History-Triumph of AC. 2. The Battle of The Currents PDF
History-Triumph of AC. 2. The Battle of The Currents PDF
History-Triumph of AC. 2. The Battle of The Currents PDF
Carl L. Sulzberger
Westinghouse AC
Power Systems
The seven U.S. patent applications filed by Nicola Tesla
in late 1887 comprised a
comprehensive ac system of
generators,
transformers,
transmission lines, polyphase
motors, and lighting. When
the enterprising Pittsburgh
industrialist George Westinghouse, recognizing the value
of Teslas work, purchased
the seven patents and
employed Tesla to further
develop ac power systems,
the Westinghouse Electric
Company equipped itself to
manufacture and market
advanced, complete ac power
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systems. This set the stage for an industrial war to determine whether Edisons
dc or Westinghouses ac would be the
electric supply technology to power the
massive industrial development that
began in the last years of the 19th century and continues to the present.
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animals to demonstrate
the effects of ac. He
also urged the New
York Board of Electrical Control to prohibit
ac voltages of more
than 300 V. While
maintaining that lowvoltage dc was perfectly
safe, he condemned ac
voltages over 300 V as
being damnable. Edison himself spoke in
favor of banning the use
of ac altogether or at
least limiting voltages
to no more than 300 V.
At about the same
time, Brown was instrumental in causing New
York State to replace
hanging with electrocution by ac as its method
of carrying out capital
punishment. While it
was argued that electrocution would be painless and instant because
electric energy travels at
the speed of light, it was
not known how high a
voltage or current was
needed to kill or the
mechanism and speed
of electricity passing through a human
body. One of the first electric chairs was
installed at the Auburn State Prison in
upstate New York. It utilized a used Westinghouse
generator
clandestinely
acquired by Brown with the financial
backing of the Edison interests. Westinghouse would not willingly or knowingly
supply the generators for the New York
electric chairs. The first electrocution,
that of convicted axe-murderer William
Kemmler, was conducted on 6 August
1890. Because of poor voltage regulation, the execution was reportedly a grisly affair. Kemmler was first subjected to
1,300 V ac for a period of 17 seconds.
When it was discovered that he was still
alive, he was then administered about
2,000 V ac until his body began to smolder and burn. This second charge proved
lethal. Westinghousing was suggested
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Polyphase AC Systems
Come of Age
As the battle of the currents cooled in
the early 1890s, Westinghouse continued
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Westinghouse
turned the 1893
Worlds Fair
buildings and
fairgrounds into
a city of light,
demonstrating
that ac systems
were both practical and available.
development of the Niagara Falls Project. Man had long sought to harness the
vast power of the Niagara River at Niagara Falls. In 1886, the Cataract Construction Company was granted a charter
to use the equivalent of 120,000 horsepower of the Niagara flow. Plans to create an industrial city along the river bank
to utilize the water power were abandoned because of the lack of sufficient
available land for such purpose.
In 1890, the International Niagara
Commission was formed with Sir
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Epilogue
In the industrial world of 1880, the use
of electrical energy was virtually
unknown. Mechanical power, generally
using muscle power, water, or steam as
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Niagara Falls Power Station no. 2, ca. 1905. (Photo courtesy of the Smithsonian
Institution.)
Further Reading
J.D. Ryder and D. G. Fink, Engineers
and Electrons; A Century of Electrical
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