use a record player, it wont go beep,but it will work
HOW THEY MADE A MORSE CODE MACHINE Samuel F.B. Morse and Alfred Vail developed an electric telegraph which sent pulses of electrical current to control an electromagnet that was located at the receiving end of the telegraph wire.
They of course used the telegraph machine, but to make sure no one could understand, they switched it up... it wasn't exactly Morse code, but a code that they made up.
A machine, Samuel F. B. Morse, was built to make "dits" and "dots" to send help messages like SOS.
1836
To make a Morse code telegraph machine, you'll need a power source (like a battery), a switch (key), a sounder or buzzer, and insulated wire. Connect one end of the wire to the battery and the other to the key, then connect the key to the sounder. When the key is pressed, it completes the circuit, creating audible clicks that represent dots and dashes in Morse code. Ensure the setup is secure and that the connections are properly insulated to prevent short circuits.
Before telephones were invented, they could send messages over long distances by using pulses of electricity to signal the machine to make marks on a moving paper tape. A code was necessary to help translate the marks on the paper tape into readable text messages. Morse developed the first version of this code.
They could send messages using it by telegraph and ships used it. If you know Morse code you don’t have to say anything, but can use lights to send the dots and dashes that make up Morse code.
Telepathic Morse code.
No. But several in addition to myself use it.
Samuel f.b. Morse was on a boat coming back from Europe when he got the idea of making the machine so he found a partner to help him by the name of Alfred Vail. it took them five years to build this machine.
Samuel F.B. Morse, with the assistance of Alfred Vail, invented Morse Code in 1835 when, as a professor of arts and design at New York University, he proved that signals could be transmitted by wire. Originally, Morse Code was a series of written codes on a strip of paper, but in 1836, the device used to produce the written codes was modified to emboss the paper with dots and dashes, which he modestly called Morse's Code. The message sent as the first public demonstration was "What hath God wrought".
A machine's job is to make man's work easy !!