1878 - Inspired by a visit to Edison's laboratories in Menlo Park, New Jersey, a prominent American mechanical engineer named Oberlin Smith conceived the idea of recording the electrical signals produced by the telephone onto a steel wire. He files a patent caveat but not a formal patent.
1888 - Oberlin Smith, deciding that he will not pursue his idea, "donates" it to the public by publishing his ideas about magnetic recording in the journal 'Electrical World'.
1889 - Danish inventor Valdemar Poulsen re-discovers ( perhaps after seeing Smith's article or the Tainter patents ) the principle of magnetic recording. Over the course of the next few years he produces practical sound recorders for steel wire and tape. He takes patents in Denmark, the United States, and elsewhere and attempts to sell his patent rights to investors. The machine, called the Telegraphone utilises a steel wire wound helically on a cylinder rotating under an electromagnet connected to a carbon microphone or an earphone. It is described as a device to record telephone messages in the absence the called party.
1900 - Poulsen's first major demonstration of the Telegraphone takes place at the Paris International Exhibition of 1900. The Telegraphone is desribed in glowing terms by the technical and scientific press as superior to the phonograph and a great advance in physics as well.
1903 - The American Telegraphone Company formed in Washington, D.C.to manufacture the Tele graphone. A manufacturing facility in Wheeling, West Virginia set up to make the machines, and the company makes a large public stock offering. American Telegraphone creates several distributorships across the country to handle service and sales. Telegraphone publicity over the next decade or so promotes the various models of the machine as a dictation system and an automatic telephone recorder.
1910 - American Telegraphone, failing because of bad management and production problems, moves production to Springfield, Mass.
1911 - Lee DeForest, then working for the Federal Telegraph Company, is asked to develop an amplifier to allow the recording of high-speed radio telegraph messages received on a type of receiver called the Tikker. Deforest uses his Audion tube, invented in 1907, to make his first practical electronic amplifier. DeForest later tries to apply the amplifier and Telegraphone to the making of motion picture soundtracks, but the work does not result in a practical system.
1918 - American Telegraphone enters receivership after having sold only a few hundred machines. The company remains in existence until 1944 when it is finally disolved.
Early 1920s - German inventor/entrepreneur Curt Stille modifies the Telegraphone to use electronic amplification and markets the patent rights to the device, a wire recorder, to German and British companies.
1925 - Stille and another German, Karl Bauer ( a licensee of the Stille wire recorder patents ), market an improved wire recorder telephone answering/dictation machine called the Dailygraph. The machine was manufactured by the Vox company, a lso of Germany. Later versions of the Dailygraph include provisions for a cartridge, apparently the first use of a cartridge-loaded medium.
c. 1928-29 - A British motion picture production company, Ludwig Blattner Picture Corporation, takes a license to manfacture Stille technology. The firm unsuccessfully tries to make and distribute movies with a synchronized soundtrack on wire. Later machines, modified by Blattner, use steel tape instead of wire.
Radio could be recorded from the late 1920's on machines like the huge Blattnerphone, or the Marconi-Stille. The sound was recorded magnetically on rapidly-spinning reels of steel wire. Editing could only happen with the aid of wire cutters and welding equipment, so the machines were only really used to record broadcasts for later repeats. So expensive were the machines that wire was often re-used, rather than kept for archiving.
Source: http://ftp.bbc.co.uk/radio4/drama/techie.html
1930 - Bell Telephone Laboratories initiates a major research effort in magnetic tape recording under the direction of Clarence N. Hickman. By 1931, prototypes or designs are completed for a steel tape telephone answering machine, a central-office message announcer, an endless loop voice-training machine, and a portable, reel-to-reel recorder for general purpose sound recording. None of these enter production. AT&T's official policy on telephone recorders is that they will not be allowed on public telephone lines.
The German, Stille, and Marconi form the Marconi-Stille Company which builds the first steel band recorders for the BBC: the specifications are the following: width 3mm (1/8"), thickness: 80 cm (3x10-3 mil), speed: 1.5 m/s (60 ips), mass of a full reel: 25 kg (55 lbs); fairly dangerous use (risk of deep cuts). 1931-32 - Blattner sells an experimental steel tape recorder to the BBC but goes bankrupt the same year. Meanwhile, the British Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company purchases the U.K. rights to the Stille patents. The BBC and Marconi jointly produce several steel tape recorders and introduce them to BBC Empire service by 1932. Similar steel tape recorders are used in radio service in Canada, Australia, France, Egypt, Sweden, and Poland. Because the machines depend on a special steel tape made in Sweden, supplies are threatened when World War II begins.
AEG, a large German electrical manufacturer, purchases the patent rights of the independent inventor Fritz Pfleumer, who after 1928 patented a system for recording on paper coated with a magnetizable, powdered steel layer. AEG sets about designing a tape recorder, while it collaborates with the German chemical firm I.G.Farben to develop a suitable tape. I.G.Farben experiments with tape coated with carbonyl iron powder, made under a proprietary process and used in inductor cores.
c.1933-35 - Echophon company, another licensee of the Stille patents, develops the Textophon, a dictation machine using steel wire. Echophon is later purchased by ITT and made part of the subsidiary firm C. Lorenz, a manufacturer of telephone equipment. C. Lorenz, with the help of engineer Semi J. Begun, later markets a steel tape recorder that finds wide use in European telephone authorities for telephone recording purposes and by German radio networks for mobile recording.
1935 - An improved AEG recorder, dubbed the "Magnetophon", is demonstrated by recording the London Philharmonic Orchestra. The RRG ( the German radio authority ) begins to use the Magnetophon for broadcasting, replacing the earlier C. Lorenz recorders.
1938 - S.J. Begun of C. Lorenz leaves Germany to start a new career in the United States. In 1939 he takes a job at the Brush Development Company of Cleveland, Ohio.
1939-44 - Sales of Magnetophons total 379 units. That figure rises to 937 by 1943-44.
1939-45 - At the Brush Development Company, S. J. Begun develops steel tape and coated-paper tape recorders. Between 1942 and 1945 the company designs and successfully sells to the military various types of recorders utilizing plated media in the form of tapes, disks, and wire.
1941Weber and Von Braunmuhl from AEG develop the high frequency biasing: the improvement is decisive and the "Magnetophon" becomes a machine of excellent quality. 1945 - The Armour Research Foundation of the Armour Institute of Technology invents an improved wire recorder. The Institute succeeds in selling several thousand to the American army and navy, and after the war sells licenses to dozens of American and European manufacturers to make wire recorders.
American and British technical investigators "discover" the Magnetophon in Luxembourg, France, and other places formerly occupied by the Germans. By Spring, these investigators begin gathering information about the production of tape recorders and tape, and the information is published by the U.S. Department of Commerce. German patent rights on the technology are seized by the U.S. Alien Property Custodian.
Former serviceman John T. Mullin demonstrates a captured Magnetophon to the Institute of Radio Engineers. Performer Bing Crosby works with Mullin to use the Magnetophon for radio broadcasts on ABC.
Three former Armour Research Foundations employees start Magnecord Corporation in Chicago to make a high quality wire recorder. Plans for the wire recorder are soon dropped, and the group in 1949 introduces a tape recorder, the PT-6. The corporate life of Magnecord ends in 1957 when it is purchased by Midwestern Instruments, Inc.
1946-47 - The first Amour Research Foundation- licensed wire recorders appear in the American market, manufactured by Pentron, Pierce Wire Recorder company, and others. Brush Development company introduces its Soundmirror paper tape recorder developed in 1939-40. A Brush licensee, Amplifier Corp. of America, introduces the Magnephone tape recorder.
Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing ( later 3M Corp. ) introduces a line of sound recording tapes, including type #100, a paper based tape, and type #110, a plastic based tape. Type #111, a plastic based tape with an improved oxide, becomes the industry standard.
1947 - Rangertone Inc., of New Jersey introduces a professional tape recorder based on the Magnetophon.
1948 - Ampex corporation, using Armour Research Foundation and German expertise and designs, produces its first professional tape recorder, the Model 200.
1949-50 - Magnecord introduces two-channel tape recorders, and begins making stereo recordings of music for demonstration purposes.
1948-49 - Sony Corporation begins its efforts to design a tape recorder.
1950 - The first catalog of recorded music on tape appears in the United States. It is offered by Recording Associates company.
1951 - Bing Crosby Enterprises, the research team funded by Crosby and headed by engineer John Mullin, demonstrate a crude video recording system.
1956 - Ampex Corporation demonstrates its first video recorder, the VR1000. The machine, which recorded only monodchrome signals takes the industry by a storm and quickly becomes the standard.
On November 30, the first videotaped material on a TV show airs. It is "Douglas Edwards and the News" on CBS.
1957 - Price of first commercial blank video tape offered by the 3M Corp. listed as $307 per reel.
1958 - The same year that stereo LP's appear on the RCA-Victor label, RCA introduces stereo tape, in a cartridge format requiring a special player. The system flops almost immediately, though its production continues by a licensee, Bell Sound, until 1964.
1962-64 - Phillips company of the Netherlands introduces the Compact Cassette, a portable tape recorder using a small cartridge.
1965 - Ford and Mercury, in conjunction with Motorola and RCA-Victor records, introduce the "Stereo-8" (or "eight track" ) format tape players as an option on certain luxury models. The medium becomes the first truly successful form of recorded music on tape in the consumer market. 8-track tapes discontinued around 1980.
1969-70 - DuPont and BASF begin offering chromium dioxide recording tapes.
1970 - Sony introduces the U-Matic videotape recorder. The format does not succeed well as a consumer product, but achieves great success in schools and television stations.
1975 - Sony introduces the Betamax home video system. By using a convenient cartridge and offering the product at a low cost, Beta quickly takes off.
1976- Panasonic and JVC introduce a competitor to Betamax, the Video Home System ( VHS ) system.
1978 - Sony introduces the first digital recorders. These were professional, open reel PCM recorders for the studio.
1984 - Sales of recorded compact cassettes (audio cassettes) exceed LP sales for the first time.
Sources:
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~dmorton/mrchrono.html
http://www.canorus.com/evercloser/nagra/Profile.html
http://ftp.bbc.co.uk/radio4/drama/techie.html
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