A gramophone works by using a needle to read the grooves on a vinyl record. The needle vibrates as it moves along the grooves, which creates sound waves that are amplified and played through a speaker.
Sure! The phonograph is an old-fashioned device used to play music recorded on vinyl records.
The first gramophone was invented by Thomas Edison in the United States in the late 19th century. Edison's phonograph was the first device to play and record sound using a rotating cylinder with indentations.
The answer is yes...and no. Thomas Edison is credited with inventing the first machine which could record sound and play it back. He called this device a 'phongraph', which essentially means sound writing. The phonograph, though a bit of a sensation at the time, was never commercially produced on any large scale, and remained a parlor trick when Edison basically abandoned it when he began work on his electric light. In the meantime, other inventors, namely Alexander Graham Bell and others, began working on their own improved versions of the device. Bell's group (later known as Columbia) called their device a 'graphophone' (not particularly original, wouldn't you say? Rather than Edison's tinfoil wrapped cylinder, they used a wax cylinder to record. Much better, sound could actually be reliably reproduced, but it still had it's drawbacks. One of those was the need to individually record each cylinder, there was originally no method for mass producing them. Around this time, Edison returned to the field with his 'improved phonograph', using the same wax technology of his competitors. Finally, an inventor named Emile Berliner devised what he called the 'gram-o-phone'. The gramophone used flat disc shaped records of a shellac material. More durable, and with one bi advantage: the records could be stamped out in large volume. So short answer is that Edison first demonstrated the recording of sound, but Berliner's later machine has much more in common with what became the standard record player
The 45 RPM records or vinyls sound as they were intended to sound when played at 45 revolutions per minute (at the 45 setting on a record player) while the 33 RPM records sound right at the 33 revolutions per minute speed. Then, there is the issue of size. Records that are 33 RPM are larger in diameter than 45's. Also 33's can hold more songs than 45's do. Usually, 45's have only one song on a side and were used as demo records for radio stations (yes, radio stations used to play music on records before they went to tapes and now to digital music on computers) and for releasing "singles" so that people could listen to a new band without having to pay for a whole album. 45 RPM records or vinyls are recorded at 45 revolutions per minute and are consequently played back at the same speed to achieve exact replication of the original recording. Subsequently, 33 1/3 RPMs are recorded at that speed, and played back at that speed to hear the audio as it was recorded. Generally 45s are recorded on smaller 7" disks, whereas 33 1/3s are recorded on larger, full sized 12" disks. This is not always the case, as some 12" records are recorded at 45 RPM for higher, or audiophile, sound quality.
He tried to learn play the piano at an old age when he found his violin too hard for his fingers. His mother, who loved music, made him learn to play the violin when he was 5. At first he hated it but later when he learned it with practice he got really good at it. He loved Mozart.
yes
A Gramophone is used to play music and enjoy recorded noises. People use Gramophones to listen to music and enjoy all sorts of recorded things on records.
Yes. A record deck, or turntable, is used for playing vinyl records on.
a gramophone was used for communication ================ "Gramophone" is the name given in Britain to early phonographs. A gramophone is a record player. (The term is still used in the title of some organizations, publications, and prizes.) So, the answer to your question is that a gramophone uses a pointed piece of metal (a "needle"")produces sound (usually words or music) by converting the grooves on a disc (record) into vibrations that produce sound waves. In other words, gramophone is used to play records.
usually vinyl records.
Sure! The phonograph is an old-fashioned device used to play music recorded on vinyl records.
Assuming you're talking about records and not gas or something else...yes. Long Play (LP) albums were made of vinyl, but so were the 45s in their last years. Earlier records were made of a harder plastic. "Vinyl" refers to anything that goes round and round on a turntable and is read by a needle.
A phono cartridge or magnetic cartridge is actually a transducer or converter. With it, you can play gramophone records on a phonograph or a turntable.
Make a jukebox and play some records.
The gramophone is one record player that plays 45rpm. Another is a RCA Victor phonograph. The LP records started phasing out in the 1980's though due to the invention of the compact disk.
There are many ways to have played music in 1960. There were many instruments, records, and recording devices to play music on.
A Record Player ***************** Phonograph is the official name but there were a bazillion names like Gramophone, Graphophone, etc. Usually each different company that manufactured a phonograph in the early days had a name for their product like "Victrola." Jukeboxes as well played records. Then when phonographs became electrified and smaller they started being known generically as "record players."