Brush Development Company
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brush Development Company's main business in 1943 was the production of piezoelectric phonograph pickups. They also produced magnetic tape sound recorders using hardened steel tape as the recording medium in cooperation with Western Electric, the manufacturing division of American Telephone and Telegraph.
Another of their products was wire recorders. These used ferromagnetic stainless steel wire, with a composition similar to high carbon high chromium cutlery steel as the recording medium. The recording head was a split ring, with the wire running in a groove in the head, quite similar to the heads used today. High frequency ac bias was used to linearize the recording. The ferritic stainless steel was quite strong. Diamond dies were required to draw it into wire.
The Brush Vice President for Research, Dr.S. J. Begun, obtained a contract from the National Defense Research Council to perform research and development on a substitute for the stainless steel wire. The work was justified by the military use of the recorders and the shortage of facilities for producing the diamond dies. It resulted in the production through work at Battelle Memorial Institute of iron oxide magnetic recording tape of exceptional quality.
[edit] Source
- Gerard M. Foley. personal recollections of work sponsored at Battelle Memorial Institute by Brush 1943-1945.