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<h2> X. EDISON'S DYNAMO WORK </h2>
<p>AT the present writing, when, after the phenomenally rapid electrical
development of thirty years, we find on the market a great variety of
modern forms of efficient current generators advertised under the names of
different inventors (none, however, bearing the name of Edison), a young
electrical engineer of the present generation might well inquire whether
the great inventor had ever contributed anything to the art beyond a mere
TYPE of machine formerly made and bearing his name, but not now marketed
except second hand.</p>
<p>For adequate information he might search in vain the books usually
regarded as authorities on the subject of dynamo-electric machinery, for
with slight exceptions there has been a singular unanimity in the omission
of writers to give Edison credit for his great and basic contributions to
heavy-current technics, although they have been universally acknowledged
by scientific and practical men to have laid the foundation for the
efficiency of, and to be embodied in all modern generators of current.</p>
<p>It might naturally be expected that the essential facts of Edison's work
would appear on the face of his numerous patents on dynamo-electric
machinery, but such is not necessarily the case, unless they are carefully
studied in the light of the state of the art as it existed at the time.
While some of these patents (especially the earlier ones) cover specific
devices embodying fundamental principles that not only survive to the
present day, but actually lie at the foundation of the art as it now
exists, there is no revelation therein of Edison's preceding studies of
magnets, which extended over many years, nor of his later systematic
investigations and deductions.</p>
<p>Dynamo-electric machines of a primitive kind had been invented and were in
use to a very limited extent for arc lighting and electroplating for some
years prior to the summer of 1819, when Edison, with an embryonic lighting
SYSTEM in mind, cast about for a type of machine technically and
commercially suitable for the successful carrying out of his plans. He
found absolutely none. On the contrary, all of the few types then
obtainable were uneconomical, indeed wasteful, in regard to efficiency.
The art, if indeed there can be said to have been an art at that time, was
in chaotic confusion, and only because of Edison's many years' study of
the magnet was he enabled to conclude that insufficiency in quantity of
iron in the magnets of such machines, together with poor surface contacts,
rendered the cost of magnetization abnormally high. The heating of solid
armatures, the only kind then known, and poor insulation in the
commutators, also gave rise to serious losses. But perhaps the most
serious drawback lay in the high-resistance armature, based upon the
highest scientific dictum of the time that in order to obtain the maximum
amount of work from a machine, the internal resistance of the armature
must equal the resistance of the exterior circuit, although the
application of this principle entailed the useless expenditure of at least
50 per cent. of the applied energy.</p>
<p>It seems almost incredible that only a little over thirty years ago the
sum of scientific knowledge in regard to dynamo-electric machines was so
meagre that the experts of the period should settle upon such a dictum as
this, but such was the fact, as will presently appear. Mechanical
generators of electricity were comparatively new at that time; their
theory and practice were very imperfectly understood; indeed, it is quite
within the bounds of truth to say that the correct principles were
befogged by reason of the lack of practical knowledge of their actual use.
Electricians and scientists of the period had been accustomed for many
years past to look to the chemical battery as the source from which to
obtain electrical energy; and in the practical application of such energy
to telegraphy and kindred uses, much thought and ingenuity had been
expended in studying combinations of connecting such cells so as to get
the best results. In the text-books of the period it was stated as a
settled principle that, in order to obtain the maximum work out of a set
of batteries, the internal resistance must approximately equal the
resistance of the exterior circuit. This principle and its application in
practice were quite correct as regards chemical batteries, but not as
regards dynamo machines. Both were generators of electrical current, but
so different in construction and operation, that rules applicable to the
practical use of the one did not apply with proper commercial efficiency
to the other. At the period under consideration, which may be said to have
been just before dawn of the day of electric light, the philosophy of the
dynamo was seen only in mysterious, hazy outlines—just emerging from
the darkness of departing night. Perhaps it is not surprising, then, that
the dynamo was loosely regarded by electricians as the practical
equivalent of a chemical battery; that many of the characteristics of
performance of the chemical cell were also attributed to it, and that if
the maximum work could be gotten out of a set of batteries when the
internal and external resistances were equal (and this was commercially
the best thing to do), so must it be also with a dynamo.</p>
<p>It was by no miracle that Edison was far and away ahead of his time when
he undertook to improve the dynamo. He was possessed of absolute KNOWLEDGE
far beyond that of his contemporaries. This he ad acquired by the hardest
kind of work and incessant experiment with magnets of all kinds during
several years preceding, particularly in connection with his study of
automatic telegraphy. His knowledge of magnets was tremendous. He had
studied and experimented with electromagnets in enormous variety, and knew
their peculiarities in charge and discharge, lag, self-induction, static
effects, condenser effects, and the various other phenomena connected
therewith. He had also made collateral studies of iron, steel, and copper,
insulation, winding, etc. Hence, by reason of this extensive work and
knowledge, Edison was naturally in a position to realize the utter
commercial impossibility of the then best dynamo machine in existence,
which had an efficiency of only about 40 per cent., and was constructed on
the "cut-and-try" principle.</p>
<p>He was also naturally in a position to assume the task he set out to
accomplish, of undertaking to plan and-build an improved type of machine
that should be commercial in having an efficiency of at least 90 per cent.
Truly a prodigious undertaking in those dark days, when from the
standpoint of Edison's large experience the most practical and correct
electrical treatise was contained in the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and in
a German publication which Mr. Upton had brought with him after he had
finished his studies with the illustrious Helmholtz. It was at this period
that Mr. Upton commenced his association with Edison, bringing to the
great work the very latest scientific views and the assistance of the
higher mathematics, to which he had devoted his attention for several
years previously.</p>
<p>As some account of Edison's investigations in this connection has already
been given in Chapter XII of the narrative, we shall not enlarge upon them
here, but quote from An Historical Review, by Charles L. Clarke,
Laboratory Assistant at Menlo Park, 1880-81; Chief Engineer of the Edison
Electric Light Company, 1881-84:</p>
<p>"In June, 1879, was published the account of the Edison dynamo-electric
machine that survived in the art. This machine went into extensive
commercial use, and was notable for its very massive and powerful
field-magnets and armature of extremely low resistance as compared with
the combined external resistance of the supply-mains and lamps. By means
of the large masses of iron in the field-magnets, and closely fitted
joints between the several parts thereof, the magnetic resistance
(reluctance) of the iron parts of the magnetic circuit was reduced to a
minimum, and the required magnetization effected with the maximum economy.
At the same time Mr. Edison announced the commercial necessity of having
the armature of the dynamo of low resistance, as compared with the
external resistance, in order that a large percentage of the electrical
energy developed should be utilized in the lamps, and only a small
percentage lost in the armature, albeit this procedure reduced the total
generating capacity of the machine. He also proposed to make the
resistance of the supply-mains small, as compared with the combined
resistance of the lamps in multiple arc, in order to still further
increase the percentage of energy utilized in the lamps. And likewise to
this end the combined resistance of the generator armatures in multiple
arc was kept relatively small by adjusting the number of generators
operating in multiple at any time to the number of lamps then in use. The
field-magnet circuits of the dynamos were connected in multiple with a
separate energizing source; and the field-current; and strength of field,
were regulated to maintain the required amount of electromotive force upon
the supply-mains under all conditions of load from the maximum to the
minimum number of lamps in use, and to keep the electromotive force of all
machines alike."</p>
<p>Among the earliest of Edison's dynamo experiments were those relating to
the core of the armature. He realized at once that the heat generated in a
solid core was a prolific source of loss. He experimented with bundles of
iron wires variously insulated, also with sheet-iron rolled cylindrically
and covered with iron wire wound concentrically. These experiments and
many others were tried in a great variety of ways, until, as the result of
all this work, Edison arrived at the principle which has remained in the
art to this day. He split up the iron core of the armature into thin
laminations, separated by paper, thus practically suppressing Foucault
currents therein and resulting heating effect. It was in his machine also
that mica was used for the first time as an insulating medium in a
commutator. [27]</p>
<p>[Footnote 27: The commercial manufacture of built-up sheets<br/>
of mica for electrical purposes was first established at the<br/>
Edison Machine Works, Goerck Street, New York, in 1881.]<br/></p>
<p>Elementary as these principles will appear to the modern student or
engineer, they were denounced as nothing short of absurdity at the time of
their promulgation—especially so with regard to Edison's proposal to
upset the then settled dictum that the armature resistance should be equal
to the external resistance. His proposition was derided in the technical
press of the period, both at home and abroad. As public opinion can be
best illustrated by actual quotation, we shall present a characteristic
instance.</p>
<p>In the Scientific American of October 18, 1879, there appeared an
illustrated article by Mr. Upton on Edison's dynamo machine, in which
Edison's views and claims were set forth. A subsequent issue contained a
somewhat acrimonious letter of criticism by a well-known maker of dynamo
machines. At the risk of being lengthy, we must quote nearly all this
letter: "I can scarcely conceive it as possible that the article on the
above subject '(Edison's Electric Generator)' in last week's Scientific
American could have been written from statements derived from Mr. Edison
himself, inasmuch as so many of the advantages claimed for the machine
described and statements of the results obtained are so manifestly absurd
as to indicate on the part of both writer and prompter a positive want of
knowledge of the electric circuit and the principles governing the
construction and operation of electric machines.</p>
<p>"It is not my intention to criticise the design or construction of the
machine (not because they are not open to criticism), as I am now and have
been for many years engaged in the manufacture of electric machines, but
rather to call attention to the impossibility of obtaining the described
results without destroying the doctrine of the conservation and
correlation of forces.</p>
<p>. . . . .</p>
<p>"It is stated that 'the internal resistance of the armature' of this
machine 'is only 1/2 ohm.' On this fact and the disproportion between this
resistance and that of the external circuit, the theory of the alleged
efficiency of the machine is stated to be based, for we are informed that,
'while this generator in general principle is the same as in the best
well-known forms, still there is an all-important difference, which is
that it will convert and deliver for useful work nearly double the number
of foot-pounds that any other machine will under like conditions.'" The
writer of this critical letter then proceeds to quote Mr. Upton's
statement of this efficiency: "'Now the energy converted is distributed
over the whole resistance, hence if the resistance of the machine be
represented by 1 and the exterior circuit by 9, then of the total energy
converted nine-tenths will be useful, as it is outside of the machine, and
one-tenth is lost in the resistance of the machine.'"</p>
<p>After this the critic goes on to say:</p>
<p>"How any one acquainted with the laws of the electric circuit can make
such statements is what I cannot understand. The statement last quoted is
mathematically absurd. It implies either that the machine is CAPABLE OF
INCREASING ITS OWN ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE NINE TIMES WITHOUT AN INCREASED
EXPENDITURE OF POWER, or that external resistance is NOT resistance to the
current induced in the Edison machine.</p>
<p>"Does Mr. Edison, or any one for him, mean to say that r/n enables him to
obtain nE, and that C IS NOT = E / (r/n + R)? If so Mr. Edison has
discovered something MORE than perpetual motion, and Mr. Keely had better
retire from the field.</p>
<p>"Further on the writer (Mr. Upton) gives us another example of this mode
of reasoning when, emboldened and satisfied with the absurd theory above
exposed, he endeavors to prove the cause of the inefficiency of the
Siemens and other machines. Couldn't the writer of the article see that
since C = E/(r + R) that by R/n or by making R = r, the machine would,
according to his theory, have returned more useful current to the circuit
than could be due to the power employed (and in the ratio indicated), so
that there would actually be a creation of force! . . . .</p>
<p>"In conclusion allow me to say that if Mr Edison thinks he has
accomplished so much by the REDUCTION OF THE INTERNAL RESISTANCE of his
machine, that he has much more to do in this direction before his machine
will equal IN THIS RESPECT others already in the market."</p>
<p>Another participant in the controversy on Edison's generator was a
scientific gentleman, who in a long article published in the Scientific
American, in November, 1879, gravely undertook to instruct Edison in the A
B C of electrical principles, and then proceeded to demonstrate
mathematically the IMPOSSIBILITY of doing WHAT EDISON HAD ACTUALLY DONE.
This critic concludes with a gentle rebuke to the inventor for ill-timed
jesting, and a suggestion to furnish AUTHENTIC information!</p>
<p>In the light of facts, as they were and are, this article is so full of
humor that we shall indulge in a few quotations It commences in A B C
fashion as follows: "Electric machines convert mechanical into electrical
energy.... The ratio of yield to consumption is the expression of the
efficiency of the machine.... How many foot-pounds of electricity can be
got out of 100 foot-pounds of mechanical energy? Certainly not more than
100: certainly less.... The facts and laws of physics, with the assistance
of mathematical logic, never fail to furnish precious answers to such
questions."</p>
<p>The would-be critic then goes on to tabulate tests of certain other dynamo
machines by a committee of the Franklin Institute in 1879, the results of
which showed that these machines returned about 50 per cent. of the
applied mechanical energy, ingenuously remarking: "Why is it that when we
have produced the electricity, half of it must slip away? Some persons
will be content if they are told simply that it is a way which electricity
has of behaving. But there is a satisfactory rational explanation which I
believe can be made plain to persons of ordinary intelligence. It ought to
be known to all those who are making or using machines. I am grieved to
observe that many persons who talk and write glibly about electricity do
not understand it; some even ignore or deny the fact to be explained."</p>
<p>Here follows HIS explanation, after which he goes on to say: "At this
point plausibly comes in a suggestion that the internal part of the
circuit be made very small and the external part very large. Why not (say)
make the internal part 1 and the external 9, thus saving nine-tenths and
losing only one-tenth? Unfortunately, the suggestion is not practical; a
fallacy is concealed in it."</p>
<p>He then goes on to prove his case mathematically, to his own satisfaction,
following it sadly by condoling with and a warning to Edison: "But about
Edison's electric generator! . . . No one capable of making the
improvements in the telegraph and telephone, for which we are indebted to
Mr. Edison, could be other than an accomplished electrician. His
reputation as a scientist, indeed, is smirched by the newspaper
exaggerations, and no doubt he will be more careful in future. But there
is a danger nearer home, indeed, among his own friends and in his very
household.</p>
<p>". . . The writer of page 242" (the original article) "is probably a
friend of Mr. Edison, but possibly, alas! a wicked partner. Why does he
say such things as these? 'Mr. Edison claims that he realizes 90 per cent.
of the power applied to this machine in external work.' . . . Perhaps the
writer is a humorist, and had in his mind Colonel Sellers, etc., which he
could not keep out of a serious discussion; but such jests are not good.</p>
<p>"Mr. Edison has built a very interesting machine, and he has the
opportunity of making a valuable contribution to the electrical arts by
furnishing authentic accounts of its capabilities."</p>
<p>The foregoing extracts are unavoidably lengthy, but, viewed in the light
of facts, serve to illustrate most clearly that Edison's conceptions and
work were far and away ahead of the comprehension of his contemporaries in
the art, and that his achievements in the line of efficient dynamo design
and construction were indeed truly fundamental and revolutionary in
character. Much more of similar nature to the above could be quoted from
other articles published elsewhere, but the foregoing will serve as
instances generally representing all. In the controversy which appeared in
the columns of the Scientific American, Mr. Upton, Edison's mathematician,
took up the question on his side, and answered the critics by further
elucidations of the principles on which Edison had founded such remarkable
and radical improvements in the art. The type of Edison's first
dynamo-electric machine, the description of which gave rise to the above
controversy, is shown in Fig. 1.</p>
<p>Any account of Edison's work on the dynamo would be incomplete did it omit
to relate his conception and construction of the great direct-connected
steam-driven generator that was the prototype of the colossal units which
are used throughout the world to-day.</p>
<p>In the demonstrating plant installed and operated by him at Menlo Park in
1880 ten dynamos of eight horse-power each were driven by a slow-speed
engine through a complicated system of counter-shafting, and, to quote
from Mr. Clarke's Historical Review, "it was found that a considerable
percentage of the power of the engine was necessarily wasted in friction
by this method of driving, and to prevent this waste and thus increase the
economy of his system, Mr. Edison conceived the idea of substituting a
single large dynamo for the several small dynamos, and directly coupling
it with the driving engine, and at the same time preserve the requisite
high armature speed by using an engine of the high-speed type. He also
expected to realize still further gains in economy from the use of a large
dynamo in place of several small machines by a more than correspondingly
lower armature resistance, less energy for magnetizing the field, and for
other minor reasons. To the same end, he intended to supply steam to the
engine under a much higher boiler pressure than was customary in
stationary-engine driving at that time."</p>
<p>The construction of the first one of these large machines was commenced
late in the year 1880. Early in 1881 it was completed and tested, but some
radical defects in armature construction were developed, and it was also
demonstrated that a rate of engine speed too high for continuously safe
and economical operation had been chosen. The machine was laid aside. An
accurate illustration of this machine, as it stood in the engine-room at
Menlo Park, is given in Van Nostrand's Engineering Magazine, Vol. XXV,
opposite page 439, and a brief description is given on page 450.</p>
<p>With the experience thus gained, Edison began, in the spring of 1881, at
the Edison Machine Works, Goerck Street, New York City, the construction
of the first successful machine of this type. This was the great machine
known as "Jumbo No. 1," which is referred to in the narrative as having
been exhibited at the Paris International Electrical Exposition, where it
was regarded as the wonder of the electrical world. An intimation of some
of the tremendous difficulties encountered in the construction of this
machine has already been given in preceding pages, hence we shall not now
enlarge on the subject, except to note in passing that the terribly
destructive effects of the spark of self-induction and the arcing
following it were first manifested in this powerful machine, but were
finally overcome by Edison after a strenuous application of his powers to
the solution of the problem.</p>
<p>It may be of interest, however, to mention some of its dimensions and
electrical characteristics, quoting again from Mr. Clarke: "The
field-magnet had eight solid cylindrical cores, 8 inches in diameter and
57 inches long, upon each of which was wound an exciting-coil of 3.2 ohms
resistance, consisting of 2184 turns of No. 10 B. W. G. insulated copper
wire, disposed in six layers. The laminated iron core of the armature,
formed of thin iron disks, was 33 3/4 inches long, and had an internal
diameter of 12 1/2 inches, and an external diameter of 26 7/16 inches. It
was mounted on a 6-inch shaft. The field-poles were 33 3/4 inches long,
and 27 1/2 inches inside diameter The armature winding consisted of 146
copper bars on the face of the core, connected into a closed-coil winding
by means of 73 copper disks at each end of the core. The cross-sectional
area of each bar was 0.2 square inch their average length was 42.7 inches,
and the copper end-disks were 0.065 inch thick. The commutator had 73
sections. The armature resistance was 0.0092 ohm, [28] of which 0.0055 ohm
was in the armature bars and 0.0037 ohm in the end-disks." An illustration
of the next latest type of this machine is presented in Fig. 2.</p>
<p>[Footnote 28: Had Edison in Upton's Scientific American<br/>
article in 1879 proposed such an exceedingly low armature<br/>
resistance for this immense generator (although its ratio<br/>
was proportionate to the original machine), his critics<br/>
might probably have been sufficiently indignant as to be<br/>
unable to express themselves coherently.]<br/></p>
<p>The student may find it interesting to look up Edison's United States
Patents Nos. 242,898, 263,133, 263,146, and 246,647, bearing upon the
construction of the "Jumbo"; also illustrated articles in the technical
journals of the time, among which may be mentioned: Scientific American,
Vol. XLV, page 367; Engineering, London, Vol. XXXII, pages 409 and 419,
The Telegraphic Journal and Electrical Review, London, Vol. IX, pages
431-433, 436-446; La Nature, Paris, 9th year, Part II, pages 408-409;
Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Elektricitaatslehre, Munich and Leipsic, Vol.
IV, pages 4-14; and Dredge's Electric Illumination, 1882, Vol. I, page
261.</p>
<p>The further development of these great machines later on, and their
extensive practical use, are well known and need no further comment,
except in passing it may be noted that subsequent machines had each a
capacity of 1200 lamps of 16 candle-power, and that the armature
resistance was still further reduced to 0.0039 ohm.</p>
<p>Edison's clear insight into the future, as illustrated by his persistent
advocacy of large direct-connected generating units, is abundantly
vindicated by present-day practice. His Jumbo machines, of 175
horse-power, so enormous for their time, have served as prototypes, and
have been succeeded by generators which have constantly grown in size and
capacity until at this time (1910) it is not uncommon to employ such
generating units of a capacity of 14,000 kilowatts, or about 18,666
horse-power.</p>
<p>We have not entered into specific descriptions of the many other forms of
dynamo machines invented by Edison, such as the multipolar, the disk
dynamo, and the armature with two windings, for sub-station distribution;
indeed, it is not possible within our limited space to present even a
brief digest of Edison's great and comprehensive work on the
dynamo-electric machine, as embodied in his extensive experiments and in
over one hundred patents granted to him. We have, therefore, confined
ourselves to the indication of a few salient and basic features, leaving
it to the interested student to examine the patents and the technical
literature of the long period of time over which Edison's labors were
extended.</p>
<p>Although he has not given any attention to the subject of generators for
many years, an interesting instance of his incisive method of overcoming
minor difficulties occurred while the present volumes were under
preparation (1909). Carbon for commutator brushes has been superseded by
graphite in some cases, the latter material being found much more
advantageous, electrically. Trouble developed, however, for the reason
that while carbon was hard and would wear away the mica insulation
simultaneously with the copper, graphite, being softer, would wear away
only the copper, leaving ridges of mica and thus causing sparking through
unequal contact. At this point Edison was asked to diagnose the trouble
and provide a remedy. He suggested the cutting out of the mica pieces
almost to the bottom, leaving the commutator bars separated by air-spaces.
This scheme was objected to on the ground that particles of graphite would
fill these air-spaces and cause a short-circuit. His answer was that the
air-spaces constituted the value of his plan, as the particles of graphite
falling into them would be thrown out by the action of centrifugal force
as the commutator revolved. And thus it occurred as a matter of fact, and
the trouble was remedied. This idea was subsequently adopted by a great
manufacturer of generators.</p>
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