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Megaphone

A megaphone, speaking-trumpet, bullhorn, blowhorn, or loudhailer is usually a portable or hand-held, cone-shaped acoustic horn used to amplify a person's voice or other sounds and direct it in a given direction. The sound is introduced into the narrow end of the megaphone, by holding it up to the face and speaking into it, and the sound waves radiate out the wide end. A megaphone increases the volume of sound by increasing the acoustic impedance seen by the vocal cords, matching the impedance of the vocal cords to the air, so that more sound power is radiated. It also serves to direct the sound waves in the direction the horn is pointing. It somewhat distorts the sound of the voice because the frequency response of the megaphone is greater at higher sound frequencies.

A man using an electric megaphone
A small sports megaphone for cheering at sporting events, next to a 3 in. cigarette lighter for scale

Since the 1960s the voice-powered acoustic megaphone described above has been replaced by the electric megaphone, which uses a microphone, an electrically-powered amplifier and a folded horn loudspeaker to amplify the voice.

History

 
Page from the Codex canadensis, by Louis Nicolas, circa 1675 to 1682, showing a native North-American chief using a megaphone made of bark

The initial inventor of the speaking trumpet is a subject of historical controversy. There have been references to speakers in Ancient Greece (5th Century B.C.) wearing masks with cones protruding from the mouth in order to amplify their voices in theatres.[1] Hellenic architects may have also consciously utilized acoustic physics in their design of theatre amphitheaters.

A drawing by Louis Nicolas (right) on page 14 of the Codex canadensis, circa 1675 to 1682, shows a Native American chief named Iscouakité using a megaphone made of birch bark. The text of the illustration says that he is addressing his soldiers through a birch bark tube.

 
Drawing by Athanasius Kircher, 1684, shows man (left) using megaphone to communicate over distance

Both Samuel Morland and Athanasius Kircher have been credited with inventing megaphones around the same time in the 17th century. Morland, in a work published in 1655, wrote about his experimentation with different horns. His largest megaphone consisted of over 20 feet of copper tube and could reportedly project a person's voice a mile and a half.[2]

Twenty years earlier, Kircher described a device that could be used as both a megaphone and for "overhearing" people speaking outside a house. His coiled horn would be mounted into the side of a building, with a narrow end inside that could be either spoken into or listened to, and the wide mouth projecting through the outside wall.

Morland favored a straight, tube-shaped speaking device. Kircher's horn, on the other hand, utilized a "cochleate" design, where the horn was twisted and coiled to make it more compact.

A later, papier-mâché trumpet of special design was the Sengerphone.[3]

Additionally, in ruins of Tiwanaku are stones around the central place with holes shaped in a megaphone's profile. Their purpose is today unknown, but as local guards can show, it is possible to amplify a human voice loud enough to hear it across a large area.

 
A late 19th-century speaking trumpet used by firefighters

The term 'megaphone' was first associated with Thomas Edison's instrument 200 years later. In 1878, Edison developed a device similar to the speaking trumpet in hopes of benefiting the deaf and hard of hearing. His variation included three separate funnels lined up in a row. The two outer funnels, which were six feet and eight inches long, were made of paper and connected to a tube inserted in each ear. The middle funnel was similar to Morland's speaking trumpet, but had a larger slot to insert a user's mouth.[4]

With Edison's megaphone, a low whisper could be heard a thousand feet away, while a normal tone of voice could be heard roughly two miles away. On the listening end, the receiver could hear a low whisper at a thousand feet away. However the apparatus was much too large to be portable, limiting its use. George Prescott wrote: "The principal drawback at present is the large size of the apparatus."

Prior to the invention of the electric microphone, early pop singers sang with a megaphone.

Since the 1960s, acoustic megaphones have generally been replaced by electric versions (below), although the cheap, light, rugged acoustic megaphone is still used in a few venues, like cheering at sporting events and cheerleading, and by lifeguards at pools and beaches where the moisture could damage the electronics of electric megaphones.

 
German soldier using a megaphone to command troops, 1930
 
A sailor using a megaphone to amplify the sound of a bugle to wake recruits at an American training camp in 1947
 
German lifeguard with megaphone, 1969
 
Austrian jazz singer using megaphone, 2007

Electric megaphone

 
 
(left) Woman using a small handheld electric megaphone at a demonstration in Portugal. (right) Electric megaphones use a type of horn loudspeaker called a reflex or reentrant horn. The sound waves travel in a zigzag path through concentric widening ducts (b, c, and d).

An electric megaphone is a handheld public address system, an electronic device that amplifies the human voice like an acoustic megaphone, using electric power. It consists of a microphone to convert sound waves into an electrical audio signal, an amplifier powered by a battery to increase the power of the audio signal, and a loudspeaker to convert the audio signal to sound waves again. Although slightly heavier than acoustic megaphones, electric megaphones can amplify the voice to a higher level, to over 90 dB. They have replaced acoustic megaphones in most applications, and are generally used to address congregations of people wherever stationary public address systems are not available; at outdoor sporting events, movie sets, political rallies, and street demonstrations.

Although electronic public address systems have existed since vacuum tube amplifiers were developed in the early 1920s, vacuum tube versions were too heavy to be portable. Practical portable electric megaphones had to await the development of microelectronics which followed the invention of the transistor in 1947. In 1954, TOA Corporation developed the EM-202, the world's first transistorized megaphone.[5]

Handheld versions are shaped generally like the old acoustic megaphone, with a microphone at one end and a horn speaker at the other, and a pistol grip on the side, with a trigger switch to turn it on. In use, the device is held up to the mouth, and the trigger is pressed to turn it on while speaking. Other larger versions hang from the shoulder on a strap, and have a separate handheld microphone on a cord to speak into, so users can address a crowd without the instrument obscuring their faces. A vast array of modern electric megaphones are available to purchase, and characteristics like power, weight, price, and the presence of alarms and shoulder straps all contribute to a consumer's choice.[6]

The shape of the megaphone directly affects the range of projection; narrower horns compensate for lower power by concentrating sound more sharply than wide horns.

 
The EM-202 made by TOA Corp., the first transistorized handheld megaphone
 
Waist-slung megaphones with separate microphones
 
Man using megaphone with separate microphone

Impact on society

 
Silent film director D. W. Griffith using megaphone in 1922

Portable megaphones are widely used for crowd management and mass communication. When needing to communicate information or directions to a large crowd of people in one place, an electric megaphone is valuable when other public address systems are not present.

Besides their practical implications, public address systems, including megaphones, also had a social impact. Public address systems helped promote women's participation in society. In events like the National Republican and Democratic Conventions of 1920, when electronic public address systems were first becoming popularized, women used these amplifying technologies during roll call of participants.[7] Later, portable electric megaphones extended this equalizing influence to outdoor events. Some protest leaders use electric megaphones to speak to an outdoor crowd or to other protesters.

As of the 2010s, cheerleading is one of the few fields that still uses acoustic megaphones. Cheerleaders at the University of Minnesota are credited with first using acoustic megaphones in routines in 1898. Since then, cheerleaders have relied heavily on acoustic megaphones during performances at sporting events. Generally, female cheerleaders would use pom poms while male cheerleaders, with loud booming voices, would project cheers through megaphones.[8] Vocal projection is an important aspect for cheerleading, so experts recommend the use of acoustic megaphones not only to increase the volume of sound, but also to protect performers’ voices in the process.[9]

For decades, film directors have used megaphones to communicate with their cast and crew on sets where it was hard to hear. The acoustic megaphone became an iconic clichéd symbol of a movie director, although modern directors use electric megaphones. A major contributor to this cliche was Cecil B. DeMille, director of epic movies like The Ten Commandments and The King of Kings. Many of his films were biblical epics set on vast outdoor sets that required communication with hundreds of extras.[10]

The distinctive distorted sound of a human voice amplified by a megaphone is widely recognized, from its use in train and bus stations and sports arenas. Applied to music, it gives the sound of an antique acoustic gramophone record player. It has been used in radio advertisements and popular music to give retro and often humorous effects. A recorded voice or music can be processed to give it a "megaphone" sound effect without using an actual megaphone, by audio recording decks and software. In recording software like Logic Pro and Pro Tools, selecting certain filters and settings will produce an artificial sound almost indistinguishable from an electric megaphone.[11]

Legal restrictions

Governments can pass laws restricting the use of electronically amplified megaphones. In the US the ability to use a megaphone in public can be restricted to certain decibel levels, time of day or banned in residential neighborhoods. However, under the First Amendment, the specific kinds of speech used with a megaphone cannot be restricted.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ Montgomery, Henry C. (1959). "Amplification and High Fidelity in the Greek Theater". The Classical Journal. 54 (6): 242–245. JSTOR 3294133.
  2. ^ Mills, Mara. "When Mobile Communication Technologies Were New." Endeavour 33.4 (200111111: 141-47.
  3. ^ "SENGERPHONE-Y by Len Mullenger". www.musicweb-international.com.
  4. ^ Prescott, George B. Bell's Electric Speaking Telephone: Its Invention, Construction, Application, Modification, and History. New York: D. Appleton &, 1884.
  5. ^ "TOA | From 2010 | TOA History". TOA Corporation.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on September 1, 2012.
  7. ^ Kramarae, Cheris. Technology and Women's Voices: Keeping in Touch. New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1988.
  8. ^ Hanson, Mary Ellen. Go! Fight! Win!: Cheerleading in American Culture. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green State University Popular, 1995.
  9. ^ Carrier, Justin, and Donna McKay. Complete Cheerleading. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 2006.
  10. ^ "Cecil B. DeMille". IMDb.
  11. ^ Savage, Jason. "The Megaphone Effect in Radio Ads". Houston Chronicle / Demand Media. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
  12. ^ Bernstein, David E. You Can't Say That!: The Growing Threat to Civil Liberties from Antidiscrimination Laws (2003 ed.). Cato Institute. p. 31.

External links

  • "Controlling Public Protest: First Amendment Implications" An article about restrictions that may legally be imposed on public protests (including use of bullhorns), by Daniel L. Schofield, S.J.D., published in the November 1994 issue of the FBI's Law Enforcement Bulletin.

megaphone, this, article, about, amplification, device, chemical, compound, molecule, other, uses, disambiguation, bullhorn, redirects, here, character, bullhorn, type, tree, bullhorn, acacia, loudhailer, redirects, here, song, loudhailer, maaya, uchida, singl. This article is about the amplification device For the chemical compound see Megaphone molecule For other uses see Megaphone disambiguation Bullhorn redirects here For the G I Joe character see Bullhorn G I Joe For the type of tree see Bullhorn Acacia Loudhailer redirects here For the song see Loudhailer Maaya Uchida single For the album see Loud Hailer album A megaphone speaking trumpet bullhorn blowhorn or loudhailer is usually a portable or hand held cone shaped acoustic horn used to amplify a person s voice or other sounds and direct it in a given direction The sound is introduced into the narrow end of the megaphone by holding it up to the face and speaking into it and the sound waves radiate out the wide end A megaphone increases the volume of sound by increasing the acoustic impedance seen by the vocal cords matching the impedance of the vocal cords to the air so that more sound power is radiated It also serves to direct the sound waves in the direction the horn is pointing It somewhat distorts the sound of the voice because the frequency response of the megaphone is greater at higher sound frequencies A man using an electric megaphone A small sports megaphone for cheering at sporting events next to a 3 in cigarette lighter for scale Since the 1960s the voice powered acoustic megaphone described above has been replaced by the electric megaphone which uses a microphone an electrically powered amplifier and a folded horn loudspeaker to amplify the voice Contents 1 History 2 Electric megaphone 3 Impact on society 4 Legal restrictions 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit Page from the Codex canadensis by Louis Nicolas circa 1675 to 1682 showing a native North American chief using a megaphone made of bark The initial inventor of the speaking trumpet is a subject of historical controversy There have been references to speakers in Ancient Greece 5th Century B C wearing masks with cones protruding from the mouth in order to amplify their voices in theatres 1 Hellenic architects may have also consciously utilized acoustic physics in their design of theatre amphitheaters A drawing by Louis Nicolas right on page 14 of the Codex canadensis circa 1675 to 1682 shows a Native American chief named Iscouakite using a megaphone made of birch bark The text of the illustration says that he is addressing his soldiers through a birch bark tube Drawing by Athanasius Kircher 1684 shows man left using megaphone to communicate over distance Both Samuel Morland and Athanasius Kircher have been credited with inventing megaphones around the same time in the 17th century Morland in a work published in 1655 wrote about his experimentation with different horns His largest megaphone consisted of over 20 feet of copper tube and could reportedly project a person s voice a mile and a half 2 Twenty years earlier Kircher described a device that could be used as both a megaphone and for overhearing people speaking outside a house His coiled horn would be mounted into the side of a building with a narrow end inside that could be either spoken into or listened to and the wide mouth projecting through the outside wall Morland favored a straight tube shaped speaking device Kircher s horn on the other hand utilized a cochleate design where the horn was twisted and coiled to make it more compact A later papier mache trumpet of special design was the Sengerphone 3 Additionally in ruins of Tiwanaku are stones around the central place with holes shaped in a megaphone s profile Their purpose is today unknown but as local guards can show it is possible to amplify a human voice loud enough to hear it across a large area A late 19th century speaking trumpet used by firefighters The term megaphone was first associated with Thomas Edison s instrument 200 years later In 1878 Edison developed a device similar to the speaking trumpet in hopes of benefiting the deaf and hard of hearing His variation included three separate funnels lined up in a row The two outer funnels which were six feet and eight inches long were made of paper and connected to a tube inserted in each ear The middle funnel was similar to Morland s speaking trumpet but had a larger slot to insert a user s mouth 4 With Edison s megaphone a low whisper could be heard a thousand feet away while a normal tone of voice could be heard roughly two miles away On the listening end the receiver could hear a low whisper at a thousand feet away However the apparatus was much too large to be portable limiting its use George Prescott wrote The principal drawback at present is the large size of the apparatus Prior to the invention of the electric microphone early pop singers sang with a megaphone Since the 1960s acoustic megaphones have generally been replaced by electric versions below although the cheap light rugged acoustic megaphone is still used in a few venues like cheering at sporting events and cheerleading and by lifeguards at pools and beaches where the moisture could damage the electronics of electric megaphones German soldier using a megaphone to command troops 1930 A sailor using a megaphone to amplify the sound of a bugle to wake recruits at an American training camp in 1947 German lifeguard with megaphone 1969 Austrian jazz singer using megaphone 2007Electric megaphone Edit left Woman using a small handheld electric megaphone at a demonstration in Portugal right Electric megaphones use a type of horn loudspeaker called a reflex or reentrant horn The sound waves travel in a zigzag path through concentric widening ducts b c and d An electric megaphone is a handheld public address system an electronic device that amplifies the human voice like an acoustic megaphone using electric power It consists of a microphone to convert sound waves into an electrical audio signal an amplifier powered by a battery to increase the power of the audio signal and a loudspeaker to convert the audio signal to sound waves again Although slightly heavier than acoustic megaphones electric megaphones can amplify the voice to a higher level to over 90 dB They have replaced acoustic megaphones in most applications and are generally used to address congregations of people wherever stationary public address systems are not available at outdoor sporting events movie sets political rallies and street demonstrations Although electronic public address systems have existed since vacuum tube amplifiers were developed in the early 1920s vacuum tube versions were too heavy to be portable Practical portable electric megaphones had to await the development of microelectronics which followed the invention of the transistor in 1947 In 1954 TOA Corporation developed the EM 202 the world s first transistorized megaphone 5 Handheld versions are shaped generally like the old acoustic megaphone with a microphone at one end and a horn speaker at the other and a pistol grip on the side with a trigger switch to turn it on In use the device is held up to the mouth and the trigger is pressed to turn it on while speaking Other larger versions hang from the shoulder on a strap and have a separate handheld microphone on a cord to speak into so users can address a crowd without the instrument obscuring their faces A vast array of modern electric megaphones are available to purchase and characteristics like power weight price and the presence of alarms and shoulder straps all contribute to a consumer s choice 6 The shape of the megaphone directly affects the range of projection narrower horns compensate for lower power by concentrating sound more sharply than wide horns The EM 202 made by TOA Corp the first transistorized handheld megaphone Waist slung megaphones with separate microphones Man using megaphone with separate microphoneImpact on society Edit Silent film director D W Griffith using megaphone in 1922 Portable megaphones are widely used for crowd management and mass communication When needing to communicate information or directions to a large crowd of people in one place an electric megaphone is valuable when other public address systems are not present Besides their practical implications public address systems including megaphones also had a social impact Public address systems helped promote women s participation in society In events like the National Republican and Democratic Conventions of 1920 when electronic public address systems were first becoming popularized women used these amplifying technologies during roll call of participants 7 Later portable electric megaphones extended this equalizing influence to outdoor events Some protest leaders use electric megaphones to speak to an outdoor crowd or to other protesters As of the 2010s cheerleading is one of the few fields that still uses acoustic megaphones Cheerleaders at the University of Minnesota are credited with first using acoustic megaphones in routines in 1898 Since then cheerleaders have relied heavily on acoustic megaphones during performances at sporting events Generally female cheerleaders would use pom poms while male cheerleaders with loud booming voices would project cheers through megaphones 8 Vocal projection is an important aspect for cheerleading so experts recommend the use of acoustic megaphones not only to increase the volume of sound but also to protect performers voices in the process 9 For decades film directors have used megaphones to communicate with their cast and crew on sets where it was hard to hear The acoustic megaphone became an iconic cliched symbol of a movie director although modern directors use electric megaphones A major contributor to this cliche was Cecil B DeMille director of epic movies like The Ten Commandments and The King of Kings Many of his films were biblical epics set on vast outdoor sets that required communication with hundreds of extras 10 The distinctive distorted sound of a human voice amplified by a megaphone is widely recognized from its use in train and bus stations and sports arenas Applied to music it gives the sound of an antique acoustic gramophone record player It has been used in radio advertisements and popular music to give retro and often humorous effects A recorded voice or music can be processed to give it a megaphone sound effect without using an actual megaphone by audio recording decks and software In recording software like Logic Pro and Pro Tools selecting certain filters and settings will produce an artificial sound almost indistinguishable from an electric megaphone 11 Legal restrictions EditThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Governments can pass laws restricting the use of electronically amplified megaphones In the US the ability to use a megaphone in public can be restricted to certain decibel levels time of day or banned in residential neighborhoods However under the First Amendment the specific kinds of speech used with a megaphone cannot be restricted 12 See also EditLong range acoustic device LRAD Water Talkie Human microphoneReferences Edit Montgomery Henry C 1959 Amplification and High Fidelity in the Greek Theater The Classical Journal 54 6 242 245 JSTOR 3294133 Mills Mara When Mobile Communication Technologies Were New Endeavour 33 4 200111111 141 47 SENGERPHONE Y by Len Mullenger www musicweb international com Prescott George B Bell s Electric Speaking Telephone Its Invention Construction Application Modification and History New York D Appleton amp 1884 TOA From 2010 TOA History TOA Corporation Megaphone amp Bullhorns Archived from the original on September 1 2012 Kramarae Cheris Technology and Women s Voices Keeping in Touch New York Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1988 Hanson Mary Ellen Go Fight Win Cheerleading in American Culture Bowling Green OH Bowling Green State University Popular 1995 Carrier Justin and Donna McKay Complete Cheerleading Champaign IL Human Kinetics 2006 Cecil B DeMille IMDb Savage Jason The Megaphone Effect in Radio Ads Houston Chronicle Demand Media Retrieved 2 September 2013 Bernstein David E You Can t Say That The Growing Threat to Civil Liberties from Antidiscrimination Laws 2003 ed Cato Institute p 31 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Megaphones Controlling Public Protest First Amendment Implications An article about restrictions that may legally be imposed on public protests including use of bullhorns by Daniel L Schofield S J D published in the November 1994 issue of the FBI s Law Enforcement Bulletin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Megaphone amp oldid 1122411500, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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