The sphygmograph however, had to be attached
directly to the wrist. By 1862 Marey had devised
a way of transmitting movement through the air.
He stretched a rubber membrane tightly over a
tiny metal drum and connected it by hollow
rubber tubing to another attached to a stylus.
Any impulse given to the first "tambour", as the
metal drums were called, was directly
transmitted to the second and to the stylus
marking the smoke-blackened cylinder.