Original Telephone Design Question

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The original telephone design featured a duplex coil to enable simultaneous two-way communication over a single circuit by subtracting the outgoing microphone signal from the incoming speaker signal. This design was historically implemented to reduce infrastructure costs, allowing the use of a single pair of wires. Early telephones likely had a single coil for both microphone and speaker, limiting one person to talk at a time, while later innovations introduced separate components. Allowing some outgoing audio back into the earpiece helps users hear their own voice, facilitating conversation and providing feedback that the phone is operational. The discussion highlights the evolution of telephone technology and the importance of interface engineering in both analog and digital systems.
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I have read about the need to have a duplex coil in a telephone to block the sound of your own voice from reaching your ear...the reason given on a few websites I have found is that the original design of the telephone had the microphone and speaker wired together.

So here is my question...

Why did the original telephone have this design feature? Why did they wire it this way?
 
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Not quite
The duplex coil allows you to send both sides of the conversation over the same circuit at the same time, it subtracts your outgoing microphone signal from the incoming speaker signal. This means you only need one pair for a duplex channel - pretty clever.

See http://www.epanorama.net/circuits/teleinterface.html for an explanation of telephones
 
mgb_phys said:
Not quite
The duplex coil allows you to send both sides of the conversation over the same circuit at the same time, it subtracts your outgoing microphone signal from the incoming speaker signal. This means you only need one pair for a duplex channel - pretty clever.

See http://www.epanorama.net/circuits/teleinterface.html for an explanation of telephones

1. I have already looked at that website...

2. There is only one website I can find that seems to agree with your use of terminology (even though that wasnt the question I asked) found here:

From this website:
http://en.allexperts.com/q/Electrical-Engineering-1356/Duplex-Coil.htm

Question
In a telephone there is a duplex coil to stop the sound from the microphone being heard in the speaker (even though modern telephones allow a little sound from the microphone to get to the speaker). I know what the duplex coil does but...
How does it work?
How does this device block sound from the microphone?

Thanks

Answer
Actually, you have it wrong. The duplex you are speaking of is to allow the conversation to take place on the same line in both directions.

The telephone systems have amplifiers in the lines that amplify in both directions so that your signal can go the other end and the other end can talk back to you.

This is called a duplex line.

The cancellation of the microphone sound from getting into the receiver is the work of a bridge coil or equivalent. This nulls the voltage being fed from the mic to the receiver, but puts out full voltage to line. In modern telephones the bridge is an ic or chip device that does the same thing. The basics of it are derived from the wheatstone bridge circuit.

http://www.epanorama.net/circuits/teleinterface.html

is a good overall explanation of telephone theory from beginning to end.

Let me know if you need more details or more explanations.

Cleggsan

Even if this one source is correct and all the others are wrong in what they are calling a "duplex coil"...I really don't care.

I am not looking for a lesson on electrical enigneering (I'm an EE so I'm fine thanks)...my question is a historical one...here is the question in case you missed it...

Why did the original telephone have this design feature? Why did they wire it this way?
 
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sorry i had only used that site once to work out how to power something from a phone line.
historically they wire a phone like that so they only needed a single pair of wires, so having their infrastructure bill. I'm guessing the first phones ha a single coil as a microphone an speaker so only one person could talk at once an an isolation transformer and separate speakers/mics were a later invention.

There are reasons for allowing some outgoing audio back into your ear - it makes it easier for you to talk if you can hear what you are saying for some psychological reason. Even digital or VOIP phones feed some of the output back into the earpiece deliberately. some even degrade the quality to make it the feedback sound like a tradiational phone!
 
mgb_phys said:
sorry i had only used that site once to work out how to power something from a phone line.
historically they wire a phone like that so they only needed a single pair of wires, so having their infrastructure bill.

That sounds very reasonable to me...I figured it was likely an infrastructure/saving cost thing...

mgb_phys said:
I'm guessing the first phones ha a single coil as a microphone an speaker so only one person could talk at once an an isolation transformer and separate speakers/mics were a later invention.

I don't know for sure but that sounds reasonable since it would be an easy way to do it as long as you had the iso transformer...

mgb_phys said:
There are reasons for allowing some outgoing audio back into your ear - it makes it easier for you to talk if you can hear what you are saying for some psychological reason. Even digital or VOIP phones feed some of the output back into the earpiece deliberately. some even degrade the quality to make it the feedback sound like a tradiational phone!

It also seems to tell the user that the phone is on and working...so there isn't dead silence when you are speaking.

I know that if the phone stops working the 2 things I notice are no ring tone and a "dead air" sound when I talk into the phone...
 
Firefox123 said:
I know that if the phone stops working the 2 things I notice are no ring tone and a "dead air" sound when I talk into the phone...
I know Skype had to deliberately add some noise into the earpiece rather than having it silent when there was no incoming data because people thought it wasn't working.

It's an interesting area of interface engineering, the little analog clues you get from the real world that you have to duplicate in digital systems.
 
mgb_phys said:
I know Skype had to deliberately add some noise into the earpiece rather than having it silent when there was no incoming data because people thought it wasn't working.

It's an interesting area of interface engineering, the little analog clues you get from the real world that you have to duplicate in digital systems.

lol I never thought about the need to add in that stuff with the digital systems...but yeah it makes sense.
 
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