Development of the TM was initiated by colonel
Gustave-Auguste Ferrié, chief of French long-distance military communications (
Télégraphie Militaire). Ferrié and his closest associate
Henri Abraham were well informed about American research in radio and vacuum technology. They knew that
Lee de Forest's
audion and the British gas-filled lamp designed by
H. J. Round were too unstable and unreliable for military service, and that
Irving Langmuir's
pliotron was too complex and expensive for mass production. Shortly after the outbreak of
World War I, a former
Telefunken employee returning from the United States briefed Ferrié on the progress made in Germany and delivered samples of the latest American triodes, but again none of them met the demands of the Army. The problems were traced to insufficiently hard
vacuum. Following suggestions made by Langmuire, Ferrié made a strategically correct decision to refine industrial
vacuum pump technology that could guarantee sufficiently hard vacuum in mass production. The future French triode needed to be reliable, reproducible and inexpensive. In October 1914 Ferrié dispatched Abraham and Michel Peri to Grammont incandescent lamp plant in
Lyon. Abraham and Peri started with copying American designs. As was expected, the audion was unreliable and unstable, the pliotron and the first three original French prototypes were too complex. By trial and error, Abraham and Peri developed a simpler and inexpensive configuration. Their fourth prototype, which had vertically placed electrode assembly, was selected for mass production and was manufactured by Grammont from February to October of 1915. This triode, known as the
Abraham tube, did not pass the test of field service: many tubes were damaged during transportation. Ferrié instructed Peri to fix the problem, and two days later Peri and Jacques Biguet presented a modified design, with horizontally placed electrode assembly and the novel four-pin
Type A socket (the original Abraham tube used an
Edison screw with two additional flexible wires). In November 1915 the new triode was pressed into production and became known as the TM after the French service that developed it. Work by Ferrié and Abraham was nominated for the 1916
Nobel Prize in Physics. However, the
patent was granted solely to Peri and Biguet, causing future legal disputes. == Design and specifications ==