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.
yes the shorter it is and the more lightweight it is the better your tin can telephone will be.
1667: Robert Hooke invented a string telephone that conveyed sounds over an extended wire by mechanical vibrations.
Punch holes in the bottom of two tin cans, string some string through it, tie knots at both ends, and there you have a fake telephone that doesn't work in any sense. =)
Tin cans and string can be used to create a functional telephone system by connecting the cans with a taut string. When one person speaks into their can, the vibrations travel along the string to the other person's can, allowing for communication over a distance. This simple setup demonstrates the basic principles of sound transmission and can be an effective way to communicate over short distances.
A tin can telephone is a type of voice-transmitting device made up of two tin cans, paper cups or similarly shaped items attached to either end of a taut string or wire. In 1664-1665 Robert Hooke experimented with sound transmission through a distended wire. In the centuries before tin cans and paper cups became commonplace, other cups were used and the device was sometimes called the "lovers' telephone". During the 20th century, it came into common use in preschools and elementary schools to teach children about sound vibration. Hence, Tin Can Phone is invented in 1664-1665 by Robert Hooke.
Through the string connecting the cans. This string must be kept under tension at all times for the device to operate. Therefor the two cans must be on a direct line of sight with no obstructions to interfere with the string.
The string telephone mimics the use of a landline phone. Popular with science projects, a string telephone used vibrations to produce acoustic sounds.
In 1667, an acoustic string telephone was invented by Robert Hooke. However, the phone as we think of it today, wasn't invented until the late 1800s. In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell made the first long distance (6 miles) call.
Peter Durand invented the tin can
If you whirl a tin can on the end of a string and the string suddenly breaks, the tin can will continue to move in a straight line tangentially to its circular path at the moment the string breaks. This occurs due to inertia, as the can will maintain its velocity and direction until acted upon by an external force, such as gravity or air resistance.
string for yasmin by tin tin out
By making the string tighten for the particles to go through