Acoustic Coupler

In telecommunications, the term acoustic coupler has the following meanings:
  1. An interface device for coupling electrical signals by acoustical means--usually into and out of a telephone instrument.
  2. A terminal device used to link data terminals and radio sets with the telephone network.
Note: The link is achieved through acoustic (sound) signals rather than through direct electrical connection. Prior to the deregulation of telephony in many countries of the world, it was illegal to make an electrical connection to the telephone network. With the increased use of computing, acoustic couplers were used to connect modems to the telephone network. Usually, a standard telephone handset was placed into a cradle that had been engineered to fit closely (by the use of rubber seals) around the microphone and earpiece of the handset. A modem would modulate a loudspeaker in the cup attached to the handsets microphone, and the loudspeaker in the telephone handset's earpiece would be picked up by a microphone in the cup attached to the earpiece. In this way a two-way signal could be passed. Speeds were typically 300 bits per second achieved by modulating a carrier at 300 baud. The first such device was the ACOUSTIC DATA COUPLER 300 MODEM from 1968. Acoustic couplers were sensitive to external noise and depended on the widespread standardisation of the dimensions of telephone handsets. Once electrical connection to telephone networks became legal, it rapidly became the preferred method of attaching modems. Acoustic couplers are still used by people travelling in areas of the world where electrical connection to the telephone network is illegal or impractical.

References


 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
buffy summers
scale (zoology)
scale (music)
leigh brackett
13th century bc
14th century bc
15th century bc
kingsbury commitment
uss merrimack
accidental
list of sports history organizations
lon
american goldfinch
meien
treblinka
luc besson
cornish
absolute gain
access
access charge
access control
access denial
access failure
access time
baud
acknowledgement
acquisition
active laser medium
adaptive communications
adaptive predictive coding
adder subtracter
address
addressability
address message
adjacent channel interference
advanced data communication control procedures
aerial insert
aeronautical emergency communications system plan
aiod leads
airborne radio relay
air ground worldwide communications system
alarm sensor
a law algorithm
allan variance