Telaupad
Telaupad is the contemporary British term for headphones used in a variety of shipboard applications, often in Fire Control tasks where the operator had to keep his hands free and be attentive to a remote source of information and command.
Form Factor
Telaupads where essentially large headphones, often with a good effort made at isolating the wearer from external sound.
In time, some telaupad users were also given microphones so they had a complete hands-free means of communicating bidirectionally.
Application
Sightsetters were ideal candidates for wearing telaupads, particularly in the days before F.T.P. sights came into service, or in smaller ships or ships whose secondary batteries could not receive timely outfits of specialised hardware. It required very little engineering and fuss to wire up a ship so a telaupad could be tethered fairly near each gun.
In 1912, a new pattern of receiver (the earphone) was to be made available, the Pattern 555. It featured naval brass for the case and a cable clamp that removed strain from the terminals.[3]
See Also
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