I think it depends on the type of string. How thick or thin and what material.
Nobody knows when the string telephone was invented (as far as I know), but I do know that the tin can telephone was invented in 1664-65.
The string telephone mimics the use of a landline phone. Popular with science projects, a string telephone used vibrations to produce acoustic sounds.
How long is a piece of string?
1667: Robert Hooke invented a string telephone that conveyed sounds over an extended wire by mechanical vibrations.
yes the shorter it is and the more lightweight it is the better your tin can telephone will be.
As long as a piece of string.
A hypothesis is a prediction or proposed explanation for something. A hypothesis for the length of string telephone with a clarity of sound responding variable can be about the string length affecting the quality of the sound.
Yes, but only if the string is kept taut. A slack string causes the vibrations to dissipate in the first 1/2 inch of string.
Take two paper cups and poke wholes through the bottom. Get some string and insert it through the bottom of the cup. Tie knots on the ends of it so it will pull through the bottom of the cup. Then make the string taught and talk into the cup. If pulled taut enough, the string will carry the vibrations of your speech, and your string telephone should work.
The prefix "tele" comes from the Greek word "tele," meaning "far off" or "distant." In the case of "telephone," it refers to a device that allows sound to be heard from a distance, enabling communication over long distances.
Yes , It is. The Old category of people in the year 60's to 70's use this kind of telephone. This telephone work due to the vibration of the sound from each string.
The telephone from the Greek: tēle, meaning "far" and phōnē, meaning "voice"