- The
diaphone is a
noisemaking device best
known for its use as a foghorn: It can
produce deep,
powerful tones, able to
carry a long distance. Although...
-
because the
diaphone is
voiced to
imitate a reed stop, the
transition from reed to
diaphone cannot be detected. (For
several decades,
diaphone technology...
- pressures. The
diaphone is
usually found at 16' and 32' pitches,
however there are a few
examples of 8'
diaphones.
There are two 32'
Diaphones in Philadelphia's...
-
precursor to RACON. From the
early 20th
century an
improved device called the
diaphone,
originally invented as an
organ stop by
Robert Hope-Jones and developed...
- for
words like
eight (⫽ex⫽).
Diaphonology studies the
realization of
diaphones across dialects, and is
important if an
orthography is to be adequate...
-
Diaphone is a
genus of
moths of the
family Noctuidae.
Diaphone angolensis Weymer, 1901
Diaphone delamarei Viette, 1962
Diaphone eumela (Stoll, [1782])...
-
Diaphone eumela, the
cherry spot or lily borer, is a moth of the
family Noctuidae. It is
found in Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia,
South Africa and Angola...
- Peninsula. The plant's main
parasite is the lily
borer Brithys crini and/or
Diaphone eumela.
Amaryllis belladonna was
introduced into
cultivation at the beginning...
-
Diaphone pipe...
- air to the
diaphone itself,
mounted behind its trumpet-like
emitter which protruded through the window.
Admission of air into the
diaphone was controlled...