Edison cylinder phonograph from about 1899
The phonograph, or gramophone, was
the most common device for playing recorded
sound from the
1870s through the
1980s.
Usage of these terms is somewhat different in
American English and
British English; see usage note
below. In more modern usage, this device is often called a
turntable or record player. In the late 19th and early
20th century, the alternative term talking machine was
sometimes used. The phonograph was the first device for
recording and replaying sound.
The term phonograph meaning "writing
sound", is derived from
Greek roots. Similar related
terms gramophone and graphophone have similar root
meanings.
Arguably, any device used to record sound or
reproduce recorded sound could be called a type of "phonograph",
but in common practice it has come to mean historic technologies
of sound recording.
History
The phonautograph
The earliest known invention of a phonographic
recording device was the phonautograph, invented by
Leon Scott and patented on
March 25,
1857. It could transcribe sound
to a visible medium, but had no means to play back the sound after
it was recorded. The device consisted of a horn that focused sound
waves onto a membrane to which a hog's bristle was attached,
causing the bristle to move and enabling it to inscribe a visual
medium. Initially, the phonautograph made recordings onto a
lamp-blackened glass plate. A later version used a medium of
lamp-blackened paper on a drum or
cylinder—an arrangement to which
Thomas Edison's later invention would bear striking resemblance.
Other versions would draw a line representing the sound wave on to
a roll of
paper. The phonautograph was a
laboratory curiosity for the study of
acoustics. It was used to
determine the vibrations per second for a
musical pitch and to study sound
and speech; it was not widely understood until after the
development of the phonograph that the waveform recorded by the
phonautograph was a record of the sound wavelength that needed
only a playback mechanism to reproduce the sound.
The first phonograph
Patent drawing for Edison's phonograph,
05/18/1880.
Thomas Alva Edison
announced his invention of the first phonograph, a device
for recording and replaying sound, on
November 21,
1877 and he demonstrated the
device for the first time on
November 29 (he
patented it on
February 19,
1878; US Pat. No. 200,521).
Edison's early phonographs recorded on a
phonograph cylinder using up-down
(vertical) motion of the stylus. Edison's early patents show that
he also considered that sound could also be recorded as a
spiral on a
disc, but Edison concentrated his
efforts on
cylinders, since the groove on
the outside of a rotating cylinder provides a constant velocity to
the stylus in the groove, which Edison considered more
"scientifically correct". Edison's patent specified that the audio
recording was
embossed, and it was not until
1889 that
engraved recordings were patented
by Bell and Tainter.
The first gramophone
Emile Berliner
invented what he called the Gramophone, another device for
recording and replaying sound, and patented it in on
November 8,
1887 (US Pat. No 372,786). It
recorded on a
disk using side-to-side (lateral)
motion of the
stylus.
British and American language usage differences
In
British English "gramophone" came
to refer to any sound reproducing machine using disc records, as
disc records were popularized in the UK by the
Gramophone Company. The term
"phonograph" is usually restricted to devices playing cylinder
records
In
American English, "phonograph"
was the most common generic term for any early sound reproducing
machine. Berliner's Gramophone was considered a type of
phonograph. "Gramophone" was a
brand name, and as such in the
same category as "Victrola,"
"Zon-o-phone,"
and "Graphonola" referring to specific brands of sound reproducing
machines.
The brand "Gramophone" was not used in the USA
after
1901, and the word fell out of
use there. In contemporary American usage "phonograph" most
usually refers to disc record machines or turntables, the most
common type of analogue recording from the 1910s on. The word has
survived in America based on its nickname form, "Grammy", in the
Grammy Awards.
Disc versus cylinder as a recording media
Disc recording is inherently neither better nor
worse than cylinder recording in potential audio fidelity.
Recordings made on a cylinder remain at a
constant radial velocity for the entirety of the recording, while
those made on a disc, have a higher radial velocity at the outer
portion of the groove, compared to the inner portion.
Edison's patented recording method recorded with
vertical modulations in a groove, Berliner utilized a lateraly
modulated groove.
Though Edison's recording technology was better
than Berliner's, there were commercial advantages to a disc
system:
- The disc could be easily mass produced by
molding and stamping, and
required less storage space for a collection of recordings.
- The heavy cast-iron turntable acted as a
flywheel and helped to maintain
a consistant rotational velocity. The cylinder machine, lacking
this greater rotational inertia, was suceptable to musical pitch
fluctuations, and required more mechanical adjustment and
maintainence to avoid this impairment.
Berliner successfully argued that his technology
was different enough from Edison's that he did not need to pay
royalties on it, which reduced his business expences.
Through experimentation, in
1892 Berliner began commercial
production of his disc records, and "gramophones" or
"talking-machines". His "gramophone
record" was the first disc record to be offered to the
public. They were five
inches (12.7
cm) in diameter and recorded on
one side only. Seven-inch (17.8 cm) records followed in 1895. By
1901, ten-inch (25.4 cm) records being sold by the Victor Talking
Machine Company, and Berliner had sold his interests. By 1908,
double sided disc recorded records became demanded by the public,
and cylinders fell into disfavor. Edison felt the commercial
pressure for disc records, and by 1912, though reluctant at first,
his movement to disc records was in full swing.
From the mid
1890s until the early
1920s both
phonograph cylinder and disc
recordings and machines to play them on were widely mass marketed
and sold. The disc system gradually became more popular due to its
cheaper price and better marketing by disc record companies.
Edison ceased cylinder manufacture in the fall of 1929, and the
history of disc and cylinder rivalry was concluded.
The dominance of the disc phonograph
Berliner's lateral disc record was the ancestor
of the 78rpm, 45rpm, 33⅓rpm, and all other analogue disc records
popular for use in sound recording through the
20th century. See
gramophone record and
vinyl record.
Christmas 1925 brought improved
radio technology and radio sales,
bringing many phonograph dealers to financial ruin. With efforts
at improved audio fidelity, the big record companies succeeded in
keeping business booming through the end of the decade, but the
record sales plummeted during the
Great Depression, with many
companies merging or going out of business. Booms in record sales
returned after
World War II.
The "phonograph", "gramophone" or "turntable",
remained a common element of home
audio systems well after the
introduction of other media such as
audio tape and even the early
years of the
compact disc. They were not
uncommon in home audio systems into the early
1990s.
Turntable technology
Drive systems: direct and belt
Most turntable designs use a either a belt drive
or direct drive system. Earlier designs also used a rubberized
idler wheel drive system. However, non-linear wear and
decomposition of the wheel introduced noise and speed variations
into the desired audio. These systems generally used a
synchronous motor which ran at a
speed synchronized to the
AC
frequency of the power supply.
Different speeds were obtained by bringing differing diameter
wheels into position against the bottom or inside edge of the
platter.
Belt drives brought improved motor and platter
isolation compared to idler wheel designs. Motor noise heard as
low frequency
rumble was much reduced. It is
difficult to design multiple speed synchronous motors,
consequently
DC servomotors with electronics
providing speed control, have gained favour. On the most
sophisticated designs, optical sensors on the platter are used to
ensure the speed of the platter remains stable. Many platters have
a continuous series of
strobe markings machined around
their edge to provide these pulses. A strobe effect can be
observed by the operator to verify rotational speed. DC
servomotors rotate in steps rather than continuously. This is
referred to as 'cogging', and can add noise during playback.
Helical armature motors can be
used to overcome this.
Direct drive turntables, drive the platter
directly, without utilizing intermediate wheels, belts, or gears
as part of a drive train. The platter functions as a motor
armature. This requires good engineering, with advanced
electronics for acceleration and speed control.
Matsushita's
Technics division introduced the
first commercially successful direct drive platter, model SP10, in
1969.
Pickup systems
An other major component is the pickup or
cartridge. Early electronic phonographs used a
piezo-electric
quartz
crystal for pickup, where the
mechanical movement of the
stylus in the groove generates a
proportional electrical
voltage. Crystal pickups are
relatively robust, and yield a good level of signal which requires
only a modest amount of amplification. A crystal's output tends
not to be very linear, that is, it introduces unwanted
distortion. It is difficult to
make a crystal pickup suitable for
stereo reproduction, as the stiff
coupling between the crystal and the stylus prevents close
tracking of the needle to the groove modulations. This tends to
increase wear on the record, and introduces distortion.
In all high-fidelity systems, the crystal pickup
has been replaced by the
magnetic cartridge using either a
moving magnet or moving coil. In the moving magnet system, the
stylus carries a tiny permanent
magnet, which is positioned
between a series of fixed coils. As the magnet vibrates in
response to the stylus following the record groove, it
induces a tiny
current in the coils. This
current, now a weak alternating current representing the original
sound wave from the recording session, is fed to an
amplifier which boosts the
signal, and then to a
loudspeaker where it is converted
to sound waves. Because the magnet is so light, and is not coupled
mechanically to the coils, the stylus follows the groove far more
gently and faithfully. Moving coil systems, are generally more
expensive and are preferred by some audiophiles. Here a tiny coil
is attached to the stylus, and moves within the field of a
permanent magnet. Magnetic cartridges provide a much lower output
than a crystal pickup, in the range of a few millivolts, thus
requiring a preamplifier stage. Moving-coil cartridges generate an
even smaller signal, of a few hundred microvolts, and require
additionally a transformer or pre-preamplifier stage. Electrical
noise induced by power lines or other
EMI are
attenuated by various methods,
including
electromagnetic shielding in the
signal cables connecting the pickup to the amplifier.
The stylus is typically a conical
diamond tip on an aluminum
tubular
cantilever for a
monophonic sound or rugged use,
and an elliptical diamond tip for a stereo or
binaural signal. Some very
expensive stylii have
ruby,
boron, or
carbon fiber cantilevers chosen
for their exceptional stiffness.
Phonograph recordings are made with high
frequencies boosted. On playback the high frequencies are scaled
back to a normal level, which acts to reduce any groove noise such
as clicks or pops. This is accomplished in the amplifier with a 'PHONO'
input that uses a standardized
RIAA equalization curve.
Arm systems
Basic arm design has changed relatively little.
S-Type tone-arms can be found on even the 1925 Victor Orthophonic
phonograph. Originally, even though the tone-arm was light for
earlier electric pickup, the full weight rested on the record.
Right through to the crystal pickup, this was required to create
sufficient tracking force to follow the grooves adequately
with the relatively stiff styli. Naturally, record wear was not
given much consideration. With the advent of the better
technologies, including more powerful
rare-earth magnetic cartridges,
far lighter tracking forces became possible, and a balanced arm
came into use. Many use a
counterweight to offset the
weight of the arm. The addition of a calibrated dial on the
weight, provides for quick change of stylus pressure. Stylus
pressure of 1 to 2
grams are currently the standard.
Two types of tracking error incident to a
standard arm can affect the sound. As the tone arm tracks the
groove, the stylus drag
tangent to the disc surface and
resistance along the arm the combine to create a horizontal
skating force towards the center of the disc. Modern arms provide
a spring-loaded or hanging weight bias which offsets this force,
so as to leave the net horizontal force near zero. The second
error occurs as the arm sweeps in an arc across a disc recording,
causing the angle between the cartridge head and groove direction
to change slightly. A change in angle, albeit small, may have an
audible effect by creating a differential force on the groove
walls. Making the arm longer so as as to reduce this angle is one
solution. Some arms have been manufactured with an auxillary arm
which pivots the cartridge head on the main arm to maintain a
constant angle.
If the arm is not pivoted at a fixed point, but
travels horizontally along a radius of the disc, there will be no
skating force and no cartridge angle error. The arm is driven
along a linear track using a
servomechanism to position it
properly.
Matsushita's
Technics division developed one
such practical system with it's model SL-10 turntable in
1979, ten years after the
introduction of the first
direct-drive turntable. Early
Edison phonographs had utilized similar but spring powered drives
to carry the stylus across the record at a pre-determined rate. In
practice the linear tracking system is not widely used today due
to its complexity and attendant expense. However some of the most
sophisticated systems do employ this technique.
Front-loading systems
A brief mention could be made of one attempt to
make the use of records more convenient, in the dawning age of the
compact disk. In the early
1980s, one manufacturer designed
an upright (front loading) record playing
music centre, in which the record
was placed in a door which hinged downwards to accept it. The door
retracted automatically and the record was spun in the vertical
plane. A pair of linear-tracking arms traversed the disk, one on
each side, meaning that the whole record could be played without
stopping and turning it over. The whole system was mechanically
and electronically exceedingly complex, and while it worked, the
system as a whole was aimed at the mass market and had only
mediocre sound quality. The large physical size of the hinged door
made it vulnerable to damage, and the retraction motor was barely
able to lift its weight, especially after some years of use.
The phonograph in the 21st century
Phonographs or disc record turntables continue
to be manufactured and sold into the
21st century, although in much
smaller numbers.

Phonograph turntables at a radio
station, 2003
Updates to the
1970s era
Technics SL-1200, have remained
an industry standard for
DJs to the present day.
Turntables and
vinyl records remain popular in
techno music, where they allow
great latitude for physical manipulation of the music by the DJ.
The turntable is also useful in "scratching"
in
hip hop or
rap music, though for recording
use it has largely been replaced by the
sampler. "Turn Tables" or "Turntablism"
is a 'technique' of manipulating music recorded by artists. It is
not considered by some to be original music. However, music may be
defined as an 'organized sound', and organized manipulation of
sound (music) can still be music.
The
laser turntable—using a laser as
the pickup, rather than a stylus in physical contact with the
disk—was conceived of in the late
1980s, although the first
examples were not of usable audio quality. Practical laser
turntables are now being manufactured by
ELPJ. They are favoured by record
libraries and
audiophiles since they minimize
wear on the recording. In fact, the turntable or record player is
still the source of choice in
high end audio systems.
Experimentation is in progress in retrieving the
audio from a record by
scanning the disc and analysing
the scanned image, rather than using any sort of turntable, by
Ofer Springer at the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
See also