Accession No
4334
Brief Description
double, high-freqency oscillograph, Duddell-type, by Cambridge and Paul Instrument Company Ltd., England, 1919
Origin
England; Cambridge
Maker
Cambridge and Paul Instrument Company Ltd.
Class
electrical
Earliest Date
1919
Latest Date
1919
Inscription Date
Material
metal (brass, iron); plastic (ebonite); glass; hide (leather)
Dimensions
breadth 235mm; depth 250mm; height 195mm
Special Collection
Cambridge Instrument Company Collection
Provenance
Donated by the Cambridge Instrument Company.
Inscription
‘DUDDELL’S PATENT
The Cambridge and Paul
Instrument Co. Ltd., England.
NO. 43207’ (oil bath plate)
‘The Cambridge and Paul instrument Co. Ltd., England.’ (ebonite terminal plate)
Description Notes
Double, high-freqency oscillograph, Duddell-type, by Cambridge & Paul Inst. Co., English, c. 1922.
Electromagnet with three brass levelling feet. Four brass terminals for magnet mounted on ebonite plate. Oil bath clamped in magnet gap with two large brass screws. Four brass terminals and two glass fuses for vibrators, mounted on ebonite plate. Two vibrator units fixed in oil bath with brass screws. Circular glazed window at front of oil bath, showing two vibrating mirrors. Zero adjustment screws on either side. Glass thermometer in vertical brass tube. Top plate of oil bath with gasket fixed with two brass nuts.
Condition good (three vibrator terminals broken or bent; one fuse broken); complete
References
Events
Description
The Duddell oscillograph was patented in London in 1898 and was used in various forms until the 1960s. It was developed into a highly successful commercial instrument through a partnership between its inventor, William Du Bois Duddell, and the Cambridge and Scientific Instrument Company. The oscillograph was the first scientific instrument capable of producing a complete, real-time image of alternating current electrical waveforms. It is comprised of a rotating or vibrating mirror fixed on a single electric coil held under tension between the poles of an electromagnet. Variations in current induce momentum in the coil, creating minute movements in the mirror, which can be observed and traced through the reflection of a beam of light. This can display an instantly visible trace, or photographic accessories can be used to produce a permanent record. The automatic nature of the oscillograph saved both time and labour in the measurement, analysis, and comparison of varying electric currents. This model is an early model of the Duddell type III.
William du Bois Duddell (1872–1917) studied at the new technical colleges developing in London and around the country, which provided the first academic arena for electrical engineering in Britain. Duddell studied under William Edward Ayrton (1847–1908), who taught at Finsbury College and the London Central Technical College as Professor of Applied Physics and spent most of his career defining and legitimating an academic forum for electrical engineering in Britain. These technical colleges were self-consciously different than traditional physics laboratories, combined industrial workshop and field sites with formal training. Duddell’s training in these London institutions strongly influenced his own subsequent work, including his design for the oscillograph, a practical, portable, highly accurate instrument. The first detailed explanation of Duddell’s design appeared in The Electrician in 1897, and within a year the Cambridge Scientific Instrument Company was producing the first commercially-available versions of the instrument. CSIC continued to produce improved versions of Duddell’s design into the 1950s, when it was finally superseded by the oscilloscope.
08/01/2015
Created by: Joshua Nall on 08/01/2015
FM:40988
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