Make Inventions: Episode 4
Get your own Maker Camp Electronics Pack: https://www.makershed.com/products/ma... Find more at the Maker Shed: https://makershed.com Sometimes even famous inventors come up with ideas that don't turn out like they expected. Samuel Morse's first telegraph patented in 1840 was much more complex than the simple key that became common. The original device didn't require the sender to know a special code, they simply built messages from pre-made letters and fed them through the machine. In this episode of Make: Inventions I build Morse's original automated transmitter as well as a gravity-driven receiver that records Morse coded message to paper.

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Make Inventions: The Air bag

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Recreating an Ancient Pump (with no moving parts)

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how to make Morse key

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Perpetual Motion Generator: HOW DOES IT WORK?

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The Tragedy That Led Samuel Morse to Develop the Telegraph

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How did people talk before cell phones? | History Remade with Sabrina

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The Professor Who Taught People How To Think (1962)

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Using a 123 year old wireless telegraph machine! The first wireless tech in history!

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How To Build a Telegraph

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Build A Wooden Morse Key From Scrap Wood

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Wirtz pumps are really clever

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Incredible Street Performers – Caught on Camera

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How to make a simple Wireless Telegraph/Spark Gap Transmitter

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Build it: One dollar morse code key #HamradioQA

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Steam Speeder Locomotive Railroad Engine Boiler Pump Whistle. SOLD!

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Satisfying Machines Operating at an Insane Level

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Making a Simple Steam Engine

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The Weird Physics of Sandpaper (Why You’re Working Too Hard)

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Morse Code Telegraph Key: Development & History

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