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The Library of Work and Play: Electricity and Its Everyday Uses
Author: John F. Woodhull Genre: LiteratureThe Library of Work and Play: Electricity and Its Everyday Uses
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away, which furnish the electric light in our apartment. So I t
n concentrated at a central station, and its power was merely transmitted to the trains by means of electricity. The trains were, therefore, run by steam power quite as much as ever. In like manner, the surface cars of New York a few years ago were run by a cable, which was merely a very long belt used to transmit to the cars the power of steam-engines located at a central station. When they were changed to electric cars, electricity became the successful rival of nothing else than a twisted wire cable. The cars still run by steam power as before, but that power is transmitted by electricity instead of the discarded cable. Steam has driven out the horse as a power for drawing street cars, and electricity has enabled us to gather all the steam engines into central stations, where now they are furnishing the power for moving surface, elevated, and subw
hem in the telephone the night before. "I shall try to show you before we get through," I said, "that these dynamos are doing something which makes iron
gh energy to supply 5? horse-power for an hour. (Written for short 5? H.P.H.) One ton of coal is capable of furnishing (2,000 × 5?) 11,500 H.P.H. Forty tons would yield 460,000 H.P.H. But the best furnaces, boi
ame chiefly from wood. They lived in cold houses, attended cold churches and schools, did not ride in steam or electric cars, and did not have power plants. Our wood is nearly all gone, our coal is going, and we are very rapidly growing more depe
r part of the energy of the coal which we now waste, and tha
ne thousand seven hundred times the volume of the water. We compel it to expand through the cylinders of the steam-engine, using its force of expansion to make wheels go around-to make the dynamo revolve. These dynamos are not devices
horse-power. You boys each weigh about half as much as I do, and if one of you walks up the same stairs in one minute you exert half the power that I do, or if you run up the stairs in half a minute you exert the same power, that is, one quarter of a horse-power. When we three walk up together in one minute we exert one half horse-power. If
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t power, some of which goes to that elevator; and standing beside it is another waiting to be used when necessary. Examining these dynamos, we find that they are composed
g.
s a fixed ring of iron, portions of which are surrounded by insulated copper conductors. Ordinarily the ring which is stationary is called 'the field,' and the wheel, which rotates, is called 'the armature,' although these terms are sometimes reversed for certain reasons. The movable part in these machines rotates a
questions they asked were entirely without thought. "What is inside of it?" "Simply more iron and copper, such as you see on the surface," I replied. "But what makes it go?" "The steam engines, of course, four of which you see, are coupled directly to each dynamo." "But where does it get its electricity?" "Don't forget that you are lookin
Whether one may say they were thinking or not I can