Basically like talking into an arc welder! We've come a long way.. Hopefully there were no fried lips back then!
Should have been OK unless the cooling pump stopped! At the time, the only way to create a continuous carrier wave was with an "arc transmitter" that is more-or-less exactly what it sounds like, a spark gap transmitter that created and quenched a giant high power spark at a roughly fixed frequency , like an arc lamp. Before that, spark transmitters worked only in morse code by turning the arc on and off. Someone noticed that if you blew air into the arc it changed the amplitude of the "buzz", that was the idea behind the arc phone. This was well before anything like the exotic high-tech "vacuum tube".
Regarding the politics, obviously my post was not political and I think you are reading a lot more than intended to the comment about politics, it wasn't directed at me as far as I can tell. In fact, I have been studiously avoiding the obvious opportunities to say "I told you so" here and I note that the usual instigators have been unusually silent regarding two blindingly obvious "areas" for comment. That's presumably because the usual instigators were proven definitively *wrong* in virtually their every comment. And also proving that only one "side" were instigating, the rest of us just wanting to talk about model airplanes (or radio history) but were also unwilling to be attacked without a response.
Brett
p.s the most important radio designs and techniques were all invented by ONE GUY! Howard Armstrong invented the Regenerative receiver (greatly increasing the performance and greatly simplifying the design of early radio receivers), the super-regenerative receiver (a vast improvement over the regenerative receiver to the point it was possible to build them for reasonable prices by the tens of millions), the Super-Heterodyne receiver (increasing the performance again and greatly simplifying them again, and the basis for virtually every current radio system, including your cell phone and WiFi), and FM (greatly improving the fidelity, also still used in all sorts of things today). He ended up jumping out a window in frustration of some personal failings while suing RCA over FM, his widow kept the case going for decades and finally won. He was also sued by a borderline huckster named Lee DeForest who "invented" the first amplifying vacuum tube, he ultimately lost in court, but in his testimony, he was the first to explain to everyone, including the supposed "inventor", how it actually worked.
p.p.s Hedy Lamarr did get a patent for a sort of idea vaguely related to "spread spectrum" radio techniques intended to guide torpedos, but definitely *did not invent anything closely related to current cell phone spread-spectrum radio", despite what you may have heard.