Fork, tuning

Use this image

Can I reuse this image without permission? Yes

Object images on the Ingenium Collection’s portal have the following Creative Commons license:

Copyright Ingenium / CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

ATTRIBUTE THIS IMAGE

Ingenium, 2009.0005.004
Permalink:

Ingenium is releasing this image under the Creative Commons licensing framework, and encourages downloading and reuse for non-commercial purposes. Please acknowledge Ingenium and cite the artifact number.

DOWNLOAD IMAGE

PURCHASE THIS IMAGE

This image is free for non-commercial use.

For commercial use, please consult our Reproduction Fees and contact us to purchase the image.

OBJECT TYPE
demonstration/mounted/512 Hz/1024 VS
DATE
1890
ARTIFACT NUMBER
2009.0005.004
MANUFACTURER
Koenig, Rudolph
MODEL
UT4
LOCATION
Paris, France

More Information


General Information

Serial #
N/A
Part Number
4
Total Parts
7
AKA
N/A
Patents
N/A
General Description
ferrous metal fork/ wood box/ non-ferrous metal nut/ paper? label

Dimensions

Note: These reflect the general size for storage and are not necessarily representative of the object's true dimensions.

Length
N/A
Width
N/A
Height
N/A
Thickness
N/A
Weight
N/A
Diameter
N/A
Volume
N/A

Lexicon

Group
Physics
Category
Acoustics
Sub-Category
N/A

Manufacturer

AKA
Koenig
Country
France
State/Province
Unknown
City
Paris

Context

Country
Canada
State/Province
Unknown
Period
late 19th century +
Canada
A piece of French made equipment from the original laboratories of one of Canada's premier research schools. These apparatus derive from the earliest days of physics teaching at Western University in London (1920s). In the late nineteenth century, Canadian scientists such as J.C. McLennan (Canada's first PhD in physics in 1900, U of T) learned the basics of physics using these apparatus. The maker, Rudolph Koenig, was influential in helping Prof. James Loudon establish the first teaching laboratory in Canada in the 1870s and 80s, which was emulated at other schools such as Queen's, Western and McGill. These particular apparatus were probably obtained c. 1920 by Raymond Compton Dearle, who had done a PHD at the University of Toronto under J.C. McLennan. The French connection is also significant. In the late nineteenth century, every college and university in Canada and the United States bought instruments from Paris. They were deemed an essential part of early research and teaching. In the early 1870s, shortly after arriving in Boston, Alexander Bell used the Koenig instruments at MIT for his research on visible speech. He was particularly impressed with the manometric flame instruments and went out of his way to meet Koenig at the 1876 Exhibition in Philadelphia.
Function
An instrument which, when struck, audibly reproduces a note of a definite pitch. This is one of a series of tuning forks, mounted on resonsnce boxes, based on the harmonics of the fundamental ut2, used to demonstrate that one could sympathetically excite a harmonic series with the base note, ut2.
Technical
These tuning forks by Koenig were the highest precision of their day, which were used to standardize pitch across North America and Europe, as well as for precision timing apparatus in physics experiments. This series of forks is based on the harmonics of the fundamental ut2 and demonstrated that one could sympathetically excite a harmonic series with the base note, ut2. Acoustical demonstrations were an enormously popular part of basic science and physics education during the nineteenth century. They were the foundation of fundamental studies in physics, musicology and psychology. Teaching laboratories and conservatories across Europe and North America had large acoustical collections for demonstrating and experimenting with sound phenomena; acoustical instruments were also used extensively for public lectures on "the science of musical sounds." In addition to basic science, physics and psychology, Koenig's acoustical instruments stimulated inventions related to the telephone and phonograph. Alexander Graham Bell used Koenig's manometric and graphical instruments to study "visible speech." Rudolph Koenig (1832-1901) was the most prolific and influential acoustical maker of the nineteenth century. He pioneered graphical and optical acoustics and perfected the making of tuning forks. He began work as a violin maker for J.B. Vuillaume and moved into the precision instrument trade in Paris during its height (1830-1880). His workshop on Quai d'Anjou, which was based on the master artisan model, was a popular meeting place in Paris for scientists, musicians, physicians and science agents.
Area Notes
Unknown

Details

Markings
indented lettering on tuning fork reads 'UT4/ 1024 VS/ K'/ indented black lettering on box reads 'UT4/ RUDOLPH KOENIG/ À PARIS'/ hand written lettering on box reads '512'; handwritten label reads '511.8'/ white stenciled lettering on box side reads 'P263.16'
Missing
rubber feet or padding
Finish
metallic tuning fork/ light brown wood grain veneer attached to box top, mahogany finish veneer to sides and ends/ white label
Decoration
N/A

CITE THIS OBJECT

If you choose to share our information about this collection object, please cite:

Koenig, Rudolph, Fork, tuning, circa 1890, Artifact no. 2009.0005, Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation, http://collection.ingeniumcanada.org/en/id/2009.0005.004/

FEEDBACK

Submit a question or comment about this artifact.

More Like This


...
Resonator

2009.0005.007

Object

...
Fork, tuning

2009.0005.002

Object

...
Fork, tuning

2009.0005.003

Object

...
Fork, tuning

2009.0005.005

Object

...
Fork, tuning

2009.0005.001

Object

...
Fork, tuning

2009.0005.006

Object

...
Pipe, organ

2009.0006.001

Object

...
Fork, tuning

2009.0009.001

Object

...
Analyser, aco…

2009.0004.001

Object

...
Fork, tuning

2009.0008.001

Object

...
Tuning fork a…

2009.0007.001

Object

No image available.
Resonator

1998.0246.002

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0248.002

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0247.006

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0247.007

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0247.001

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0247.002

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0247.003

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0247.004

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0247.005

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0248.001

Object

...
Resonator

1998.0246.001

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1998.0249.001

Object

...
Bracket

1998.0273.013

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0263.001

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0251.001

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0251.002

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0261.001

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0260.001

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0250.002

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0250.001

Object

...
Bar, unidenti…

1998.0273.012

Object

No image available.
Pipe

1998.0262.002

Object

...
Stand

1998.0244.006

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0244.005

Object

...
Pipe

1998.0262.001

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0252.002

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0252.005

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0252.004

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0252.006

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0254.001

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0246.004

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0246.003

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0252.003

Object

...
Plate, Chladni

1998.0244.002

Object

No image available.
Plate, Chladni

1998.0244.003

Object

...
Plate, Chladni

1998.0244.004

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0255.001

Object

...
Pipe, organ

1998.0253.001

Object

...
Plate, Chladni

1998.0244.001

Object

...
Pipe set, org…

1998.0252.001

Object

...
Analyser part

2009.0004.002

Object

...
Analyser part

2009.0004.004

Object

...
Analyser part

2009.0004.003

Object

...
Disk, siren

1998.0245.001

Object

...
Fork, tuning

1993.0271.001

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0273.002

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0273.003

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0273.004

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0273.005

Object

...
Stand

1998.0273.006

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0273.007

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0273.008

Object

No image available.
Stand

1998.0273.009

Object

...
Stand

1998.0273.014

Object

...
Magnet, induc…

1998.0239.001

Object

...
Holder, prism

1998.0273.010

Object

No image available.
Holder, prism

1998.0273.011

Object

...
Stand

1998.0273.001

Object

No image available.
Weight, tunin…

2009.0008.007

Object

No image available.
Weight, tunin…

2009.0008.003

Object

No image available.
Weight, tunin…

2009.0008.005

Object

...
Weight, tunin…

2009.0008.006

Object

...
Weight, tunin…

2009.0008.002

Object

...
Weight, tunin…

2009.0008.004

Object

No image available.
Magnet

1998.0239.002

Object

...
Transformer

1984.1101.002

Object

...
Demonstrator,…

1984.1101.001

Object

No image available.
Prism, multip…

1998.0269.002

Object

No image available.
Prism, multip…

1998.0269.003

Object

...
Lens

1998.0265.001

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.013

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.023

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.024

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.025

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.026

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.051

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.078

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.055

Object

No image available.
Cover, instru…

1998.0231.002

Object

...
Wave motion a…

1971.0252.001

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.071

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.072

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.015

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.017

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.075

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.073

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.074

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.068

Object

No image available.
Demonstrator …

1992.2419.069

Object