I have recently acquired this, what seems to be a push button microphone utilizing a two prong plug. Could anyone enlighten me on exactly what this is and what it was used for?
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FF-33 Push Button Microphone?
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Yes, it is to switch the speaker on (you can see on the photograph how it pushes the input contact against the telephone contact spring).
It uses a peculiar magnetic speaker element where the membrane is indirectly vibrated by an anchor plate mounted within the speaker. This type is highly sensitive and interestingly this type of speaker element could be used as a sound powered microphone (The Linienfernsprecher 39 used these elements both as microphone and speaker).
So your unit could in theory be used as a micorphone, but then it would not have the two-pronged "Mithör" plug.
regards,
Funksammler
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Originally posted by Panzer212 View PostThank you for the information Funksammler. I will test it later today to see how well it functions. But, you are unsure if it is military or not? The loop on top seems to be styled after the loop found on ff33 handsets.
regards,
Funksammler
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Kapseln designation is : Fg. mph. 56c
By Siemens designation "mph" was short for microphone = Mikrofon.
"Fg" abbrev mean Fernmeldegerät.
At the same time base has designation 11.Fg.tph.29b
Tph is short for telephone. While mph was a marking on sprechkapseln (microphone), tph was a marking on hörkapseln (earpiece).Last edited by Val; 01-25-2014, 05:27 PM.
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By design the capsule resembles so called "sound powered" or balanced armature telephone capsule which can be used both as telephone or microphone - it's just so sensitive that it can generate electrical signal just by sound without any external power. I think this item was used as a microphone.
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Mithörer for the Ftf.39 (and maybe used for the TF.38 as well). Uses the -almost- same capsule as the Festungsfernhörer.39 (megnetisch, Einzelteile). See here (from page 201.):
http://www.rkk-museum.ru/documents/a.../D796-1940.pdf
There were another two versions as well.
Csaba
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Originally posted by Val View Post... is it possible that you scan this D 796 Handbuch fully? It is very interesting, i'd like to read it fully.
I'm sure the book is still there, and if you are in touch with Alois you may try your luck yourself. I will go to Czech next coming Sunday (to Marienbad via Praha) and will be back to Moscow by early March. May try to contact Alois myself and see if I can help.
BTW the full list of Wehrmacht documentation originals Alois has in his possession contains 306 lines, and it seems that Werner Thote of Radeberg may have a copy of D796, too...
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