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When you wind the unit up, you're not only winding the
turntable, but you're "loading" the mechanical
amplification system.
It works by virtue of a system of levers. A wound up
spring provides the power for this amplification. When a
very small
vibration is sent into the system, it "releases"
the tension
provided by the spring and transfers the vibration to a
much larger diaphragm movement system than would be
possible with just the very slight energy coming from a
wiggling needle.
As far as tone manipulation, this is all handled by a
series
of frequency tuned baffles and absorption modules. You'd
actually be able to control bass, midrange and treble.
Steampunk hi-fi.
Mechanical amplifiers
http://www.douglas-...hamp/trumechamp.htm The magnificent Museum of Retro-Tech [8th of 7, Sep 28 2019]
[link]
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RE: Link. This is one of the reasons to get up in the
morning, every day you learn something. |
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A pnumatically powered audio amplifier. |
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See also <link> for mechanical and pneumatic amplifiers. |
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Not really, it's just a case of clicking the "link" button and then copying and pasting the URL. |
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But [8th] has much to be modest about. |
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