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Dept. 37,
CHIEF EXGIXEER.
439 Cass
St.,
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My
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July,
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161
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162
July.
1917
MRTTMESGllfbr
More EleclViciang
Without the help of trained electricians on our battleships, in the army and in the thousands of manufacturing and transportation industries behind the fighting line the United States cannot hope to win the
for the thousands of new positions in the
war. ]\Iore young men must be found and trained
electrical field.
Send the coupon below for full particulars. Hundreds and thousands of Expert Electricians are giving up their positions to become soldiers.
Their places must be filled quickly. The work
they have been doing cannot wait for their return. If you cannot fight at the front, it is your duty to prepare
yourself
to help at home
not only with your hands but with a trained
mind and a trained skill. The President says our production and efficiency must
your efficiency. Don't shirk your duty. Do
be doubled. He means
NOW', for your country's sake, what you might not do for your own sake.
Fit yourself for important, vitally essential work as an Expert Electrician.
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WITH DUM.MV ANTENNA
By Frank
HOW
165
166
UAV
Part
Marcus
S.
The
171
172
173
'
'.'.'.'.'.
174
176
179
180
OUESTION POX
1S2
waste basket.
at his desk in Washington is human
and consequently weak. Try as he may, he will pay more
attention to a neatly typed letter, than to a scrawly penciled note. A correctly drawn sketch will at least arouse
a passing interest, whereas a misshapen free-hand pencil design, will rarely fetch a spark of enthusiasm.
The inventor would not dream of running to the War
Department in armsleeves. imkempt, unshaven and in a
soiled and torn shirt.
Ijut he insists on sending the
child of his brain just that way.
If you have an idea that you think is worthy, this is
grave
Now
in a
the
man
New York
year In
and
ta
puhli'^tit
on the
Irlth
nf each
monUv
at
2^.3
8.
THK KXI'KRIMKNTER
All
to
2.?:^
194
195
196
199
201
203
204
208
209
210
its
190
I.
i=^^^
War
189
By Samuel Cohen
167
168
169
170
186
Banks
story of Archie
'.
C. Perkins
'.
"nEVER' SEE^:
HOW lyE'sUBMARINE CAN'Hif 'a SHIP'lf
By H. Winfield Secor
By
WEIGHT?.
A. R. McPherson
POSSESS
DOES RADIANT MGIIT
...........
WAR AND RADIO IN THE MOVIES.....
By
H. Gernsback
ON
LAND
U S BATTLESHIPS TO RUN
the" marvels ok RADIO-ACTIVITY
v,'-;By Icrome
New York
1917
...li..nt C
OLD U. &. UATrLESUll-S TO THK FRONT
From a paintinB by deorRC Wall
LOCATING AND UESTKOYING SUBMARINES WITH A REU
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the
the way
that the
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YOU
what
ning to
know
few Nothings.
AND MAKE
BOTH
away from
its
poles.
H.
GERNSBACK.
A special rate
contrilmtlons are paid for on publication.
good photoKraplis accompanyinp them are highly desirable,
TTTE
the
and
second-class matter at
TlUe registered U. S.
The content! of this
must not be reproduced without giving full credit to the
163
Is
New York
Omce
Patent
at Brentano's. 37
Is
164
At
July.
1917
Last!
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in-
the
Number 3
July, 1917
51
Subm arines
EDITC7R
A550Z\UT EDITOR
As may be imagined,
far as
the experiment-
public
the
experiments,
actual
sub-
make
details
and results accomplished, but the following outline of the method now under
consideration will be of great interest
to the public.
Inasmuch as
of
with
Red Light
Not Locate the Submerged, Yet Always Dangerous. Enemy Submarines by Continually Flashing a Powerful Red Searchllqht Beam
Beam, the
Back and Forth Thru and Under the Water. Asks a Yankee Genius. Once a "Bulge" Is Spotted (Day or Night) in the Light
Observer on the Mast Signals That Fact to the Gun Crews. Consequence as Soon as the Periscope Appears the Already Trained Guns
Open Fire. The Spotting Range Is Over Two Miles, Day or Night.
Why
then the greatest worry of cargo steamship captains will be over, for when the
"sub's" location
is
the
the
if
submarine
fact
that
over
it
is
by some means
made known to
surface
hidden
the
vessels
is
from view,
exact
location
cape.
In seeking methods to be employed
for certain purposes, inventors and experimenters frequently turn to the five
senses when beginning the solution of
cannot feel, smell
a baffling problem.
We
her engines over very slowly to maintain her depth below the surface.
A submarine vibrator operated by
electricity has produced an echo from
an iceberg two miles distant, but it is
doubtful if the system can be improved
to efficiency in the case of the submarine.
Now let us consider our remaining sense:
sight.
166
1917
July.
Cold Light
WE
are accustomed to
seeing the
light
substitution, the intermittent flashes producing the effect of a steady light. Each
lamp is in consequence lighted for so short
a time period that the infinitesimal amount
of heat developed is quickly dissipated.
The cooling interval is about twice that of
The lamps, moreover,
the light interval.
can in this way be operated on 3 to 4 times
the normal voltage, vastly increasing the
efficiency and illumination of each filament
thereby.
It is said that Dussaud has sue-
the
merits,
The
Above
Dussaud
"Cold Light"
with
the
subject,
to
ically,
contact.
As seen it now becomes
possible to rapidly switch one lamp after
The
the other into circuit, consecutively.
persistence of vision of the retina of the
human eye defies the detection of the lamp
makes
Lower
The result is
either lenses or mirrors.
that while the heat effect of the electric
current is dissipated over a great area, the
as
in
making moving
picture posi-
he
One of
made cold
Microscopic Projection of a
as Devised by Prof. Dussaud of France.
Beam
use
the
Experimentaf
Generator and Current
Measuring Meters.
Light"
run
Complete
Above
intense.
"Cold
Indeed,
cold light.
1917
July.
How
the
167
a Ship It
Never Sees
By H. WINFIELD SECOR
Tl
!;
German submarine has finally
lifcome a most menacing factor in
llic great world-war and now pre1
proud
succeeded
in
feasible,
but
entirely
possible
for a
The Latest Reports Regarding Submarine Activities Frequently State that the Ship Was Torpedoed by an "Unseen" Sub-sea War-vessel.
This Can Easily Be True for, by Utilizing Telegraphic Sound-waves Propagated Thru Water (Fessenden System), a Relatively Distant
"Range-finding" Submarine Can Signal Her Hidden Allies as to the Position and Course of the Enemy. Thus the Submarine That Frres
the Fatal Torpedo Need Never Show Its Periscope.
this and even more mysterious ones.
For instance there is the case where the
ship's lookout remembers having seen an
much
as
enemy submarine
miles ofif
too far to be within torpedo range. Moreover, nothing more had been seen of the
enemy after the first sighting, but suddenly a terrible explosion fairly lifted the
Sure as
boat out of the sea torpedoed?
guns? But how? asks every(5ne, from Cap-
tain
light
down
several
yes,
how ? and
in
broad day-
companying
illustration.
At any
rate here's
before the latter's look-out spies the cunningly disguised and mottled periscope.
At the first shot from the steamship's gun
crew the submarine may disappear. Consider that the U-boat commander has the
range of the enemy; he at once dispatches
the data by sub-sea telegraphy or telephony, so that other U-boats lying submerged or awash at the surface, will receive the information on their sound wave
apparatus.
All this
logical
l)ut
fighters and
war
vessels
are
all
equipt
ELECTRICAL TREATMENT OF
BRITISH WOUNDED.
In a recent number of the "Lancet," Dr.
\V. J. Turrell describes various applications of electro-therapy at the Radcliflfe
Infirmary, Oxford, England.
One interesting point is the treatment of unclean
woimds by
ionization,
produced either by
limbs.
tient
168
July.
1917
THE
Mcpherson
A. R.
I.. W
OF
POSITION
LIGHT RAYS
(normal -NO magnet)
HICOL PRISM
OEFIECTEO^-,
RAY CAUSED
BY MAGNET
CROOKE'S RADIOMETER
LIGHT RAVS
^tlOCITY=
2O.O0OMILES
PCRSECOND)
and
That
Norstrom. claim
thai: the
Spectrum lines of two light rays
originating la gravitation fielas
of different sfrenpibs FiandFz
of the radiometer
as to the nature of light was the materialistic theory, which involved the idea that
light was composed of material farticles of
matter. This theory was rejected years ago,
but like tlie alchemists' dreams of the transmutation of matter, which it seems is now
becoming a reality, so this materialistic
theory is again coming into favor.
The present generally accepted theory
states that light is identical with electromagnetic disturbances, such as are generated
by oscillating electric currents or moving
magnets but this must presuppose the existence of an imaginary medium called
;
capable
transmitting
of
enormous
vibrations
with
velocity.
in a state
vibrations to the surrounding ether. This,
in short, is the electro-magnetic etlier theory
which has been evolved in recent years.
It is the belief of many, however, that
ether, to exist at all, must be in a material
form such as a gas, in order to harmonize
with natural laws. To quote from "Xew
".Mendelieff, the Dean of
Knowledge"
chemical science, has recently originated the
:
RADIUM
"Li^f maybe a
suhstaitce, having
possiile, as it
material
weight. Seems
for in this
shifting, cannot be the cause
case, single lines would be shifted in differ;
ent degrees.
But the measurements show
that the shifting of the lines, both in amount
and direction, is the same for all, as Einstein's theory of the influence of gravitation
requires.
The shifting of the lines calculated with Einstein's formula agrees remarkably well with the average observed
values.
The influence of gravitation on
light may now" be regarded as partially
proved, and thus it may also be inferred
that light possesses zi'eight.
From the above facts it may be demonstrated and must also be proven that li.ght
exerts pressure, since it is a material subThis peculiar
stance possessing weight.
truth was proven mathematically as early
as 1873 by Maxwell, tho it was applied
then and still is to a certain extent in support of the clectro-magiietie leaz-e theory.
In 1901, Peter Lelidew actually proved and
measured the meehanieal pressure of light.
The pressure discovered was small, of
course, but the minuteness of a thing is
often an inverse measure of its importance,
as this light pressure has been found adequate to explain some of the earth's greatest
1917
July.
War
hero of the
TllF.
photoplav "Treason,"
realistic
ment
Bhiebird
and
is
City,
possible.
feels deeply the neplect of his country,
and confides his feeliuKS to his friendv the
tobacconist, who in reality is a "spy." The
man sends information to the enemy (top
view) bv means of wireless ai)paratus con-
He
cealed
ill
a trunk
rijjht plioto).
in his
rooms,
He works upon
of" the
Secret
Service,
highly
officers
are
naval
American
amused over a recent "wireless mmance"
cnniiccted with an American destroyer. The
(extreme
Fettrus' re-
with
land.
denounces her native
Paul Strong, perceiving in Mary's position an opportunity to strike a telling blowto the "enemy," accordingly outfits a wireless telephone contrivance whereby Marv,
thru her close association with the "enemy,"
can inform him of their plans without inSee left and lower
curring their suspicions.
The copper gutters on the
center photos.)
roof of the Woolworth Building are used
as antenna. Mary employs a pocket radiojilione instrument^ which she connects with
the improvised antenna, thru a secret switch,
cleverly hidden in the brass scroll work of
an electrolier on the side wall.
vehenieiilly
Head
169
wliose
at
St.
John's
ago, information
whom he knows to
questions Pettrus, who
The Head of the Secret
finally confesses.
Service helps him to recover the code.
He now
There
ends
is
in a terrific
The paymaster
date of sailing.
to join his destroyer.
When several days at sea the destroyer
got into distant connection one night with
a certain vessel, and made a code inquiry
as to the vessel's position, course, and speed.
No direct reply was made, the vessel fearing a submarine trick and the possibility
Instead of answerof a stolen codebook.
ing a demand was made to the destroyer:
"Give the name of your ship in code."
The destroyer complied.
second
Even this was not enough.
wireless was sent out "What is the name
of your paymaster who is the friend of
Dr.
a passenger aboard this shipr"
Then the paymaster of the destrover
was called into the wireless cabin and asked
"Sure." he reif he knew Dr.
name and
Top Center: A
Stirring Scene
from "Trea-
w-hich
Building.
tunity to
is
pal.
\\ e were
roommates at college, and had dinner together two nights before I sailed. Where
'He was my
plied.
IS
best
he?"
The destroyer
sent
saying: "Paymaster
oldest
out
another
.
radio.
the doctor's
friend."
After
this
vessel at last
and speed.
170
U.
S.
Battleships to
July.
1917
Run on Land
ByH. GERNSBACK
EVERY
battleships
of
pre-dreadnought
the
good ships as
obsolete as
refer to ships of the
but
yet,
type,
first-
ships.
gon,
lo'ii'a,
Illinois,
them.
When
is
wheels.
The
are strengthened
as seen in
very light, as well
latter
reason, that insofar as they usually contain the element of surprise, the enemv, not
being prepared for the unusual onslaught
is defeated.
Thus a
illustration.
With
as powerful wide wheel is formed.
a little previous drilling, the crew should
be able to construct the
***** AAA
A A A A A
/>
^ \ * * * 4
than an ordinary taxicab
could be imagined to launch
a modern army, equipt with
the world's best artillery.
too.
The hollow shaft, is
Nevertheless, when the deadvised, first because it
weighs less, and second befender of Paris, General
Gallieni, requisitioned every
cause such shafts are equally
Paris taxicab, and flung
as strong as solid ones,
\\ ithin a reasonable proporthese thousands of squeaky
tion.
vehicles, w h c h had never
been designed for such work,
The two wheels at the
against the German hordes,
stern are "idlers," the same
V 'r yi V vW
they simply had to give way
as the front wheels on an
and the taxicabs won. One of
automobile.
No power is
the world's greatest retreats Putting Wheels on Our Battleships
and How It Is Accomplisht. The Wheels applied to them, they simply
was mainly due to these Here Shown Are Fashioned of Angle and Steel Beams, on the Plan of Structural rotate on the shaft, extendSlow Running Electric I'nsr from one wheel tn the
peaceful fare-eaters.
Per- Steel Toys. Such Wheels Are Tremendously Strong.
Motors Coupled to the Steel Shafts Drive the New Monster Over Land.
haps taxicabs will never be
other dear thru the ship
used again in such a manThe two small center
ner, but at any rate they did their full duty
the houses, but no one volunteered to show
wheels are also idlers. They serve to take
once. The experiment proved worth while.
how it might be accomplisht. A battle- up undue shocks, which might break the ship
Therefore when I propose to run battleship weighs anywhere from 10,000 tons
in two, when negotiating difficult terrain.
ships over land, I am fully aware of the
upwards quite a respectable weight. How
The two front (bow) wheels are the
ridicule I will be subject to.
I am also
then can we run such a monster on land ?
''drivers".
Thej' are bolted solid to the
aware of all the objections that will be
How can it be propelled ?
shafts, two of the latter being used as
cited against the fantastic-appearing plan.
Now that we are at .var, our first duty will become apparent at once. Our illusNevertheless, I insist that the idea is not
is to help our allies, and to help
them
tration shows that the two shafts revolve
half as impractical as it may appear at
quickly.
The time is too short to build
in a common bearing ( which might be an
first.
And at any rate I believe I have new colossal war engines which could be old reconstructed gun barrel). Each shaft
found a way showing how it may be done
used at the front at once. Our army will
in turn is directly coupled to a slow-runin a simple manner.
I give the idea to the
not be fully ready till a year from now.
ning electric motor armature, as clearly
country for what it is worth.
Our navy cannot help very much on sea.
shown. And this, by the way. is the much
1 do not claim to be the originator of
For if the British, French and Russian
discust electrical drive, adopted in our
the idea to run battleships or other ships
navies, which are at least four times as
latest monster battle cruisers, now being
over land. That idea is old already. Twenpowerful as the German navy, cannot deconstructed.
From this it becomes apty-five years ago there was published in a
stroy the latter, the addition of our own
parent how the land battleship is propelled
German weekly an idea to run a powernavy will not matter much one way or anoverland in a simple and practical manful car, moving over a dozen closely spaced
other.
The German navy simply stays be(Conlinued on pane 216)
i
1917
July,
The Marvels
By JEROME
a New Series
Radio-activity deals,
Kadiiim as many lica wliole class of snhstances, the licst examples of which
of Radio-Activity
MARCUS,
S.
Fint Paper of
siilijfct of
not only witli
licvc, liiit with
THE
(Experiments on these
These rays
later.)
were named after their discoverer, "BecIt was also found that in
querel rays."
would
not.
points
will
Fig.
1.
given
be
ray-emitting
these
carrying
171
^ub^tiuices
suhstances h a v e
of giving off or
certain
emitting
sponradiations
these
taneously,
rays having the
power to penetrate thru matter
which is opaciue
to ordinary light.
It
'-i.
radio-acAmong
snow,
spring
etc.
by
ascertain
h e
this,
from
radiations
Gold Bar, About the Size of an Ordinary Building Brick. Worth $18,263.53. Tube of Radium the
Photographed m the
Size of a Match. Worth $18,000.00 (150 Milligrams at $120.00 Per Milligram).
Mint, at Denver, to Show Relative Value of Gold to Radium.
they
would or not emit rays of the same character. Professor Henri Becquerel, a Paris
physicist, discovered in 1896 that the compounds of Uranium which had a phosphorescence (that is, they would glow in the dark
after exposure to daylight) would weakly
He then found
affect a photographic plate.
that salts of Uranium which were not phosphorescent also affected a plate, thus showing that it was the element Uranium which
t
waters,
From
due to certain
the
h e
many
physics began to
\v
re.-ont
tive..
students of
to
has been
1
phorescent bodies
t li
investigators that
subalmost a 1
stances in nature
are more or less
s -
Thorium.
shown by
Shortly after
the discovery of
investigate
different p h o
the'
J"
History.
properties
connected
~'
which these
erty
these
radiations
w'cre
compounds
w t h the
appearance of the
nected
Aurora Borealis
and other phe-
nomena of atmospheric
In the
electricity.
spring of 1903, Professor J. J. Thomson
discovered that waters from deep wells contained a certain gas which was radio-active,
and other substances are being found which
also possess the power of radio-activity.
silk.
salt
were radio-
active.
of
the
Uranium
com-
to
i.e..
it
the
was propor-
amount
Uranium present.
of
While
working on
The
Austrian
from
Government
172
Back
VOLTA,
He was
true genius
is
Days
to the
July,
1917
of '^Volta''
elec-
One
of the
c^-'-
J rr^^t^/
r4*v*
iff-
/ vK/.
^y
:(^f'"i':^ cm-j^
if"
FIG.2
Fig. 1 Alessandro Volta, Dean of the Early Electrical Inventors Conducted Hundreds of Experiments witti Static Electricity. This Photo
Shows Several of the Original Apparatus Disk Condenser, Electroscope. Etc., Used by Him.
Fig. 2 Static Electric Apparatus which Belonged to Volta. The Apparatus on the Right Served to Produce a Static Spark by the Friction on
a Strip of Parchment. As It Was Rapidly Reeled Up.
Fig. 3 Volta's Original Apparatus: At Right
Device for Igniting Mixture of Hydrogen and Oxygen by a Static Spark.
Left Instrument
for Demonstrating Electric Theory of Hail.
Fig. 4 The Highly Prized Original Letter Written by Volta to the
Royal Society of London Describing His First Battery the "Voltaic
Pile."
1
shows a variety of electro-static
apparatus, including a static electric charging device the electrophorus, at extreme
left, and the detector of static charges
the
electroscope at extreme right. Both of these
devices are still in use in electrical laboratories where the elements of pure science
are studied. Besides, the electricians of today have found many practical applications
for the electroscope, never even dreamed of
by the illustrious \'olta.
One important
commercial and highly important application of the sensitive electroscope is in the
measurement of radio-activity. The Ra-
Fig.
Societe
new
ing of alternate zinc and copper discs separated by dampened blotter paper sheets.
This formed the basis of present-day elec-
There is no doubt that modern electricity really starts with this famous
letter.
For it was ^'olta's battery that produced the very first electric galvanic mark.
It was \'olta who led the first galvanic curAnd it was his battery
rent thru a wire.
that produced for the first time useful
tric batteries.
dynamic
electricity.
July.
1917
173
174
July,
1IGHTNING,
-i
is
Yearly.
the
city.
amount
damage
of
source.
from
received
,
terrifying lightning
of a hot summer day
closely related,
belonging as they do
in the same family of
are
natural phenomena,
has never been surmised by the average
school pupil. In fact
many
older people
1752.
Benjamin Franklin
while e.xpcrimenting
with electricity
noticed certain resemblances between the
sparks produced artificially and the natural
Both
lightning.
flashes were
taneous
instangave intense
followed a
crooked path prolight;
duced noise;
bustible
fire
set
com-
material on
Frotn observation of
the similar behavior
of the two, he was led
to a strong belief in
their identity, so he
determined
to per-
obtained sparks
Ijy
this
,
rub-
1917
It
State
duce lightning.
We
become
cold.
flashes
may
The discharge
of
cloud, 10 yards
square, gives enough
energ}-, in 1/20,000 of
a second, if properly
directed, to hurl 1,000
this
I)arrels of flour 20
When
lightning discharge it
causes sudden expansion with e.xplosive
violence and when the
expanded air cools and
contracts a vacuum is
When
plosive force.
you blow up a rubber
balloon to an excessive pressure, explosion results with a
loud sound. Wlien an
incandescent bulb is
broken, air rushes into the space, and when
it meets it produces a
loud sound from the
implosion. These two
cases illustrate the
production of thunOne part of a
der.
lightning flash may be
a mile farther away
nearer
part.
The
may
unite.
1917
July.
that
which
held
it
when
it
before
the
discharge,
there would be
little
175
ning will often jump oflF from a good conductor at a sharp bend, even tho it must
pass thru a poorer conductor.
There are two ways in which lightning
rods protect a house. First, they serve as
conductors carrying the discharge harmsecond, they tend to discharge the
lessly
earth slowly.
Often such an amount of
electricity escapes by this slow discharge
that a lightning stroke is prevented, or if not
prevented it is less severe. Occasionally a
rodded house is struck,
;
and damage.
similar
discharge
when an
object on the
by a
near-by cloud by induction and a discharge
earth
is
electril'ied
is
grounded.
"A"
less
"B"
flashes
and vio-
cold
lightning.
Lightning
rods are effective pro-
tection
against them.
The B
den and
between
them.
The tremendous heat
cneriry which is pro-
burning
Lightning rods
electri-
will
not
always safeguard
cal
Germans term
discharge of a large
cloud highlv charged is
and
The
lightning as
flashes
flashes.
charge
Lodge
Sir Oliver
classifies
Actual Photograph Taken After a Severe Electric Storm Showing the Lightning's Toll in
Valuable Live-Stock. The Barn Was Unrodded, as May Be Surmised, for U Is Very
Seldom that Fatalities Occur Where Buildings Are Properly Covered with First-Ciass
Lightning Rods, Thoroly Grounded in Damp or Wet Earth.
secured
of rods
thoroly
of sufficient capacity to carry off large quantities
of electricity and it must not corrode
readily.
Copper and galvanized iron are
the two metals most commonly used for
lightning rods. The lightning rods or conductors should not be insulated from the
building because the object of the rods is
to drain electricity from all objects about
Conductors
or a part of the building.
ought not to be placed near or parallel to
an inside pipe, because the discharge might
jump thru the wall to it, causing fire, or
it might produce a powerful heating effect
safein it, resulting from induction.
guard against such a disaster is to connect
the lightning rod system at the highest and
at the lowest points with inside structural
beams and water pipes.
Sometimes gas
pipes are connected but because of the inflammability of gas, many prefer not to
connect them. All exterior metal work of
the building, as gutters, railings, etc., cither
should be connected to the lightning rod at
a level below their own or they should be
grounded by a separate cable. The ground-
against these
Both the
flashes.
and B
WHAT TO DO
IN A THUNDER
STORM.
If you are out of doors in a very severe
it is well to observe the
following rules for your own protection.
They
1. Keep away from wire fences.
may carry a dangerous electrical charge
Cattle in pastures are
long distances.
frequently killed from the neglect of
farmers to ground the wire of the fence.
2. Keep away from hedges, ponds, and
streams.
3. Keep away from isolated trees. Oak
trees are frequently struck; beech are
It is safe in a dense
seldom struck.
electrical storm,
forest.
4. Keep away from herds of cattle
crowds of people.
and
an
open
not
down
The
.A.
When
above
fatal.
The heart
It
is the chief danger spot.
not the voltage but the current which
passes thru the heart which is the important
thing.
Tho with a given body resistance,
an increased volta.ge causes an increased
current to pass. It has never been determined with accuracy just how much current can pass thru the human body with
safety. It dotibtless varies with individuals.
High voltage causes paralysis which may
stop breathing, and even the heart's action.
First aid in lightning stroke should be artificial respiration, the same as is used to
restore a drowning person.
No danger results when a comparatively
large current flows thru the lower trunk
alone, but as low a pressure as 6.^ volts
has been known to prove fatal, when it
past thru the thorax.
The resistance of the skin varies with
its dryness, moisture, greasiness, and by the
area which is in cont.ict with an electric
bare wire carrying our ordiconductor.
nary lighting current at 110 volts or 220
volts pressure may be handled safely if the
skin which the wire touches is dry or if the
person's boots by which the current leaves
is
5.
6. It is safer to sit or lie down in
field than to stand.
7. Drivers should dismount and
ground.
the chimney.
176
The
SOUND
of nature
is
that mysterious
phenomenon
1917
July,
Science of Sound
The tuning fork may be adjusted for different frequencies when desired and in general corresponds to the usual musical tuning
fork, except that a small electro-magnet
Sound Wave
C Sabine of Harvard University Has Made the Accompanying Remarkable Photographs Showing First the Start of aRight
Echoes
At Center, the Sound Wave Photographed 3-100ths Second After Its Production on Stage.
Into an Auditorium, (Left).
'Reverberation."
Call
in a Theater Developed from a Single Sound Impulse in 14-100ths Second, Resulting in What
Prof
We
always
in vibration.
sponding
over-tones.
may be constructed
Jr]
Interesting
illustrations
Studies of Sound
which
View
a Simple Tone
the vibrations of the sounding body itself or those
which are set up by the soimding body
in the air or other medium, and which
are capable of directly affecting the ar,
even tho there is no ear to hear; the sound
going forth just the same.
Many Valuable
1^
^^^
K^^Jj^l
^^^^iB
The accompanying
instance,
may
tones.
es-
is tised
scientist to designate
harmonic
For
by the
its
For
be caused to show
and
three-loop
two-loop,
five-loop formations, repreit
sound
to
we
Fork
Is
Used
in
Co rresponding to
Vi brated Tuning
This Experiment.
This
the loop of vibration more clearly.
single loop corresponds to a simple tone
The
consisting of a fundamental only.
string is secured at one end to a stationary
support, and at the other to one prong of a
electrically-operated tuning fork.
special
projection
lustrated).
present some very startling effects
to
in
New York
his
recent lectures
in
City before the American Association for
When the
the" Advancement of Science.
The Sand
Note.
Is
Placed on a
1917
July.
word "War"
rarefactions
which are projected thru
space with a velocity of 1,132 feet per second fat 70 Fahrenheit), and for the tone
"middle C," the distance from one compression to the next is about four feet.
woulfl prove very desirable indeed to
It
be able to actually photograph sound waves
in air, but no practical means have as yet
been perfected for photographing waves
of this size.
The accompanying photographs of a cross-sectional model of a
theater showing the progress of a sound
wave from the stage is due to the researches of Prof. W. C. Sabine, of Harvard University. Photographs such as these,
showing the sound wave at any instant,
are taken by instantaneous exposures and
are obtained by the snapping sound produced by the electric spark discharge
from a Leyden jar. The sound thus given
off by a Leyden jar discharge consists of
a single wave containing one condensation
and one rarefaction, the wave length of
which may be 1/16 inch or less, and the
sound is relatively a loud one.
Now if,
while such a sound wave is past over a
photograph plate in the dark, the wave is
instantaneously illuminated by a single dis-
177
that the music reverberates
thruout
the
auditorium.
A great deal of study
can be and has been
carried out in the realm
of sound studies by
means of sand figures.
These are known as
Chladnis' figures, and
one of the accompanying illustrations shows
three interesting forms
produced
by
certain
sounds.
large number of patterns can be
formed by the various
sounds, and which patterns or figures are always the same for the
same
note.
As an example
of
in
direc-
this
may
in
it
and
rings
circular
made
sponding
frequen-
to
from 129
cies
to 12.400.
The
undulating
made
Dayton
Prof.
Professor
in
Miller's laboratory,
is
and
part of a record of
opera
world-famous
from "Lucia di
Lammermoor."
The
tette
remarkable
]ualities.
among which we
find
that,
if
tionary
changes
at
the
wave follows
ner.
Three interesting illustrations are presented herewith which show the progress
of a sound wave in a theater; the wave
gradually swelling out into the auditorium
until the main wave has reached the back
of the gallery and been reflected.
Sound waves, according to Prof. Miller,
consist
of
alternate
condensations and
To make
torium
is
first
and
baritone
voices
This
softly.
siiii/iny
Occurring
When
Tetrazzini
and Amato
(Soprano, and Baritone)
Warble
"Lucia
a
di
moor.'"
1-100th
the
Note
from
Lammer-
Each Dot Is
Second Apart:
Time Period
Shown
Record
Second
and
Is
of the
Is
.80
for a
"Single Note."
THE ELECTRICAL EXPERIMENTER
178
municating
all
has
electrical
intelligence
IN
WAR-
perhaps
made
means of com-
than
any
be
The
of
other
the
battle
lines.
July,
1917
even
thousands
of
men.
He
not
make a mistake and his
instruments must always work so long
as his antenna stays up.
dreds,
must
NEW INVENTION
'PHONES
Iventuck\',
the
invention.
With the installation of the alarm, a
burglar in forcing or gaining an entrance
sets in motion the mechanical device, which
then summons the police, giving them the
name and address of the person whose
home or office is being entered.
Another type of the device does not
Here
We
See
Two
Pictures. At Left
Headquarters.
at
Near the Battle
Interesting French
Telephone
Right
War
Switchboard
Radio Station
Front "Somewhere
France."
in
The
illustrations
illustration sliows an
lamp-post in use at Xewport,
R. I. It is formed of a one-time dangerous torpedo, whicli was captured in the
Spanish-American War. The torpedo has
odd
electric
The
how
By means of
important army division.
the flexible cord and attachment plug connected to the wall telephone instrument seen
in the picture, an officer of the commanding staff may instantly ring up any division commander and transmit orders or
receive a special report as to the progress
of a battle at any certain part of the front.
The head telephone set lying on the
table
listen
used to
is
secretly
in
any
line
quarters. Thus
the officer in
charge may know
at once if unauthorized
talk
i~
going on.
But to the radio
operator comes a
full share of mystery, romance and
action. He sit3
with his head re-
ceivers clamped
tight against his
ears while from
out of the boundless
ether there
the news
comes
of victory or defeat
the
When
to
Central
reinforcements
messages of every description and from many points along the battle
front.
Needless to say the military radio
operator holds a most important position
an
importance
\yhich
peace-time
the
never even dreams about. In
hands there may lie the difference between life and death for hun-
operator
his
Servict-.
it
the
Call
for
Police.
call for
out.
drummer has
tric
trap
lights
installed
tight.
1917
July,
Speeding
Up Vote
of Congress
179
by
Electricity
Instead of Wasting an Hour and a Half in Which to "Call the Roll" Alone in the House of Representatives at Washington, a Newly Proposed Electric Voting System Will Cut the Time Down to a Few Minutes, Resulting in a Savmg of Thousands of Dollars Annually.
HAVE you
call
it
is
perhaps
dillicult to
realize
how much
The
U.
applicants
the information of
FOR
Signal Enlisted Reserve Corps, we
in
all
to enlist
only such
men
We
will make our organizatitm an elhcicnt military unit for active service.
"Our advice to men wlio enlist is to continue their ordinary pursuits until they re-
which
S.
Signal Corps
it
could
be quickly photographed.
method
machinery
in
Con-
The
illustration
we
present
herewith
Wants You
nated,
Each man
In addition to operators, men must be obtained who have had technical training, or
We
We
180
July,
1917
Scientist
"Ham" Jones
EVELETH
By H.\RL.\N
HENRY
DUKE
ALFONSO
MARMA-
thru
rimmed
the lenses
spectacles.
of omnipresent,
iron-
He
had attained a
his
wire-
A.
replied;
I,
"Spindle") being
modeled somewhat along the graceful lines
of a Geissler tube.
"Come right up stairs," chirped "Ham,"
so I trailed along behind him, up two flights
of stairs to a hall leading to the laboratory
"Spin"
alias
(short
for
in the attic.
"Ham"
upon
my
turned
eyes
y/AV>iil
....
"
He Picked Up
Full of Carpet
Tacks and
My Shoes Became
Wire from the Floor, Fastened It to tiie Coll and Prest the Key. Suffering Cats!
'Hen' Got to Laughing so Hard He Could Not
Leapt so High that My Head Nearly Hit the Ceiling.
Keep His Stick on the Key."
a Fine
I
so.
show
less
quoth "Ham," as he
swung the door open. "Glad to see you
"Hello!
'Spin',"
less
business."
"Yes
you?"
well,
will
vou
let
me
trv
it
on
'juice.'
Come
junk."
So
in
in
I
and
went.
I'll
show you my
DANGER
150,000
VOLTS
dignity.
July.
1917
"Uh huh!"
liad not
door wliile
better
took a
down
after
seat,
to
diabolical
upsideof any
which might be con-
first
discover
the
mechanism
turning
it
jiresence
me
the
M-ireless."
"Haw
Haw
August number
pleasure
tion
The
ing:
"The
"The
aerial,
guessing
coils,
Adams.
We
Radio
story
will
minute
Time"
feature
class.
Bomb" A
that
every
"Standard
himself.
of the highest
article
In
thrilling
keep you
by C. M.
which
our
Re-
doing it just as
Just then "Hen"
start to
lifted his
I
listen
to
"
noise stopt.
He didn't say a word; just
looked a bit foolish and sawed his tuner
harder than ever.
Finally he jumped up,
stuck his head and arms out of the window and did something which suddenly
made the buzzes come in at a great rate.
"I guess that's one on me," said "Hen."
"I forgot to open the ground switch.
Now
listen.
Ah
There's Colon keep quiet
now, don't talk hang it all. there's that
fellow who sits across the aisle from me
in Latin one; he's always hutting in on
me when I am trying to do long-distance
work listen
There's the 'R. B.' giving
!
"That is a good scheme, all right," I remarked. "I will say nothing about it; but
what is that arrangement over there on
the wall?"
contrivance of mine
enabled to listen to conversation which takes place on the first
floor.
It consists of two microphones, a
I inbattery and a telephone receiver.
"That
whereby
is
am
he
is
some night
."
out of the window
Whereupon I
dropt the receiver and said to the unsuspecting "Hen," "It's getting pretty late.
I think I had better go home."
.
"I
will
now
can't operate
the evening, for it blinks
the lights and is apt to cause trouble in
the family." He tinkered with the switchboard, made new connections, then prest
the key with a yard-stick and blandly continued, "The sparks I am about to show
you consist of over one hundred and fifty
thousand volts. They electrocute men over
in Sing Sing with two or three thousand
volts, so you can imagine what a dangerous current this is. That's it," as I backed
away, "stand on the rug there and you will
be safe."
"Ham" Jones punched the key
with his stick and long, purple sparks shot
off from the knobs of the "Tesla coil,
flicked about like the fangs of a boa constrictor and snarled and crackled like a
wounded "rattler." I stood on the rug in
mute admiration of this exhibition of artificial lightning, ever fearful of an impending death. "Hen" let the sparks play over
his hands and even pulled sparks from
conspicuous
portions
of
my anatomy.
Surely, he was a genius, a second Edison, a great engineer to be
I told him so,
but he only laughed and told me to wait
a moment and he would show me something better.
He picked a fine wire up
from the floor, fastened it to the coil and
prest the key.
Suffering cats
shoes
became full of carpet tacks and I leaped
so high that my head nearly hit the ceiling; then down I came again on that redit
very
much
in
Hiram Maxim
wireless
we'll
to
the
ceiving.
in
181
little
My
works
stunt, even if I
to say.
"Those
182
When, a
sufficiently
July, iqi7
WIRE.
no
curiosity of the
limit.
who
who might
HOW
IN TELEPHONY.
W. Weston, manager of the Port
Byron (Xew York) telephone company, had
If C.
been
One
Test
of the
Most Remarkable Electric Generating Plants Ever Built. It Is Used for Special
Forty 500 Volt D.C. Dynamos, Which. All Driven and Connected
Together, Develop 20,000 Volts Direct Current!
verv good insulator breaks down and beconies a partial conductor. The phenoinena
connected with this character of conduction thru gases are known collectively by
the name corona. The failure of the gaseous dielectric separating the metallic conductors is made evident by a flow of current from one conductor to the other, by a
power loss and, in practically all cases, by
the appearance of light at either one or
In some cases
both conductor surfaces.
light appears in the intervening space.
Since the present theories as to the mechanism of corona formation do not satisfactorily account for all of the observed
phenomena it was decided to carry out further investigations, says G. \V. Davis and
C. S. Breese in the Proceedings of the
in
the
formation.
continuous-current,
generators connected
in series.
shunt-wound
sulating bases and the shafts of the separate machines are connected by insulating
couplings. In the newer part of tlie installation one terminal of each machine is pertiianently connected to the frame of that
generator, in order definitely to limit the
strain on the machine insulation to the
voltage generated in one armature.
The
field
of each machine
is
connected
with
librium
The
comb
hand cor-
July. iqi7
A COMPACT ELECTRICAL
HOSPITAL.
The generating and main instruments are contained in the lower por-
motor-driven
tion of the cabinet.
suction pump is utilized for the pro-
183
It
was
in-
l84
36-INCH
Probably the most amazing and spectacuof all electrical apparatus is the Tesla
or High Frequency Coil and no electrical
lar
July, IQ17
keyboard
Giving
Taken
the
quency
'M^^^^Hjat
A
Novel
Which
Is
actly Like
mounted on
el
flexi-
is
ble cable.
electric musical
RADIO IN DENMARK.
Denmark
results.
The
coil
.01
M.F.
shown
in full activity is
produc-
To
warrant the installation of additional dyto carry the mean average load, plus
the peak load.
namos
1917
July.
GRAFITE-SELENIUM CELLS.
The new
Selenium Cell here illustrated aiul hrouKht out in I'^nKland. possesses distinct advantages over all forty|)e
of
mer
are
cells
These
have great
staliility,
and should,
with proper treatment,
effective
for
remain
claimed
many
wire
to
As
years.
used
is
construction,
cuiting
is
'i'licir
no
their
short-cirin
excluded,
etticiency,
meas-
is
A PRECISION
It
is
TYPE OF RHEOSTAT.
especially
ments, to
when making
delicate
have available a
measure-
finely adjustable
some time
is
electrical
standard
resistance
shellac finish.
The terminals of the resistance are attached to spring binding posts.
The resistance unit blocks are l-j4 inches
square and 2,' j inclics high, and can be arranged togetlicr like blocks in various combinations.
The resistance wire is wound
bililar on a large diameter spool which is
concealed in the block.
All units are ad-
can be used on a
top desk without
flat
table's surface.
The breeze is distributed in a strata
above
the
and
level,
of
radius
ten
six
a
to
There-
feet.
fore,
table
has
everyone
radius,
often
annoying
Table Fan for Use on
Dining-room or Library Tables to Give
All-around Breeze.
at
it
and
unit.
is
that
TIME.
UNITS.
man wants
fact
The marking of
HANDY RESISTANCE
the
in
lie
dining-room table or a
Something every
ing fan.
metre-candle
milliampere
1 milliampere
50 metre-candles
500 metre-candles
2 milliamperoN
The cells are constructed under the supervision of Dr. Fournier d'Albe, A.R.C.
Sc, the inventor of the Type-reading Op-'
tophone, and are made in two standard
1
183
The machine
Precision
ticular
long or
about one-half
will
accommodate any
size
inch,
rheostat
particular precision
trated is designed to be
mounted on the rear of
a switch-board panel and
the regulating knob or
projecting
only
wheel
thru on the face of the
panel.
It
should
prove
The
New Form
of
Unit.
Is
It
Handy Resistance
Supplied In Any
Size Desired.
Electric
The new
2.400
an Hour.
marker
compact, portable,
is
operation due to the worm
drive, and only weighs 45 pounds.
This tag
vcrv quiet
in
186
III1IIIIIIIIIIIIIII1III1IIII1II
July,
1917
iiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiir
of our radio readers arc undoubtedly az^'are, the I'. S. Gofcnuueiit lias decided that all Amateur, Wireless Stations,
xvhcther licensed or unlicensed, or cqiiipt for receiving or transmitting, shall be closed.
This is a very important consideration, especially to those v.4io arc readers of
ELECTRICAL EXPERIMENTER,
for the reason that ice desire to continue to publish valuable articles in the tvireless art from time to time, and which may
treat on both transmitting and receiving apparatus.
In the first place, there are a great many students among our readers
who will demand and expect a continuation of the -usual class of Radio subjects, which we have publisht in the past four
years, and secondly, there ivill be hundreds and even thousands of new radio pupils in the various nazal and civilian schools
thruout the country, who will be benefited by up-to-date wireless articles treating on both the transmittiinj as well as receiving equipment.
Therefore, and in t'it'it' of the foregoing e.vplanation, zee feel sure that every reader zi'il! thoroly understand that alllw
articles on transmitting, as well as receiving, apparatus may appear from time to time in tliese columns, he is not permitted to
connect up any radio apparatus whatsoever to any form of aerial. The Editors.
THE
AHE accompanying
''
I
I
illustrations,
2 and 3, show the equipused for testing radio units of
figures
ment
1,
-*-
Federal
the
Telegraph Company
with a ihiinmy Antenna, as utihzed
It
at the Palo Alto, Cahfornia, laboratory.
was possible, with this antenna, to reproduce practically anj- antenna found in commercial radio telegraph stations, and there-
With
FRANK
C.
Dummy Antenna
PERKINS
Sixty-four kilovolts driving 250 amperes
quadrature would develop 16 megawatts
of reactive power.
It is pointed out that an active power
rating of 200 K.W. woidd thus only demand a little more than 1 per cent of dissiIt is evident that this dumpation factor.
my has large dissipation possibilities. In
making radio units of larger capacity than
have heretofore been attempted,
found necessary to proit was
vide a dummy antenna which
could be used for testing Federal-Poulsen Arc converters of
various sizes.
Because of the
large units contemplated, and
since interference with nearby
commercial stations had to be
avoided, the type of construction
in
shown
accompanying
was developed.
the
in
lustrations
il-
layer are 2
ft.
apart horizontally
grounded,
"Dummy" Antenna
Colos-
Erected by a
Large Radio Concern in Palo Alto. California, for the Purpose of Testing Out
Large Poulsen Arc Generators Now Being
Extensively Used by Uncle Sam. The Antenna Is 262.5 Ft. Long by 136.5 Ft. Wide.
sal
fore observe the performance of the wiresets under practical operating condi-
less
tions.
losses,
would be approximately
64,000.
is
maximum
July.
1917
resistance could
be kept within
the
usual
limits.
187
San
Diego,
Pearl
Harbor
and
Cavite.
in
of
a
more
microfarad.
By various combinations of
these wires with different layers of the
antenna, a considerable number of capacities are available, the maximum being obtained when layers Xos. 1, 3 and 5 are
connected as the earth side of the systemand Nos. 2 and 4 are connected with the
two single wires as the high potential side.
With this combination the capacity is 0.031
microfarad.
The jumpers used for connecting the
various layers consist of l^i in. copper tube
provided with suitable clamps and fittiufjs
so that shifting to different capacities is an
easv matter.
The capacities most commonly used are 0.006. 0012, 0.017 and 0.024
microfarad.
Many others are available.
Before deciding upon the exact lengths of
the antenna wires, it was noted that with
evenly spaced crjual loading the l-in. cables
to which the wires are attached would assume a parabolic curve. The lengths of the
wires in each layer were calculated accordingly, and thus a uniform tension is secured
in the individual wires of each layer without excessive pull on the pole supports.
Prexious to the tests, it was desirable to
tabulate the length of each wire, which was
calculated to the nearest 0.01 ft.
A convenient scheme was tlien devis-ed for cutting the large number of wires to exact
"come
bevond
There was
for
Women's
Ser-
she
May 8th. Women in all parts of the country are taking up the study of telegraph
and radio operating in earnest, as these
vocations hold undeniable proinise for those
aspiring to fill positions of responsibility
stake.
After cutting each
individual wire the crew, consisting of two men at each
end, proceeded at once to fasten it in place on the l-in.
cable which had been previously stretched, to remove twists,
and laid out on the ground in
position for hoisting.
In cutting the wires. 1 ft. over and
above finished dimensions was
allowed for connections.
There was then a point 6 in.
first
IVIiss
Helen Campbell Has Successfully Mastered the
She Is an Expert in
Intricacies of Radio-Telegraphy.
generaSending and Receiving Radio Messages.
tor.
The dummy antenna was
used at the laboratory for testing the high
and service to the Nation. Besides, there
power anparatus which the company has
will be plentv of opportunities after\the
constructed for the United States Navy at
war for radio and telegraph experts.
Federal-Poulsen
.\rc
188
SEALS
HOW THE GOVERNMENT
APPARATUS.
U.
RADIO
S.
for telegraphic
thru
com-
War
the
triotic service
sire to enlist.
"The
country
made
demands
of
forces
the
who
upon
country
dethe
during
have
Arrangements
Western
by relieving those
tremendous
operating
to present
themselves to be trained
as telegraph operators.
been
1917
July,
with the
Tele-
Union
commercial t e
e graph forces, and with1
out seriously
ing with vital
interfer-
communi-
cations.
needed
graph
for tele-
service, either in
those
in
commercial
work who
are leaving
positions to join the
colors.
These
young
graph Company
placed
its
facilities
has
at
& Herbert. N.
the disposal of the GovOur Uncle Samuel Seals Up Wireless Apparatus Tight When He ernment to train twenDoes the Job. A Heavy Wire Is Run Thru All the Binding Posts
and Sealed as Shown, and Woe Be Unto Anyone Who Maliciously ty-live hundred operBreaks the Seal.
ators, and the training
1
be conducted by
its experts.
that there are more
than 30,000 amateur wireless (sending)
These
operators in the United States.
will
"It
is
estimated
to
welfare
in
any important
city.
MANUFACTURING
manufacturers
night and
now working
arc-
da>-
The photo
S. Xaval vessels.
shows quenched spark gaps
being machined.
These spark gaps are bras?
discs with silver centers, and
thev must be accurate to
ver>-
practical
and
patriotic
wav."
CORRECTION NOTICE!
ment
Mav
activity the
period
of
intense
mobilizing of all the resources and energies of the American people have taxed
the present telegraph forces to the utmost and necessitate the immediate recruiting of hundreds of volunteers for this
service.
The Government needs telegraph
operators for its Signal Corps.
"Amateur wireless operators, women
typists, and
other competent young
all
this
FlKto by Kadcl
&
Herbert
non-gaseous bulb.
1917
July.
How
WEATHER
all.
the
Eight years ago Archie Hanks was a sixteen-year-old boy, living on the farm of his
father, a well-known live stock farmer. The
boy had always been interested in machinery and mechanical matters, l)ut met with
from
little encouragement along this line
He might never have had an
his parents.
opportunity to develop his latent talents had
for an accident.
One day, in
it not been
working about lier household task, the boy's
mother knocked off the telephone batteries.
"Central told her how to connect them
up again and she did so," says Mr. Banks.
"I happened to come in then and slie told
me what she had done. Of course, I wanted
I was promptly
to see if she did it right.
told to run along and that wdiat I knew about
telephone batteries wouldn't bother anyone.
Well, I made up my mind I would know
something about tlicni, and I set to work
studying everything I could get hold ofmagazines
books,
and catalogs. In a
1
had the
year
house wired from
])aper laid
tions
cellar
and
years
I
city,
There
was no
it
had
the press.
This is not all, however.
drives toward or
."Vs one
from Delmar, along the
road which leads by the
Banks home, he comes suddenly upon a large sign
stretched across the road,
a board sign eight feet long
left
in
aftera small
had
w'ireless
it
lights run
batteries.
from
ward
garret,
to
with
lighted
electric
Two
189
but
built,
well.
All
could
do was to talk to
mile
Delmar,
a
away.
deter-
mined to do better,
and so I set to
work again."
This second time
the boy
was more
successful, so that
today
he has
stalled
in
in-
the
miles
Maquoketa,
from
com-
graph
outfit,
by
which he receives
weather forecasts
-"^-^w
from
his
receive
them, the climatic changes being known for
a radius of ten or fifteen miles, long in advance, by means of this excellent service.
to
"The wireless
an<l
twelve rooms."
190
July.
1917
THE
The
standard
Space Is at a Premium on the "Submarine Chaser." For Such Radio Service There
Fig. 1
It
Is Available the Extremely Light-Weight Transmitting and Receiving Set Illustrated.
Utilizes a Spark Coil with Independent Vibrator for Batteries.
above described a very efficient and an allaround receiving outfit has been designed
and built by Messrs. L. G. Pacent and A. H.
Grebe for the submarine chasers, and this
This equipoutfit is illustrated in Fig. 2.
ment consists of four units, viz., a main
tuning cabinet, loading cabinet, detector
shown.
The
Fig.
1.
first
This
Fig. 2
An
July.
1917
cabinet,
and an emercency
crj'stal detector.
tbe largest of
ibc tbrcc ami comprises an inductive coupler, coupled with variometers, the latter of
which are controlled by two handles, while
tlie center one operates a variable condenser
linked in the secondary circuit. The handle
on the left side is used to control the secondarv coupling. The two-point switches
are employed for regulating the inductance
of the primary of the inductive coupler.
The cabinet on toj) of this is the loaduifr
bo.x which contains the proper coils for aidins the regenerali\e .\udion circuit; the
center knob is the coupIiTig handle, while
the two side knobs are the inductance control handles. The cabinet to the right is the
detector box in which the vacuimi detector
An opening fitted with a slidnig
is housed.
door is used to note the illumination InilThe switch to
liancv of the detector bulb.
the right is the filanicitt sw itch while the one
to the left is the "H" battery control switch.
A variable resistance is secured to the side
of this cabinet (not shown here) and tliis is
used for regulating the current consumption
of the filament. The emergency crystal detector is hooked up to the set thru binding
posts at the bottom of the main tuning cali^
cabinet
is
191
to be Awarded by the
Engineers
Radio
tute of
Medal of Honor
Honor"
Insti-
inet.
One
of
this
The illustration. Fig. 3, shows a wellbuilt set designed by Cutting and WashingThis outfit utilizes a new principle in
ton.
radio transmitter design involving the use
of a special spark gap, by means of which
powerful oscillations and a hy-note signal
are produced in a very simple manner withThe antenna wave
out a transformer.
length can be changed with this set by altering the secondary of the oscillation trans-
fixt.
New "Medal
of
Honor"
to be
Two
Advance
As is well
thoritative engineering society.
known, the Institute of Radio Engineers,
with more than 1,000 member5_ here and
abroad, and -with sections in New- York,
Washington,
Boston,
Seattle.
San
Fran-
"To
,..;.,
Distin-
Recognition of
guished Service in
Radio
Communication"
followed
in
wreath.
The medal
the
Edward
New
is
the
work of
well-known sculptor.
Sanford,
York.
Jr.,
of
Fig.
3 Particularly
Adapted
to
analysis
or
following conditions
At least thirty days before the April
meeting the Board of Direction will call
from a number of members and fellows
of the Institute, whom it may choose to
This
consult, for suggested candidates.
provision will be waived wholly or in part
for 1917 only.
In deciding upon the award, the Board
at its April meeting, thru those actually
present or voting. by mail, will nominate
canat least one, but not more than three
didates, in order of preference for the
The
official
presentation
meeting.
of the medal
or his repreMay or June
EL.
AMATEURS!
ATTENTION!!
Now
being,
vou?
in 30
is
positively
of a high pit ch
days
AND THAT
NOT ALL:
IS
No. FX5I7
Selenium Cells
Everj'bod.v has read about
e-\periments of telepho-
the
known
sitive
Connect two of these outfits together for intercommunication work and you and your
friend five or fifteen blocks distant can converse over a NO. 36 WIRE, so fine that no one
Or you can use instead of the wire, a metallic fence and the ground. Or you
will see it.
can communicate over your 110 lighting line, using no extra wire, only the ground. Full
directions how to do this are furnished with the instrument. DEALERS: This Is the 20th
Century instrument that will sell like WILDFIRE. 600 sold in New York in 10 days. Get
our proposition today!
Radiotone Codegraph complete as described, each, tfj l Qff
pi.;7J
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENTS
Better send
for a cell today and try making an elecdog that will follow a
lamp, or an electric burglar
tric
alarm.
It's very instructive
and great fun.
(See November,
1916,
issue
"Electrical
Experimenter.")
No. FX5I7
Selenium
Shipping \Vght.,
4 oz.
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENTS
BOYS!
Here Are
$122
fEilEGR'^pff'S'SDEs!
the Stars
and Stripes
LETTER5I
MORSE
[COHTIHEMT&L
in All
Their Glory.
the
Be
first
^^Bm TELEGRAM
one in
town
wear this
your
to
p a t r i o tic
b1 e
e
Think of it:
An
trically
'Elictro"
e c
i 1
^^S25
telegraph
1 u m i nated
boutonniere worn in the
lapel hole of your coat.
It
Illuminated
flag,
(to
$.60
(postage 10
cents).
be
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENTS
Cell,
$6.00
"hl'''\"ot<>"'y
not tov. but a practical, honestly built telegraph <)"<
By studMng tne
sounds but works like the big commercial instruments
Such
operator
code for 30 days you can become a flrst-class 'fleKraPj!
Outfit consists of TWO complete teleoperators are in big demand now.
AH met.al Pfrts "
graph instruments each measuring 3%x2%x2yj.
Note hard rubber k"n*'^ J^'fhighly nickel plated. Including key lever
"''^ s^e''
graph Code Chart, telegraph blanks and coiinecting wire ,^
'=^'' 'nstruOutfit works on 2 dry cells (one cell '"[.
but no batteries.
wa>s, each
""">
works
(.hat
Outfit
ONXY
the
Is
"Electro"
The
ment).
Nothing to get out of order.
station can call: no switches, no extras.
Oiiaranteed to please you or money back.
$1.00
Price Complete as illustrated
" .5""'^<'8'"
At all good dealers and department stores.
for two
charges Ji"V'
supply you send us $1 do for outfit rind add mailing
pounds, otherwise we ship express collect.
is
31
The "Electro"
Base)
article
Hard
Price
heads,
$.60
1800
RADIOTONE
ts
a mere test buzzer.
infinitely more.
Mr. H. Gerusback wiio dethis instrument labored incessantly to
The
It is
dia-
ail
thin
.SO.ME rsES.
For
telephone
work.
Also
for
making the
small testinu' outfits for repair men in circuit with only one dry cell or flashlight battery.
When connected in parallel with your
house telephone receiver, you have a double
receiver, an invaluable acquisition to those
who plione in noisy places or to people hard
of hearing.
It can also be used for wireless
though its low resistance won't permit of
such good results as a higher resistance
phone.
inninini7(r
HK
very
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENTS
No.
composi-
rubber.
resistance of our Kh(y>stat la 10 ohroe, the
(ai)HclIy 3 anil)eres cunthiually, slzo Is 4 Inches In
diuiiieter: thickness of porcelain base is 13/16 ins.
The
nheoslat Remilator.
ShiM'ing tveilfht, 2 lbs.
rubber
FK5000
Is
best
money
the
No.
doubt the
for
to-day.
Points of superiority
It
Pony Receiver
'Electro"
Rheostat-Regulator
(Porcelain
signed
This receiver
oz.
is
resistance,
ohms.
IF
TWO OF THESE
No.
v'-'-O'-'
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENTS
FK 5000
Yes. the
it
RADIOTONE
It
to
hear
is
SILENT.
In
fact,
so silent that
is
lop of
its
ANY
Radiotone as described
No. B-2
No. B-7
Each $0.15
Each
Shipping
each
3),i7Cl
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENTS
Weight
2 lbs. per doz.
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENTS
JO. 10
Shipping
Weight
2
lbs.
per 12.
These binding posts arc furnished either nickel plated or gold lacquered, They are made
of first quality brass holes are accurately bored, well fitting set screws, and higlViv pollisbed.
Each post is furnished with a
in. machine screw and washer (not shown In illustral
ilustrations).
Engravings are full size
;
HERCULES DYNAMO
71
The
Electro
Hercules is a
dynamo generating 12 Volts, II
Our
Amperes
you.
(Hiii
Is
wound;
No.
AGEK
namo;
FULTON
espe-
6H
new
IS
is
wailing for
and
ST.,
in
200
elec-
plicity.
It
big,
and n
Wattsi
marvel of electrical
or
mechanical
efficiency and sim
IN AMERICA"
Now
New York
$17.50
stock and
City,
>>
in
America
194
July,
m e?N5TRUQT2R
li
li
An
II
II
II
ii
^{
ii
II
1(
If
1(
II
II
1917
By ALBERT H. BEILER
MANY
experimenters
electrical
have at one time or another installed a burglar alarm in their
homes.
Most of the burglar
alarms constructed by amateurs
are of the ofcn-circuH type, and have therefore several disadvantages, the most important of these being, that, whereas the
opening of a door or window causes the
alarm to ring, the closing of the door or
window will stop the alarm again. To keep
up a steady ringing requires a different type
of circuit than that usually employed. This
may
The
type
latter
noticed that once AI is opened, its subseteill not energise the relay
cjuent closing
again, unless
O is closed.
Fig. 2 shows how this principle is used
in the burglar alarm.
The relay instead of
having only one front contact has two, one
for keeping its own circuit closed as just
described, and the other to close a circuit
for ringing an alarm bell. The relay, which
by the way, is only wound to 4 ohms, operates on 110 volts in series with a lamp or
lamps, which are connected in parallel with
one another. Thus when the alarm starts,
not only will the bell ring, but the lamps
will light and assist friend burglar towards
a hasty departure. The relay may be made
to operate from batteries if the builder
indeed
desires to dispense with the lamps
;
Now
indicated in Fig. 3.
temporarily rethe entire armature from the telegraph sounder and file the end down halfway. (Fig. 3.) Drill and tap a hole as indicated.
Screw the piece B, on to it so as to
form a half lap joint. Insert adjusting
screws with lock-nuts into the end holes of
B, and then replace the armature in its
move
frame.
If
one
is
an
is
its
far, the
electric
circuit.
energized
There
familiar.
down
so that both
front contact circuits
are closed.
Lamps
or bells may be used
to test the continuity of the circuit at
the contacts.
T w o additional
binding posts will be
is
another open-circuit
device, however,
which
called
is
known,
less
a stick relay
arrangement. It is
last one which
this
we
shall consider in
needed as shown in
Fig. 4.
The wiring
on the instrument
proper is made as
detail.
The stick
is
in
relay
used extensively
the interlocking
machines for
way
mode
signaling.
indicated.
rail-
Its
of operation
insures the followa ciring result
cuit may be closed
at a switch but not
opened again at the
:
same point
it
should
may
ringing
armature
lifted
bj-
an
be
hand and
bell
must
switch
is closed,
but the open circuit
door or w n d o w
switch
kept open,
f e
auxiliarx-
contrivances
a y
also be made in conWorking Drawings and Diagrams for Constructing a Really Reliable and Particularly
nection with the
Many Other
Effective Burglar Alarm Apparatus, Employing the "Stick Relay" Principle.
Applications of This Relay Will Suggest Themselves to the Experimenter.
burglar alarm. The
no current can
simple burglar alarm
travel thru the
may be set from inside the house. When
relay, and its armature will be drawn away
the same source of current that rings the
a person leaves, and opens the door it will
from contact C by a retractile spring. If
bell ma\' be used to operate the relay.
This, of
ring, but stop when he closes it.
switch O is now closed, either by opening
Since double contact relays are rather excourse, cannot be done with the alarm dethe door or the window, electro-magnet R
pensive, a good substitute that will cost
scribed herein, and a means must be emwill draw its armature towards it.
very little, will now be described. Secure a
then
ployed to set the alarm after the person has
touches C, and the current has two paths
telegraph sounder (or the equivalent parts
The main
closed the door and is outside.
to travel, i.e., one by way of the open-circuit
from a large electric bell also the parts
switch may be put outside the house and
door switch, and the other by branching off
may be easily made), one wound for 4
closed when leaving, but this is sometimes
at B, going tliru contact C and the armaohms is best if the lamps are to be used,
undesirable where there is no good means
ture, thru the magnet and back to the posialso a piece of 5/16" square brass, 2!4"
tive main. Should O now be opened, it will
of concealment.
long, and two pieces of ^" brass rod 1"
have no effect on electro-magnet R, since
The aut'ior has devised a little contrivlong.
The two pieces of rod should each
R still has a path by which it obtains its have a hole drilled and tapt about half-way ance wherein the alarm is set from the outsource of current. The current can only be
side if/ieii the key is turned in the lock, in
thru them longitudinally. The 5/16" square
conjunction with another device which rings
shut off by main switch M, but it will be
brass should have holes drilled and tapt as
i
1917
July,
setting
the
When
alarm*.
door
the
move
will
was
the
greatest
"MOSQUITO CHASERS."
is
having
stopt
again.
The
set
Oil of pennyroyal
AD
is
enough time
Arrangement
trolling
"Stick
Interlocking
of
Relay"
Burglar
in
Alarm System
Here
Described.
start
tlie
is
unnecessary.
it.
oz.
3 "
Castor oil
Alcohol
"
Mix
ROBERT THOMPSON,
opened, which
8 parts
Castor oil
6 "
Glycerin
3 "
Dissolve the resin into the other two
mgredients by the aid of heat. When they
become a liquid spread on parchment paper
by means of a brush.
it.
To
ringing,
Resm
difficulty
moment
FLY PAPER.
is
to the left
alarm
195
and
the spool
tied
or pasted
in
Jr.
place,
fit-
centers and
must be
switch
place.
lint:
electro-magnet that is capable of lifting about 1.000 lbs., may be easily made.
Its current consumption is about 5 amperes
on 110 volts.
The body of the magnet consists of a circular piece of wrought iron or steel 7J4
inches in diameter and 2 9/16 inches thick.
The bottom of the body should be machined
true and a circular groove turned out in it
to fit the magnet coil. The outer end of the
groove is counterbored 1/16 of an inch
deep by l-}4 inches wide, to fit a brass ring
which keeps the coil in place. The ring is
held in position by eight small flat-head
screws. When fastened in place, the screws
and brass plate sfiould be slightly below
the surface of the magnet body.
To support the magnet, three screw eyes
of 3/16 inch stock should be provided and
fastened in three tapt holes equally spaced
in a 5 in. diameter circle, or one ^s inch
stock screw-eye may be placed in the cenFor winding the wire coil.
ter as shown.
a wooden form or spool must be provided. It
is made with a cylindrical core .>'_ inches
in diameter by I'j inches long and slightly
tapered, so that the coil may be easily re-
Contributed by
ffo/e
for cord.
J.
'
LWAK.
h/rought iron
The
spool
is
both
Something
Some Time
Details
Circuits.
196
More About
By
THERE
August of the
same year, an explanation of why
the same would not operate indefinitely.
That the plan is entirely feasible, provided
a small amount of energj' be supplied from
some outside source, may be seen from the
following description and illustrations of a
electric clock and, in
HOWARD
W. LEWIS
(lulum rod
of
.\. 1.
E. E,
In connection with
As
terzals.
191 7
July,
hundred
dollars.
The
per day. It is now operated thru the medium of a bell-ringing transformer. The
incir-
secondary circuit
which it operates
energized by
is
a sub-
how-
u t e for a
standard seconds
batteries,
ever.
pendulum,
point was
as to the
magnitude of the
induced
current
in the coil.
In order to answer this question the author
made a simple
s t
electro -
an
The
magnet-
raised
actuated
ically
very
service
satisfac-
torily.
photo-
The
test
may
In
Some
The
Work
to are inappreciable c o
p a red
with either the
ratus
ing
normal
current
thru the solenoid,
or the current in
Shown HavFulfilled
the
Requirements Very
The pendu-
the
Satisfactory.
A s
a
Test
It
Was
Run for 24 Hours
with
Deviation
a
of a Few Seconds
Only.
lum consists of a
round steel rod
with two attached
weights.
It is
hung on thin
flexible
nomena referred
is of small iron
pipe and the table
of thin
steel
plate.
Research
Aerodyin
namics Need Arose
for an Instrument
debe seen
may
be moved up or down.
The upper
end of the rod is threaded to receive the
nut, 16.
Coarse or fine adjustment of the
periodicity is thus secured by shifting one
or the other of these weights.
On top of the plate is mounted a \'eeder
stroke counter, actuated thru links from
the pendulum rod.
This device, together
with a stop watch, facilitates the calibration and adjustment of the clock.
solenoid consisting of 2,700 turns of
Xo. 26 B. & S. gage insulated copper wire
is attached to the lower part of the frame.
To the bottom of the pendulum is fastened a bundle of closely bound iron wires.
This curved plunger moves in and out of
the solenoid as the pendulum swings. The
coil is energized from either the 110 volt
These
ments
(A)
lighting circuit w ith a lamp in series therewith, or from 3 dry cells without the lamp.
It is necessary, of course, to have some
arrangement which will close the circuit
thru the solenoid when the plunger is mov-
nected
hook is consequently
reaching forward to pick up the next tooth
of the ratchet-wheel, this brush rests on a
fiber segment and the circuit thru the coil
is open.
On the return stroke, however,
the hook pulls a live (brass)
segment
under the brush and current flows into the
coil, which thus exerts a powerful pull on
the plunger.
Before the plunger reaches
the end of its travel, a dead
fiber) segment rolls under the brush, the solenoid
the solenoid and the
its
pull
The
and
commutator
are
adjustable
on
the
The secondary
tion
circuit.
experiwere as
follows
entirely
releases
secondary
(battery)
steel
vinced
Connection with
this
19).
Solenoid
discon-
from the
1917
July,
words
it
is
di
-
drawn out
been
dt
exactly analogous to
the similarly
induced coimtcr E.M.E. which arises in a
coil to oppose the How of current therein
when the coil is lirst connected to a source
of continuous voltage.
Due to the tact,
however, that the movement of the plunger
It
is
WHAT TO DO WHEN
SPILLED.
ACIDS ARE
is
spilled.
Contributed by
J.
GRAY.
SYSTEM.
By
L. R.
W.
Allison,
Assoc,
A. I. E. E.
The complementary relation between the
telephone and telegraph system is particu-
^lephooe
TekpAeoe
H.
^e/eohane
BCB
Steil spring
197
^^
grounded
n^^
f
for screw
\^
"
(^^iscr,.
_^J'
>
-^3
(D
>
fi
))
1-'
.t
.,*
I
.n
rron
1
gram.
In connection with this effective wiring
it is interesting to note that
this possible interchange of system and service brings about greater economv in the
use of joint facilities of both telephnne and
telegraph plants, including both lines and
terminal stations.
Quite naturally, there
are great advantages to be derived thru
the use of a joint "wire plant," utilizing for
both telephone and telegraph the operating
facilities that would ordinarily be employed
for a single purpose only.
arrangement
/ QCi fitp9
Details of All Parts Necessary to Build a Standard Seconds Pendulum for Use In Closing
a Secondary Circuit at Exact Intervals, Et Cetera.
198
Now that Geissler tubes are hardly procurable at aiw cost, I think that this article
will prove of interest to all who have
Below are full
wanted a Geissler tube.
1917
July,
are
side.
Up
yards
75
this
will
/^o
NEEDLE
to Drawing
C, push button
Code
A, batteries B, spark
on top of cover D,
primary circuit
E, secondary circuit
F,
secondary binding post on top of cover;
coil
WAX
FICE
ibrator.
SPACE
Details for
'SPARK COIL
AIR
fire
WAX
FIG.I
about
to
the
best
to the
in
its
Some
constructors
make
their
cannon to
Take
When
Contributed by
DAVID GOODMAN.
something which
and sane.
The
Pushbu/Zan^
25-7S feet/eac/i
.Z>
-3
]
nothing
in
it.
.T_L
ing sketch.
ver\- successfully
GILBERT CROSSLEY.
July,
1917
mm
First Prize, $3.00; Second Prize. $2.00; Third Prize, $1.00.
This cUpiirlintnt will award the following monthly piizis;
The purpo.se of this department is to stiinulate experimenters towards accomplishing new things with old apparatus or old material,
and for the most useful, practical and original idea submitted to the Editors of this department, a monthly series of prizes will be
awarded. For the best idea submitted a prize of $3.00 is awarded; for the'" second ""
best idea a $2.00 prize, and for the third best prize of
FIRST PRIZE,
SECOND PRIZE,
$3.00
THIRD PRIZE,
$2.00
skin
mag-
The photograph
clearly
shows how
to
spring
may
FRED'K
J.
Contributed by
MARK SLABODNIK.
it.
CorA p/ug
Lamp'^'
ejftergt
er,
clean
from
all
the
dirt,
inside
the cartridge
of
half-round file. Xext take a combrass wood screw that will fit inside
the cartridge and place it inside one which
has been cleaned. Xow pour solder in and
you then have a serviceable contact point
It is perhaps better to put a drop of zinc
chlorid on the inside of the cartridge to
make the solder stick better.
if .screws are used which will come thru
on the rear of the base, wires may easily
be soldered to them.
WAITE.
G.
Contributed by
fir
GRAXT
Save
Your
Cartridge
Boys.
Shells,
Points,
if
They
Wood
or
Machine Screw
Is
am
stenographer,
emiiloyed
in
an
each of the carbon papers, which is separated from the next by the white paper.
On separating the carbons from the white
papers, which is done by pulling the ends
of the carbons, which protrude beyond the
w bite papers, \\ ith one hand and the w hite
papers themselves with the other hand,
some of the charges are neutralized on
separation sharp crackling being indicative
of this. I usually place all of the carbons
onto the machine, after which I draw quite
a long spark from any part of tlie ma-
At
is
^ref/ecfor
hiifi burIon
A
of
Gift or
my
knuckle.
received the shock unexpectedly
after bringing my hand near the charged
machine, as I had formed a habit of placing the carbons onto the machine after
each writing. After investigating the matter, I found that the mysterious "what-isit" was developed in the machine.
chine into
first
length of the bamboo is slightly greatsay an inch and a half, than the battery.
The bamboo must have a joint about a half
inch from one end.
A hole is bored thru
the center, just large enough to permit the
flashlight bulb to fit tightly.
.\
i)iece of
bright tin, shaped right, is placed around
.'\
the bulb to act as a reflector.
cork is
The
handy.
The "Kadio-bug" with a lean
pocketbook can construct these at practically no cost.
in
SCHLIXK.
make
mon
old used
knife
AC
CONTACT POINTS.
When
First
atomy.
"save your skin" and while it will save
more time than skin, it is our skin that
we are most considerate of.
The spring that holds the legs apart
should be made of spring brass, phosphor
shell
$1.00
first I
Contributed by
WM. LESKY.
HUBERT
200
Where
the Radio
Amateur
By
THE
amateur has
at last
an oppor-
-M. B.
Fits in
the U.
with
XAJ,
in
Illinois.
The
Class
4,
liberal organization,
AN EXTREMELY LIGHT-WEIGHT
RADIO TRANSMITTER
AND RECEIVER.
connection
The
One
that a
come
tion period.
Middle West
mon form
it
which
com-
of vi-
brator.
Xew York
of
Cir\\
The
transmitter is
stationed in the main
compartment while
the receiving outfit
is placed in the cover
of the case, which is
a substantially built
fiber
shown
paratus
measur-
affair
10
ing
member
war
stituting the
Naval Reserve
S.
U. S. N. R. F.
the
pletely in the
10
on
12
It
straps.
The
is
mitting set
prises the following:
A high tension
spark coil placed
within the case ami
used to
charge a condenser
thru a special
quenched spark gap.
This is seen on top
i
is
One
The
mounted
Compact
Designed
Espe-
The tuning inductance consists of a number of turns of wire placed on a frame, the
size of which is equivalent to that of the
inside of the dimensions of the box, so that
complished by means
of a secondary variable capacity. This
latter
is
controlled
to:>
Latest
Transmitter Operating on a
Storage or Dry Battery.
special independ-
ent vibrator
the
Sets
of
Radio
plates.
is
separate
as illustrated. This
receiver
comprises
an inductive coupler,
with a fixt secondary
and tuning is ac-
trans-
com-
wh
equipt
with heavy carrjing
inches.
1917
July.
1917
July.
201
TART
OF
is
in
its
member
I.
We
unbelievably
successfully
enter
the
munication. It is indeed a deplorable fact
that 70 per cent of the radio experimenters
in the United States
can not thoroly explain the theoretical
basis of operation of
one of their instru-
vast
and important.
Of the multitude of
wireless amateurs in
the
there
small
United
is
ments.
can
States,
anything more
than an interesting
hobby. Many experimenters are inclined
for
such
involves
quite
that
beyond
costly
it
is
their
how
it is
possible
If You
Make Up Loading or Other Inductances, Take the Trouble to Either Measure
or Calculate the Inductance in Micro-Henrys
or Centimeters.
It Always Pays.
field
of radiocommunication.
There seems
today.
The wireless transmission of
power, radio control of mechanisms (radio
tele-mechanics), tlie development of radiocommunication, the
telephony,
directive
perfection of the high frequency alternator,
and the elimination of interference, are but
a few, a very few, of the problems to be
There will be a daj', in the not
solved.
far distant future, when an audience in
New York may sit and listen to a concert
Nikola
being played in Paris via radio.
Tesla tells us that within 25 years we will
be sending radio controlled boats to any
port of Europe without a man on board
We may put much faith in statements made
by Tesla, as his accomplishments are many
and great. If it is possible to control vessels via radio, why will it not become possible
to control airships,
trains
and auto-
Audion
new
era
WV
We
impedance,
fast
study
etc.
and numerous.
Read every
One
should
stand
it
of.
If
article
read
it
again.
It
the Field.
is
detector at all.
Among the
more radio experimenters in
the United States, there are undoubtedly
many F'cssendens, Marconis and de F'orests,
who either lack courage or enthusiasm, to
enter research work.
of
operation is hopelessly
beyond them. These
statements do not
necessarily infer that
to enter research work
it
is
imperative that
one be a radio expert
or graduate engineer.
Quite to the contrary.
It is only necessary
that one be familiar
with the elementary
theory under which
the various elements
of radio receptors and
transmitters
operate.
This knowledge is ab-
and
even then it is not
necessary to go real deep at the start. It
is not necessary to be able to explain in
come
his .\udion
4(10,000 and
The possibilities
less are limitless.
is
if
Possibilities
they
a
that
solutely essential
resistance,
you
know why a
True,
se-
apparatus
tell
variable condenser
a surprisingly
number of
work
research
into
an elementary understanding of
fundamental principles of radiocom-
without
A Good Type
mitter Which
or
of
May
"Dummy"
the "Wireless Course" by Gernsback, Lescarboura and Secor, you can learn just
why, for a given wave length, that when
C is decreased, L must be increased, etc.
None are so blind as those who won't see!
(Conliiiucd on fiagi' 218)
202
16
A very compact and serviceable arrangement of military signal light and tell-tale
buzzer is shown in the accompanying illusIt
was developed by R. C.
tration.
soon becomes
then goes out.
For this paradoxical
experiment, now break
that
rent.
these,
it
brilliant,
the tip
off
lows
tom
as small
holes.
points.
H,
at
The
these
holes
must
Xow,
After obtaining
proceed as fol-
Mark
dition,
1917
July,
The Boy Scout S ignal Corps Division^"Will Find This Combined Buzzer and Signal
Be Sure You Have a Good Lens to Start
Light Outfit Very Light and Serviceable.
would burn
and it
same candle
power or Yz. When the lamp has burned
for about three minutes on either voltage,
place a match at the opening and a small
and vers- white light will burn like a candle.
;
circuit,
close
the
all
circuit.
Match.
Check sfinng
norm
cloa'
Contributed by
GEORGE
C.
non-conductivity.
it
a Tin
MACLEAN.
TO TRANSFER PICTURES TO
WOOD.
float your
Dissolve salt in soft water
photo print on the surface, picture-side up;
The wood
let it remain about an hour.
should lie of bird's-eye maple, or other
Varnish with the
light-colored hardwood.
:
Take
Ai.BERT
\V.
WTLSDOX.
Due
"
What!
when
enough so
that
Contributed by
V. C.
McILVAINE.
1917
July,
203
Experimental Chemistry
By .VLBI-RT
\VlL.SI>ON
Fourteenth Lesson
HYDROCHLORIC
B
capcd
form
ACID.
ASIL \ALr:.\'n.\i;
tUc 15tli
Century first described the preparation by a process similar to the
in
He
now
called it
in use.
That which csSalt."
from anything easily in intangible
was called a "Spirit." Thus Sl>irit
one
of
"Spirit
are evolved.
When
a mixture
volumes of
hydrogen and chlorin
is exposed to the di3.
Ttiist/e
fube
of
Safe/y fu6e
thus obtained,
The acid
digestive fluids of the stomach.
is supposed to be secreted in what is known
as the Border Cells, whose exact func-
equal
r/7/j//e
fuOe
Small ring
fsupporf
fii/dber
RuMer
formed with no
co/7nec/or\
Cannec/ar
\
resi-
Large rmg
^sappor/
hydrogen
4.
When
given
chloric
treated
acid gas
with
is
sodium
volume.
No derivative of
Hydrochloric acid is
known which contains
5.
rig69
Experimental Apparatus Set Up for the Preparation of Hydrochloric
Acid In the Laboratory.
Wine, Spirit of Wood, etc., are indication of the crude theory of spirits so long
Hydrochloric acid being a_ gas
in vogue.
which is liberated from salt when it is
treated with Sulfuric acid, it was naturally
regarded as a Spirit of Salt.
Glauber prepared this gas in the 17th
Century by treating Sodium Chlorid [Common salt, Na CI) with sulfuric acid.
I'riestly, in l/'72, first obtained it in pure
condition. He called it "^larine Acid Air."
Upon the theory introduced by Lavoisier,
that all acids necessarily contain oxygen,
Hydrochloric acid was for a long time be11/
fube^
The
less
hydrogen or
chlorin in a. molecule.
ratio
Occurrence
The
The series of salts, derived from Hydrochloric acid, are widely distributed and
of great importance. In general, they are
crystalline, stable, and soluble [except Silver], tho some are decomposed by water,
Common
especially if evaporated with it.
salt. Sodium Chlorid [NaCl| is the most
important of the chlorids, and in fact is
the parent substance from which almost
all chlorin and its compounds are made,
as well as all of the sodium compounds.
In the manufacture of Sodium Carbonat by the process in most common u:c,
.Salt
is
first
treated with Sulfuric acid,
by which it is converted into Sodium SulIn this stage of the process. Hydrofate.
chloric acid is necessarily formed in large
_
cjuantity.
Formerly
which
it
air,
this
was allowed
to
ef-
Fig.
70
Fig.
of
Hydrochloric
Collecting
Downward Displacement
in
See Experiment
Tube.
Gas By
Dry Test
79.
[I]
121
KaCl
Sulfuric
2XaCI
Sodium
-F
Chlorid
H,SO.
.^odium
Chlo
HCI
-f
Hydrochloric
Acid
Acid
NaHSO.
H\-drogeti
S^oHium
Sulfate
H,SO,
2HCI
Sulfuric
Hydro-
NajSO,
Sodium
Acid
chloric
Sulfate
Aci.i
If an excess of acid
is
employed, ar
>\ r,
Atsi'hcd
Fn.
if ajtting
rubber ccnmctor
^'973
Method
the
less
I'll
paih' 220)
204
Wminklesl
[avoirdupois].
For
4
5
6
7
8
9
EDITED BY S.GERNSBACK
heading we will publish every
information in Mechanics.
useful
We shall be
Electricity and Chemistry.
pleased, of course, to have our readers send
new
wrinkles,
us any recipes, formulas,
ideas, etc.. useful to the experimenter which
if
publication,
will be duly paid for. upon
10
this
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
acceptable^
HOW TO MAKE
A CHEMICAL
BALANCE.
a
chemical balance constructed by the writer
The
accompanying
photo
ilhistrates
While
gram.
self-explanatory, but
is
not be amiss. To make
as that
it, first obtain a telephone ringer set
shown in figure. It is not necessary to purchase a brand new one, hut go to some
electric or telephone repair shop where you
may secure a ringer for less than fifty
Procents or even for nothing, possibly.
ceed to rearrange the different pieces so as
to appear, after adding other parts, like
On the armature,
shown below.
that
solder or bolt a strip of metal, preferably
aluminum, Y2" x 7" and on the ends of this
"beam" attach two circular 4" pans. Below one of the pans place a right angle
strip and adjusting screw, in order to be
Back of the
able to make pans balance.
instrument, after fixing on base, place a
strip for an indicator.
The
illustration
a few words
may
2
3
Under
month
fluid
4.66 grains
"
9.38
"
14.10
"
19.00
'
24.00
"
29.10
"
34.30
'
39.60
"
45.09
"
50.67
"
..
"
'
'
'
"
"
"'
..
.
..
'
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
"
..
80.48
114.00
152.00
195.44
245.56
304.02
373.10
456.03
^
^^y^ertfaomp
"
izj^^ffcfher
"
"
'
"
liquid.
also, sometimes,
This
a saturated base.
method is incorrect unless it is so designated in giving the formula, that is. by
stating in the formula saturated solution
Such percentages are made by placbase.
ing in the liquid used more of the chemical than the liquid will carry in solution
made up from
move
as
resulting solution is
the excess chemical
base.
liltered
re-
to
For example,
make
to
10
ALBERT
TO PETRIFY WOOD.
Equal quantities of gem salt, rock alum,
white vinegar, chalk and Peebles' powder.
This solution will petrify wood or any other
porous substances if put in after the ebulStone Coating for
Wood
it
straight.
Finished
will
make
graphic work.
Contributed by
MARK SLABODNIK.
HOW TO MAKE
The hygrometer
A HYGROMETER.
is
an
WILL
M. DUFFIE.
Forty parts
Lever.
of the beam.
If the air becomes moist,
the sponge, becoming heavier, will preponderate
if dry. the sponge will be raised
This balance may be contrived in two
up.
ways, by either having the pin in the middle of the beam, with a slender tongue,
a foot and a half long, pointing to the divisions of an arched plate, fitted on it, or
the other extremity of the beam may be
so long, as to describe a large arc on a
board placed for the purpose.
To prepare the sponge, it may be necessary to wash it in water and. when dry. in
water or vinegar, in which sal ammoniac
or salt of tartar has been dissolved and
The
let it dry again: then it is fit for use.
instrument can be hung against the wall^;
and. in that case a bit of steel, as at "A,"
should be placed before the needle, to keep
chalk,
for
Contributed by
lition is over.
r^
"
this
1917
either
For each
July.
instrument
to
measure the degrees of dryness or moisture of the atmosphere. There are various
kinds of hygrometers; for whatever body
Everyone
Strange
is
silver
a pliable
If
metal is obtained that hardens slowly.
the solder is too hard, grind up with more
Keep gold and silver jewelry,
mercurv.
destroys
etc., out of the way. as mercury
white.
them.
Contributed by
H. V.
_
PFEIFFER.
July,
1917
205
Our Amateur Laboratory Contest is open to all readers, whether subscribers or not. The photos are judged for best arrangement and efficiency
of the apparatus. To increase the interest of this department we make it a rule not to publish photos of apparatus unaccompanied by that of the owner.
Dark
We pay each month $3.00 prize for the best photo. Make your description brief and use only one side of the sheet
photos preferred to light toned ones.
Address the Editor. "With the Amateurs" Dcpt.
win a cash prize for a few minutes' brain work. The big question now confronting every radio
do with my wireless apparatus?" To help the more than 400,000 loyal radio students and enihiisiasts to apply their kuowlcdu'c and, most important of all, to utilize their instruments for some practical electrical or
communication purpose other than wireless, we shall pay two prizes one of $10.00 and one of $5.00 respectively, for the
best suKnestion as to "what to do with your radio set during the war."
Be brief; 100 to 200 words should tell your story,
keinember it's the "idea" that counts. Get busy at once, ijoys, as we want all suggestions in by July 25th, at the latest, so that
the results can be announced in the September number of The Electrical Expf.ri.m enter. And don't forget we must have
thoroly "practical" ideas. Address the Editor, Radio Problem Contest.
Here
amateur
chance
your
"What can
is
is
to
Prize This Month Awarded to Amateur Radio Station of 8 Parker Wiggin. Kansas City. Kan.
1 William P. Aldrlch, Westfield,
Mass.; 2 Radio station of Orney Dunnum. Hannaford, N. D.; 3 N. W. Lockwood. East Orange. N. J.; 4 Lucas Tylekens. Jr.. Kansas
City. Mo.; 5
Walter Reimer. Milwaukee. Wis.; 6 Lester S. Fawcett, Independence, Iowa: 7 Ole B. Ritchey. Lake City. Mich.: 9 Lovell
H. Cook. Mexico. N. Y.; 10 Henry W. Hall, Beeville. Tex.; 11 Otto Vandell. Brooklyn. N. Y.; 12 Hubert F. Jordan, Evanston, III.;
$3.00
13
Palmer
Reist,
Dayton, O.
206
July,
1917
14
Radio Station of Louis Falconi. Fort Stanton. N. Mex.: 15 Lessesne R. Allison, Statesvllle, N. C: 16 Frank O. Walsh, Jr., Augusta,
Ga.: 17 Geo. Anderson, Dorchester, Mass.; 18 James B. Armstrong. Ithaca. N. Y.; 19 L. C. Herndon. Portsmouth, Va.; 20 Allen B. Du
Mont, Montclair, N. J.; 21 IVIorris Pollack, Chicago, III.; 22 H. Muysklns, Jr., Lynden, Wash
23 Geo. M. Bends. Utica, N. Y.; 24 Earl
McClure, Van Wert, O.; 25 Butswick Brattland, Ada, Minn.; 26 Geo. E. Meldrum, Jr., Carrollton. III.: 27 Clyde R. Battin, Athens, Ohio.
July.
1917
ACTIVITY.
Nikola
Tesla,
the
famous
electrical
wizard,
Radium
definitely
determined
Colorado and Utah. The Radium is extracted by chemical means from the ore together with Barium, from which it is sepaThe
rated by fractional crystallization.
bromid salt of Radium is slightly less soluble than that of Barium, so on cooling
a solution, crystals richer in Radium than
.-Xfter six or
in Barium separate out first.
eight successive operations, pure crystals
of Radium bromid are obtained, which are
then ready for the market.
many
Besides the rrfdiations given off by Radium, there is produced in addition a gas,
known as "emanation." This gas is about
a lunidred thousand times as active as
Radium itself. When introduced into a
This
glass tube it causes a bright glow.
illumination
when substances which phosphoresce, as zinc
sullid.
are put into a tube containing
Fig. 2.
emanation.
glow increases
to
brilliant
By means
established upon
friends and
Thomas .'\. Edison, for the
purpose of recounting and celebrating the
achievements of a quarter of a century in
the art of electric lighting, with which the
name of Edison is imperishably identified.
was decided that the most effective
It
means of accomplishing this object would
be by the establishment of a gold medal,
which should, during the centuries to come,
serve as an honorable incentive to scienengineers and artisans to maintain
tists,
by their works a high standard of accomplishment.
the initiative
associates of
group of
tablished and
under
an
indenture
dated
February
11,
Behrend said:
"By an extraordinary
coincidence, it is
exactly twenty -nine years ago, to the very
day and hour, that there stood before this
Institute .\ikola Tesla, and he read a description of his great discovery of the generation and utilization of polyphase alternating currents.
He left nothing to be
done for those who followed him.
His
paper contained the skeleton even of the
mathematical theory.
here
It
to-night
is
that
report to Mr. .Adams, Lord Kelvin recommended the use of direct current for the
there being
final
product
is
ideas
ELECTRIC RESISTANCE OF
SELENIUM CELLS.
to Professor H. Greinacher
selenium cells of the original
Shatford Bidwell type, which he studied
together with Mr. C. W. Miller, behave
with respect to alternating currents as they
behave when exposed to light, and show
polarity when traversed by continuous curCommiuiicating his observations to
rents.
the German Physical Society, Greinacher
stated that the resistance of the selenium
cell rose when direct current flow-ed in the
According
of
of
207
Zurich,
dark,
resistance was
for negative curthe time, and that
certain sense like
in
rectifiers.
Who Was
Medal."
"The basis for the theory of the operating characteristics of Mr. Tesla's rotating-field induction motor, so necessary to
its practical development, was laid by the
brilliant French savant Prof. -Andre Blondel, and by Professor Kapp of Birmingham.
It
work and
my
fell
diagram' the somewhat mysterious and complex experimental phenomAs this was done twenty-one years
ena.
ago, it is particularly pleasing to me, upon
the coming of age of this now universally
accepted theory tried out by application
to several million horse-power of machines
operating in our great industries to pay
my tribute to the inventor of the motor
and the system which have made possible
His
the electric transmission of energy.
name marks an epoch in the advance of
From that work has
electrical science.
sprung a revolution in the electrical art."
simple
'circle
208
July.
1917
k^TENTS
Galvanic Cell
(No.
issued
1,221,062;
L.
to
Morduch
10
(No.
Kaplan.)
New
(No.
1,221,981
A.
issued
Edison.)
form
simplified
Thomas
to
vibrating
of
Radio-Telegraph Receptor
by
rectifier
for charging storage batteries, etc.
It involves a permanent
issued to Greenleaf
Whittier Pickard.)
1,224,499;
An improved method
of receiving
radio- telegraphic or telephonic signals wherein (Fig. 1) the secondary
coil C has only one side connected
to
the
receiving apparatus
D-T,
which may be grounded.
Fig. 2
shows
and primary B
Ft^l
magnet, a set of
and an actuating
The contacts on the
polarizing
vibrating reeds
steel
magnet
so
electrodes are of
cut down arcing
By connecting the rectifying contacts in
parallel a large current capacity is
obtained; in series a relatively nigh
potential current can be handled.
The amplitude of movement of the
vibratory contacts is small
about
10 thousandths of an inch.
special
of
The
lonized-Chamber Device
(No.
Electrolytic Rectifier
electrolyte
solution,
the
as
1.222.QI6;
issued
to
Clifford
Dudley Babcock.)
A clever arrangement for ionizedchamber detectors or amplifiers of
the de Forest type, and here shown
to
the
fixt
carbon
quickly
means
coil.
vibrators and
ar-
r^^
compound
sired
wave
reach
length.
assured.
that
a few turns of
coarse wire having a natural period
much smaller than the shortest de-
its
unfailingly
projectile
to
target when the latter is
composed of a
structure.
steel
The lower
or iron shell
part of the
means
a certain measure of
of oxygen from the
the exterior of the cell,
depolarizing efficiency does
not depend merely on surface exposure, but also on the gross amount
of the manganese compound.
this
transference
rows
in
nietal
in
a
electrodes
diagram
7
illustrate.
The
due
to
interior
so that
heat-
and passing thru the salts deposited in the lower part of the
pocket formed by diagonal grid as
indicated.
The
inventor
claims
that the solution will thus be kept
saturated at all times and that heating is reduced to a minimum, with
increased efficiency in consequence.
to
Electric Interrupter
ing,
(No.
An
1,224,570;
issued
Sandreuter.)
interrupter
electric
to
Stuart
intended
metal sleeves placed inside and outside of the tubular glass bulb.
The
inner sleeve supports the usual grid
and is charged thru
the
glass
dielectric
from the outer sliding
metal sleeve, connected in the circuit
as shown.
issued to
Solaro.)
(No.
1,224,343:
issued to
James O.
Watkins.)
Britannio
an
10c
EACH
swing
1917
July.
Phoney Patent
Under
We
We
Patent to
$3.00
-(^^)
To
ll'lionic It
May
If
.1,
jiffy.
Patent Appraised
CUDOMOTOR
away
Constern:
it
Lapup Cowjuce
Whereby It
Device.
"
ing
YOU THREE
Offizz
you haven't a smell of the Patent yet. After they have allowed the Patent, you must pay another $20.00 as a final fee.
That's $40.00
WE
PAY YOU $3.00 and grant you a Phoney Patent in the bargain, so you
save $43.00
When sending in your Phoney Patent application,
be sure that it is as daffy as a lovesick bat.
The daffier, the better.
Simple sketches and a short description will help our staff of Phoney
Patent examiners to issue a Phoney Patent on your invention in a
this
DOLLARS!
209
Galena
is very
sensitive.
Milkshake, N. D., Have at the Risk of My Decaying Sanity. Invented and Designed a World-UpheavPossible At Last for Cows to Milk Themselves Automatically By the Surplus 'Cow-Power' Developed By
of the City of
Is
Made
is
of
Dynamo
oscillatory
erates an
G.
This
latter
on account of the
alternatin.g
current,
.1.
The
now conveyed
thru
glass pipe O, thru Galena stop-cock P,
thence thru flexible cast iron supply pipe Q.
temperature.
air
is
1st
.\n automatic cow-milk dispenser,
dispensing with all milkmaids.
2nd A cow-milker operated by the cow's
own cud-chewing.
3rd .\ motor attachable on all ruminators and other rummies.
In memoriani henceforth and hencewith I
have therefore caused and bv these presents
ment
this
legal
instru-
my
south-western uppermost backhoof, this 3rd day of our Grace, in the 149th
year of the French Revolution.
Lapup Cowjuce,
Fiiiicssi-s:
A. Helnvaguy.
A. \\. Drvup,
S. O. Mecrust.
By
his attorney:
Leon'.\rd S.arves,
Enid, Okla
210
1917
July.
Question Box
>y^r^
This department is for the sole benefit of all electrical experimenters. Questions w.il be answered here for the benefit of all but onlv
"
'
matter of sufficient interest will be publisht. Rules under which questions will be answered:
Only three questions can be submitted to be answered.
1.
2.
Only one side of sheet to be written on: matter must be typewritten or else written in ink; no penciled matter considered
Sketches, diagrams, etc., must be on separate sheets. Questions addrest to this department cannot be answered by mail free 'of charee
3.
4.
If a quick answer is desired by mail, a nominal charge of 25 cents is made for each question.
If the question entail considerable research work or intricate calculations a special rate will be charged. Correspondents will be informed ac to the fee before such questions are
answered.
'
permits
$1-00 EACH!!!
a
^
= Now the time
make your B
in a real practi- B
g Kodak pay for
cal way.
IVc are after interesting H
a photographs
out-of-the-ordinary =
m,
to
is
itself
s
g
H
M
B
B
^
happens to interest
particularly =
well, we can have the photo retouched. B
For the general run of subjects,
B
ever,
does not pay to go to such 3
= expense. Therefore, please take pains H
'" properly focus and crpose your M
S pictures.
It often happens that a M
J
= really mediocre
subject well photo- M
graphed wins approval over an
M
a
= cellent subject poorly photographed. B
g And don't send us plate or film "nega- W
send unmounted or mounted H
a
preferably a light and a dark 3
^ "prints,"
one.
M
a
M As to what to photograph: Well M
that's hard for us to say.
We leave 3
a that
up to you, and every reader now g
a
g has the opportunity to become a re- g
of the latest things in the realm M
B porter
a of Electricity, Radio and Science. =
B
remember
the "odd,
a novelplease
or practical stunts" that we are H
a interested
Every photo submitted J
g should
be accompanied by a brief de- g
g
g scription of100 150 words. Give M
don't worry about the S
a the "facts" attend
to
Enclose g
a stamps We'llphotos
are to he returned g
g Of^d
place a piece of cardboard in the B
a
a envelope with them to prevent mutila- M
Look around your tozcn and H
a see what
you can find that's interest- a
a
idea of the freak S
H To give some
a photos we likerefer to page 188. H
Address photos to Editor "Odd m
m. Photos," Electrical Experimenter, m
233 Fiiltoji Street, New York City.
m
J
Station.
improve it ?
A. 2. A tuning coil or loose coupler
should not be used with this system, as
it is impossible to tune any distant signal
with this ground telegraph system, speakcircuit
ing generally.
ADHESION PHENOMENON.
Betram Wertheim, N.
(802.)
Y.,
writes
us
Q.
1.
copies,
occurs.
Whenever,
I
after
carbon
typing
that a strange phenomenon
papers, including the carbons,
find
The
of
electrical, radio and scientific snbjccts and are zeilling to pay $1.00 cash
for every one 'u'c can use. Please
bear in mind that for half-tone reproduction in a magazine, a photograph should be particularly sharp
and clear. Of course, if a subject
J
a
H
a
a
g
=
a
=
^
OXYBENZYLMETHYLENGLYCOLANHYDRIDE.
(803.) Harold
wishes to know
Betts,
Sacramento.
Cal.,
'
hozi>-
it
3.
A.
3. X'es.
Is
it
An
electrolytic
interrupter
be made by placing
container and adding
of one part of sulparts
of
water.
effected.
e.v-
tiz'es:"
'
is
in-
terrupters
it's
in.
to
style.
110
AC.
that.
if
tion.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
tis
B'lt,
|lllllllll!rilllllll!llllillllllliiillliiiiii!l!!!lliiiliin^
finer,
Q.
symbol
an organic
Bakelite/is one of these.
a{
XVhich
compound,
and
Q.
2.
two wires
is
fifty
a SOS
cno.ire CO//
Oscar
F. Miller,
Milwaukee, Wis.,
says
ble
A.
is.
1.
The
trouble
is
with
your
wiring
1917
July.
211
present.
at
BOOKS
(805.)
H.
H.
Bales,
N.
Halifax,
F.,
wants
Q. 1. The prices of the following text
"Alternating Current Electricity
hooks
and Its Applications to Industry" By \V.
H. Timbie and H. H. Higbie, 729 pages.
Also "Practical
Second Course, 1916.
:
stated.
TELEPHONE MAGNETS.
Michigan,
Otsego,
Reader,
(806.) A
wishes to know
Q. 1. How can I magnetize telephone
magneto magnets ?
A. 1. The magneto magnets can be remagnetized by employing an electro-magthe distance
net consisting of two poles
between these poles should correspond to
the distance between the magneto mag;
By
About Electricity
All
Anythmg you want to know about electricity can be found in these seven thick volumes.
Every line is written in plain language language that ever\'one can understand. The
covers the generation and use of electricity for power,
1916 edition just off the press
of
light, transportation and communication, including the construction and operation
dynamos and motors. Also covers central station engineering and telephone work, as well
as wireless telegraphy and telephony and land and submarine telegraphy
Valuable alike to the electrical experimenter, experienced electrician and electrical engineei;
will fit yc
rience necessary.
net type.
fixt
condenser and
1,0(X)
ohm
receiver.
My
anything but
static; can you tell me what the cause of
If
this is?
I have never heard a signal.
it is some minor trouble and if I remedied
could I receive Arlington and X.A.R.
it,
(Key West), with it?
A. 3. The trouble is undoubtedly with
your ground, and this can be remedied by
placing a copper sheet about 6 feet square
This should be placed 10,
in the ground.
or even 15 feet deep, in the earth, coverwith
pulverized charcoal and
ing the same
impregnating the total mass with salt water,
hard
which
clay.
will
never
EleetrleaJ
PImeDt9 of ElMtrleity
Ele^
UraQrpmpnta
I' ndr writer's
Eleetrle
Alteroatine Carrent Ma Power Tran^mhsion^
of Elfctrical Machlnpry
Llpbtinp
chinery
^Eli-f-
Cars
Hobmarine Telepmpby,
heard
considerably.
In regard to the reception of Arlington time signals with your present equipment, we are very much in doubt as to
whether it can be done, but by the employment of an Audion detector, a variable
condenser shunted across the secondary of
the inductive coupler and a pair of 2.000
ohm 'phones, you should have no trouble
yon
benefit by
Sent
FREE to You!
The complete
r's
FREE
Worth
COUFOIV
$15.20 to
you
I
I
now
N'AMB
mctitiotiitty
"The
Electrical
.....
Addkess.,
,^J
to advertisers.
212
July,
in
in
NECTION.
Bulock,
Ivan
(807.)
Fairmont,
Minn.,
writes
telephony ?
A. 2. No. The current obtained from the
secondary of a one-inch spark coil is so
small that it does not warrant its use.
VWW^
/
CMecoih.
//OKBC
VWWV
Hook-Up
with
for Wireless
Microphone
WHAT
IS
SYNCHRONISM?
Thus two
New
W28
Catalog
Edition of our
Ready June 15
Is
Illustrations and
about Bells,
ail
IT
to
power.
Q. 3.
Manhattan
Electrical
Supply Co., Inc.
New York:
IH
17 I'ark Place
San Francisco
Chicago:
ST. LOUIS:
S. oth Ave.
IIOS I'liie St.
Office: GOi Mission St.
How
independent
K. 3. It must hiave two
windings, and theie must be so spaced
out that when the .M.F. generated in one
of the two phases' is at a maximum, the
E.M.F. generated in the other is at zero,
I.
c. they are 90 degrees apart, vectorially
speaking.
SOLDERING QUERIES.
Electric
Maiicyour
an
I
I
Row Boat
Launch.
Detachable
p:k-itrlc
liuvaJ^nvt'l
Row
H.);U Mutorrun by
odor or
electricity.
No
casoline.
dangerous
1
Simple, noiseless
ana powerful.
Attaches to any
la
RECTIFIER
ourStb
Look
Y.,
MAGNETIC
vnlt Batteries.
successful year.
Poughkeepsie,
Paul
Johnson,
wants to know
Q. 1. What is hard solder?
.\. 1. .^n alio}' composed of copper and
zinc, or copper, zinc and silver.
Hard
(Continued on page 2131
(810.)
X'.
wanted.
There
demand.
Agents
CHICAGO
K.
is
superstition
that
lightning
Keep
ritth Av.,
ia in Rre;it
anr) calalOE
hail.
you'd
vour
get
storage
most
the
battery
out of
it
fully charged if
in service and
(enpth of life.
Plug into any convenient 110 volt 60 cycle
alternating current lamp socket and connect the
charging leads to the battery terminals.
The rectifier utilizes the Full Wave of cur-
imitation
open
produces
electricity
(at right)
^*-~^~~~-~-_
patented
static
in-
human
Control Oscillations.
very low.
Price.
List No.
Wireless Practice Set, with Battery
342.
and Cord
$2.25
Wireless Practice Set only, no bat344.
tery or Cord
2.00
Transm.
SOT
MWMr-^
j-A/WWVS
Recommended
1.
transmitter.
The
1917
has Carbon Electrodes and makes Recharging a Profitable Business where batteries
are taken in to charge.
P- O. B. Cleveland
rent,
Nk
\y SIS Complete
STROMBERG CARLSON ftO.25
-
''*'
Carlson Telephone
Rochester, N. V.
Mfg.
Co.
C^^^^^^^^U^^^^^^^I^^^B^^^r-.ST)
W
^33
^>t
No.
Biillftin
12.
and
P<a!crs
"
Throughout
Oeveland, Ohio
the
i'tuU'J
'"
1
to advertisers.
1917
July.
213
QUESTION BOX.
{Continued from payc 212)
snkler
is
sometimes
called
erroneously
ELECTRICflkEXPERIMENTERS DEMAND
sfi-ltcr.
Q.
What
2.
necessary
rclatitCn
LDSEAL^
with
metals
the'
ist
must ex-
A. 2. The solder must have a lower melting point than the metals to be joined to
The melting point should approach as
it.
nearly as possible that of the metals to be
joined, so that a mbre tenacious joint is
FOR STRENGTH
/'
i
effected.
Q.
3.
What
of soft
plumber's, and
medium or fine. These consist chiefly of
tin and lead, altho other metals are occasionally added to lower the melting point.
Those containing the most lead arc the
cheapest and have the highest melting
Common or plumber's solder conpoint.
sists of one part of tin or two parts of
It is used
lead, and melts at 441' Fah.
by plumbers for ordinary work, and occasionally for electrical work where wipril
joints are required; for instance, in laii;iMedium or line
lead-covered cable work.
solder consists of equal parts of tin and
lead, or half and half, and melts at 370'
This solder is used for soldering
Fah.
joints in copper conductors, and for soldering lead sleeves and lead-covered wires.
solders,
viz.,
common
classes
or
FOR
IGNITION AND
SERVICE REQUIRING
HIGH AMPERAGE
Tne<
.tr'"
BATTERY WITH
a WONDERFUl-
GOLD SEAL
RECUPER/ITIVE
A^
POWER
MdNU F/)CTUnC D OY
ELECTRO-THERAPEUTICS.
(811.)
Holdstern,
1.
What
is
term "electro-therapeutics" ?
A. 1. The term electro-therapeutics
is
VIOLET- RAYS!
So-called static,
hurst machines.
1.
generated by
NEW
is
generated by
We
Q.
less
LIFE,
POWER, HEALTH
and
BEAUTY
in
Newest
marvelous delightful VIOLET-RAYS.
and most powerful form of electricity, causing neither
muscular contraction nor pain of any kind.
Wims-
the
CO.
CITY
asks
Mich.,
Q.
Thomas
NEW YORK
Little Creek,
THE VIOLETTA
High frequency instrument
is
TIVE VIOLET-RAYS,
ABSOLUTELY SAFE
Write for
and GU.\R.\XTKED.
New Free Book
Send
""^^
CO.
BLEADON-DUNN
AVENUE, CHICAGO
208
Dept.
l-\
NORTH FIFTH
BRIDGES.
The Federal Government has purchased
ten searchlights for use in illuminatini; approaches to the bridges over the Ohio River
at Louisville, Ky., all of which are imder
guard. Another of the same lamps has been
installed on the roof of the City Mall in
Louisville and is used to ilhuninate the flat:
at night.
You
fct*iif/i?
"EXPERIMENTS"
the book
of modern
the
and
Read
^TV^lTrrV!''
impression. $1.50
ED EL
AN
The applications
.iw.ikcnc.l C'.rcnt Britain to the need of organized research.
scicnlilic wonders, how inventions and researches arc made, how research is organized,
labyrinth of chemistry, electricity, mechanics, and modern physics arc clc.irly set forth
made obvious to yon bv this important work.
ih.it
Edelman's "Experiinent.il Wireless Stations" 272 pp. 1917 impression $1.50 prepaid.
1802 Hague Avenue, St. Paul, Minn.
to
aJi-crtisers.
214
July,
THE
Junior Deaf-Phone
KS7HLin,
^5^-^=^^
lilack
."Single
IMPROVED
liallerii
NEW DETECTAGRAPH
$15
MICROPHO-DETECTOR COMPANY
26 Cortlandt St:,
NEW YORK
Makers
of
U.
SIGNAL CORPS
YOU!
S.
1917
WANTS
DETECTAGRAPH
$15
Gaston Boissonnault, President
Super-Sensitive Microphone Apparatus
Be Prepared.
Demand
your
for
ClieuKTaft. it
laboratory.
just
is
You
cheiiiical
CHEMCRAFT
ANYWHERE
I.
PRICE $1.50. POSTAGE PAID
UNriED STATES OR CANADA. Con
NO.
IN
Js'o.
This picture shows Chemcraft No. 2. which contains 32 chemicals with complete apparatus and
Instructions for working 85 experiments In Chemistry and Chemical
Magic. Price, postage paid,
$2.50.
Dealers:
Line.
MENTER.
have just completed a price list of chemicals and apparatus for experimenters.
Send 10c in coin
or stamps for a copy of this List. It will be valuable to you.
Dept. B.
ari^Sm^LEARN
**
TELEGRAPHY^gSH.
:^^ZniMORSE ANDWIRELESS-m:p-"
TEACH VOURSBUH
in half the usual time, at trifling cost, with the
any speed,
AdoDted by U. S. Gov't.
4 stylet.
Catalogaa free.
St.
New York
(a)
An
expert
The
telegrapher
and
paratus.
you
for positions
paying good
salaries witli
(c)
facts.
wonderful chance
,,
14lh
& U
secondary
WASHINGTON
Yoii bcncfil by
Sis.,
batteries,
motor
generators, or
(d)
N. W., Washington, D. C.
Possess
such
qualities
as
Advantages
^^"-- ^P"-!""'
for These Courses.
of the con-
switchboards, location of
troubles, repairs, primary and
Oct. :nd.
Have knowledge
It's
the most interesting profession
to travel the world over.
known and the demand for skilled operators is increasing.
Send stamp
ad-,'crttscrs.
July.
B.
1917
The
applicant
must be
(a)
(b)
(c)
Have knowledge
systems,
of telephone
switchboards, bat-
teries, locating
faults, etc., or
(d)
and correcting
as
qualities
to act as leader
of a platoon of a company of
Possess
such
would
him
fit
Signal troops.
C.
D.
of
company
of
Signal
Private,
The
ing.
Applicants for enlistment as Master Signal Electricians and Sergeants, First Class,
Appliwill be given an oral examination.
cants for enlistment in the other grades will
demonstrate to the officer designated to obtain recruits that they have the necessary
qualifications. Applicants for enlistment in
the Eastern Department should present
themselves at 39 Whitehall St. (near the
Battery), New York City.
215
WANTED
Railway
Increase to $150
Franklin Institute
Dept. D104
Rochester, N. Y.
**
Sure pay.
-J^-
yjO
4^
Life job,
T>. .1,
^O tnit places of exainlnali'niB; list of
full
unnec- ^
^^j^,.^ gtntrnmeiit j<.l.^ n-w .asily obessary.
lainable and free book describing tliem.
Name
Address
TO RS
1
GREAT
OPPORTUNITY!
We
liato
BtO'h.
\V(-
offer
Thew
Further
110 volts direct curreiilbe had by applying to the undersiRned.
110 volts, each $19.00: Hit price.
0. C. 110 volts, each $9.00: list
price, $15.00.
I 'jH.P.. 0. C, 110 volts, each $37.00:
list price. $46.50.
I6H.P., D. C. 110 volts, each
$7.00: list price, $9.00.
are
particulars
for
all
may
3 '^H.P. D. C.
3 'bH.P..
$24.00.
Loo
New
mr
benefit by mentioning
"The
Electrical
iS-DBAe cata-
loK and
olaia.
mysteries.
YorkCily. N. Y.
Clerks
all
partic-
Addraaa
J.
H. Boak. Fraa.
Dpt, lit
PRO-ALLY
or
PRO-MOTION?
You
future
can't settle
self?
wliere.
out
Ynu
HEALTH.
VITALITY and
go forvvard and Up
haTO these
A clam
HOW!
LIONEL
STRONGFORT
PHYSICAL CCLTVRE SPECI.VMST
175
Park
Newark. N.
BIrig.
J.
Interested
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.Short Wind
.Flat Chest
Colds
.Catarrh
.
.
.I.img Trouble
.Poor Circulation
.Deformity
.Rupture
.Youthful Errors
.
.
.
.
.Devitalizing
I.,<>!is4
.Impotency
Name
Street
City
to
advertisers.
State
.Great Strcnirth
.Weight Liftiiig
.Advanced Course
..Multi-Weight
.
Barbell
216
WIRELESS
for the College or Prep. School
ning
classes.
Boston
St.
LEARN
WIRELESS
summer
This
THOUSANDS
are urgently
In war and
needed by the Government.
always
demand
has
greatly expeace the
Unusual opportunities
ceeded the supply.
await
the
well
trained
Radio Men.
therefore
Although we have trained more operators
other
private
scliool
in
the East,
than any
we can supply only one-tenth of the demand
opeiiitors
of
ratory
Complete
U. S.
Connnercial Installations.
GOVERNMENT INSTRUCTORS
Dormitories
Y.
M.
Employment
Catalogue
Radio School
C. A.
NEW YORK, N. Y.
men
electrical;
demand.
'
2000 younif
ENGINEERING
IncludinfT
complete
IN
260
ONE YEAR
WIRELESS OPERATORS
SEE THE
WORLD
Good
Commercial License
Ask
in
for folder
"B"
Eastern District Y. M. C. A.
Marcy Avenue, near Broadway,
BROOKLYN.
N. Y.
that the
ma-rays emitted by
conclusively proven
are streams of little
a mass about twice
drogen atoms, flying
parts
the
nutrient
gelatin
III.,
You
benefit by
that
the
Gam-
has
been
Alpha
rays
it
U. S.
BATTLESHIPS TO RUN ON
LAND.
{Continued from page 170)
ner.
efficient.
must
left,
line.
remained per-
iiu-iiUoiiiij
radium,
Complete preparation
1917
July.
a/ifir
uritiiiy
There
atltcrlisers.
1917
July,
From
military standpoint, this mondestruction proves rather inBut let us sec what happens
ster engine
teresting.
)r/^s;rF:!iri^Sif^i^iPiS)?^i'^^
(if
AMATEURS!
the "Oregon." one tine summer mornsteams thru the I'reiich fields, "Old
Glory" flying from hotli masts, and plow-
when
ing
IVTOW
is
buy
to
that
the
enemy must
fall
it
will
with a
is
ment will soon again allow us to operate receiving sets during the War.
Are you ready ?
Write for our printed matter.
Money
Backed by An Exceptional
Guarantee
The Mark-o'Quality
hack over
wide area.
in
listen
YOU
all,
Besides, there
to
and
forever,
for
set.
one
to be the first
REAL
tion
217
tlA-
tto
1-*
Capacity
Price
Quality
r?
WE MANUFACTURE BATTERIES
FOR EACH MAKE OF AUTOMOBILE
^ ^^
PAULM.MARKO
:^^V^t
SCO.,
Inc., 1191
N.
Y.Depoi974
attacks.
MOTORS
UNIVERSAL ON ELECTRIC
TO
OR
OPERATING
D. C. -110
A. C.
1/40
TO
130
1/8 H. P.
THIS
1/20 H. P.
VOLTS
CATALOGUE FREE
MOTOR
M.
6000 R. P.
00
Sf^.
V/
Complete with
Puriey
Emer> Wheel
Buffing Wheel
Chucks
Cord and Plug
M
r
ITlOtOr to.
n
If
MCinC Universal
From Us
If
VACUUM CLFANERS.
of R.^CINE FANS.
vibrators and motor appliances of all kinds
Makers
C:HICAG0, ILL.
WIRELESS AMATEURS
ATTENTION
Our
antiripate that very shortly all of the amateur wireless receiving stations will be reopene.l.
have large quantities
stock of ireless instruments was never more complete than it is at this time.
of every item listed in our big 300 page catalog and in the few cases where our stock was low it has been
replenished. Our wireless business is one out of five big departments of our business and our patrons can
always rest assured of prompt service for anything in the electrical or wireless line at any time in tlie future.
We
We
'
If
8 cents for
There
THE WILLIAM
Von
it
at
will
be no special
B.
11 electrical
once.
sale
on wireless instruments by
DUCK COMPANY,
this
company during
to advertisers.
Toledo, Ohio
218
PATENTS
OFTEN
""Si
rlor"*
the
auto accessories
card.
255 Ouray
Registered Af'ii''Washington, D.
Building.
PATENTS
THAT PROTECT AND PAY
out through
It
WATSON
624 F.
MONEY
K We
PATENTS
IN
"^
ap~
electrical
in
are
Giand
manufacturers
L"
PATENTS
p o n
[iliancea
;
de-
jjaieiils
nie.
throuKU
secured
Send sketch or model for advice; I assist you market
Prompt personal service. Booklet and
ymir invention.
advice free.
If ri
Y WASHINGTON,
JnIVl\.I-iLLI
I
^'*^^-
Woodward BIdg.
EVERY INVENTOR
jiiiiiifffififiin
'PATENTS AND
PATENT POSSIBILITIES."
Pat.nl
It
is
chock-
P..vm|.iIiI,..,
D.
III
onstration.
"Hen" was supposed to have
said his prayers and be snugly tucked under the covers.
"Now
"Watch
cried "Hen."
the best of
is
was plunged
darkness
in total
"What
mad ?"
From below, on
yer
NO ATTORNEY H^.luoZ'l
Books
Send sketch
Wealthy Men
Axle Crease Mfrs.
Auto Owners
Contractors
Fanners, Etc.
DniggiBts
te for this valoahle reference book; also
9 and samples of fac-eimile letters
you
ur Sales Letter*.
Have us write orT revise
r
Ross-Gould
_ n^cailing
Louis
DON'T BE THIN!
Physical Perfection attracts men
we
all
Have
veloped person.
you noticed that it is the
chesty fellcw whogets the
bestjob? Infactheseems
to get ahead in every way.
I will give you a straight
back, a full chest and an
elastic stride, three of the
is
nature.
There are certain research problems, of course, that \vould demand elaborate apparatus to work with, but this is
not generally true.
The amateur who wishes to do experimental work should equip his station with
a certain amount of auxiliary apparatus.
He should first wind several loading coils
sizes.
These
S'T.
EDWARD J. RYAN,
laboratory
Do Business by Mail
one
is
working with.
Aside from
these,
desired.
formers
benefit by mentioning
At
least
should
"The
three
be
also
Electrical
must be remembered
are
apparatus
with
Frank
free,
1917
The transmitting
Invoiiln'n
UlllUllUUul'
July,
Company.
(.See
page
186.)
The suggestions
1917
July,
219
Manufarturers
are
constantly
me
writing
for
fur
Edited by H.
pini;
in
Another thing
When
some
sort of a muffler in
the
mind
at
all,
as
most correspondents seem to think. ^luffling the gongs does not solve the problem.
Take the gongs ofT and substitute something
that
Wooden
not a gong.
is
or similar
It is
is
novel.
It
also
seems
oilers,
to us, that
it
('tells
If
J,.,.'ticability,
RICHARD
""
"^haroe
lor
report as to patentability,
OWtN,
B.
164 Owai
Wisliii^.
BM?.,
^^P^
^^^^^^^^
^^Kl^^^B
^^^KV^^^^H
^^^^^^^1
We
OSCILLATING DEVICE.
(162)
William
Woodward.
Wilmettc,
We
We
YoH
D.
C.
Our
Certificate
Patcntabil-
of
of
Evidence of Conception
and may
prove
valuable
Credit
System
ity
is
to
cnable-s
Our
vou to
device.
INSULATOR.
Harry J. Wright, Jr., North VanC, Canada, submits an insulator
(164)
couver, B.
outdoor wiring.
This insulator uses
which are placed in such a manner that the insulator is not easily pulled
away from its support during storms, or
for
two
nails
when
sleet settles
upon the
wire.
R.
A.
If the top
is
made
Morgan Elliott
S Co.
716-724
woodward
Washington,
building
d. c.
at
an angle, so that the nails will meet the surface at right angles, a
will be the result.
much
We
better insulator
NOVELTY FAN.
(16S)
Sidney Brown, Lake Charles, La.,
has submitted a design of a certain fan in
which are incorporated novelty^ lights. Our
advice is asked.
the
Send
&
LACEY
could be manufactured
prac-
etc.
PATENTS
upon the
"Step-
list
etc.),
how
A.
capital
idea.
Something that
should appeal to every housekeeper and to
every janitor. Moreover, the device can be
manufactured very cheaply, and sold at a
low price. We think it extremely practical
and we believe a patent can be obtained
MAGAZINE PENCIL.
it
ward
72-
tions wanted;
(163)
A. J. Walrath. Detroit, Mich., has
sent us a description and illustration of a
clever automatic cover lifting device attachable to garbage cans or ash cans. Is it
patentable and practical?
Stones" (conlalnine
an
entitled
"Inventions Wanted,"
mentioned that there existed a large market
for an appliance which would take the disagreealile jar out of the telephone hell. This
editorial w'as consequently publisht broadcast by dozens of newspapers and periodicals.
Since then hundreds upon hundreds
(160)
Editorial
Send
FRFF'
GERNSBACK
PATENTS WANTED'
To
We
VICTOR
Main
EVANS &
J.
1001-1007
Offices:
Gentlemen:
"The
any address.
Please send
_______
779 9th
Name
benefit by mentioninff
to
Address
Eleelrical F.xl'erimciiler" n/u-ii
Hrifiiii;
(j
ii,/:vr/ii,-r.s.
St.
220
1917
July,
EXPERIMENTAL CHEMISTRY.
CHEMISTS!
EXPERIMENTS
Normal
Sodium
formed, during
higher temperature
is
required.
DON'T BE HAMPERED
by LACKof APPARATUS
YOU CANNOT SUCCESSFULLY
STUDY CHEMISTRY WITHOUT IT.
COMPLETE
SET.
nn
WRITE FOR
ASSOCIATED
PENSEE
1221
HRST
LABORATORIES
ST.
EVANSVIUE, It^DIANA
'^--^''":IU^;J
Dynamo
KNAPi
m
Mot
For Boys
For producing current for
ductance
coils,
in-
Well
constructed
smooth running
and highly
efficient.
directly
2.
It
1.
It
dynamo.
3.
It is verj- easily
4.
It is
5.
When
QST
QST
Publishing
Company,
Inc.
Hartford,
Conn.
GENERATORS!
soluble in water.
heavier than
will
come
in
is adapted
office ose.
How
We Illustrate one
Difficult
we make.
and l^" in
diameter with 8 holes on ends and middle.
They must be perfectly straight and we
make them so. It's hard but not for us.
We can make your difficult; designs also.
pair of rolls
hard shape
T"-;" long
for quotations.
acid
possesses
is
WIRELESS
While your
station
5.
TRENTON, N.J.
THE ELECTRO-SET
CO.
we
still
NOW KNOWN AS
THE NEWMAN-STERN
E-14
Dept.
CO.,
Cleveland, O.
SMALL ENGINES
^^, 1
and
Price
Also
WASHING MACHINES
We sMp
en
trial.
Send
for Booklet
not
a Motorcycle
Motor fits any wheel.
most
motor
Best,
reliable.
Best hill climber.
More
In use than all othera.
fine
for running small Dynamos. Lathes and
STEFFEVS
small shops.
SteSe; Mfg.
Motors only
as low as 516 95
Cc 5025 W. Brown
St.,
PhUa, Pa.
MOTORCYCLES
$40
and
BirYCLES
Singles
at cut pricea.
to $100.
Tires $3.
New Motorcycle
It
dissolves
most
metals,
there
forming
chlorids.
If
study
is
1800.
ver>-
inflammable [a non-combustible gas], and does not support combustion, and is not decomposed by light or
on heating; but its hydrogen may be replaced by metals as Zinc or Sodium, and
its Chlorin by Manganese dioxid [MnOi].
3.
Sodium or Potassium burns vigorously in it on heating, forming chlorids.
its
elements at
It dissociates into
4.
It
Price, with
l-4in.
MATERIALS
BOOKS, RAW
and
dismantled you can
1-4x3
Size 3
Instrrjctions. 75c.
Hydrochloric
N.Y.
S(., Buffalo.
-air.
1.
ALTERNATORS!
W'e have a complete line of sturdy, efficient generators and alternators from 100 to 1000 watts.
We furnish complete parts for these finished
ready to assemble with instructions to wind.
Transformers made to order. Send for catalogue.
Chemical:
PORCELAIN
CO.
is
^^' ^i^^'^ss
little
fult
STYLE C SPECI.\L
ve you
Mll-WAUKEE. WIS.
SPARK COILS
111.1.
J8 atmospheres, and solidifies at
83.7.
In the liquefied state it boils at
523
of
^H
illustrated Book
for it to-day.
ENGINEERING
SCHOOL of
MILWAUKEE
throughout.exceptionally
fall
Send
details.
FREE
Our
mitted to
re-charging
thoroughly.
baadBicyclea
are
Oenloffer.
to
New
$5.
The
adicrttsers.
New York
1917
July.
lower
tlic
mt-t.-il,
is
acid.
r\(lrorlil(iric
Usi's
1.
It
is
of various metals.
As
Sodium
stated hefore.
chlorid
is
the
preser\ati\e,
with
It
is
is
from hones.
3.
used
is
It
in
ing.
4.
used
It is
in the
manufacture of coal-
tar colors.
It
is
pounds of chlorin
making
.'Vqua Regia.
chlorin,
furnishes
hlcaching powder is made.
7.
It
The
from
-which
chlorid (AgCl] in phodeposited upon the photocraphic paper from solutions of Silver
and Sodium Chlorid
Xitrat
[.\gNO3]
8.
tography
silver
is
IXaCl].
EXPERIMENT
Arrange a
NO.
73:
flask
about
rublier stopper
preferred.
It will be noticed in the illustration of
the app;iratus that rubber connectors (cut
diaKonall.Nsee Fig. 73) are used to connect the delivery tubes of the flask and second bottle. If it is desired, the tubing may
be bent in one piece as shown, but it is
rnore convenient to use separators, as the
pieces may then be used in other experiments.
Fill the two bottles, 1 and 2, about onequarter full of water.
Set the flask on a
ring stand support, on a piece of asbestos
or wire gauze.
Pour about 5 cc. of water
into the flask and add 10 or IS grams of
sodium chlorid [common salt, NaCl|, by
pouring into the flask from a creased
paper.
Have
You
benefit by
much
The
reactions which
NaCl
Sodium
1.
NaCl
HSO,
-t-
2H.SO,
NaHSO.
-(-
2nCI
-|-
Hydrochloric
Acid
Sulfuric
Acid
The equations
HCl
Acid
.Sodium
Chlorid
may
Pipe -Threadikc
'TO Sl'f-.EU the w.,rk .-ilid I.Khl.l. th,use the cisy-to-opcralc Dull
_^ lahor
Die-Slock.
Each of the eleven
sizes (both direct and ratchet) of
are
more
BULL-DOG
/^^TITD
|^i3 1 E^K. DIE-STOCKS
thread from four to eight sizes of pipe.
H'ritr
dr-
^^^1^^^^.^
^^^^^^^^^^^EU_
No. 102
1/4" to
A STITCH
bustible.
Pour
Pour about
5 cc.
76:
from
bottle No.
l.;v
IN
stiU-lics thill
wlili
SMITH
AtalliltHK-.
Inrington. M. J.
TOOLS
&
is
Odds and
cnir
for
Millets
Falls.
Us.
Never Mind
Ho>v Strong
^1
You Are
s^
.^
0\
^^
5351
into a
0.
Sulfate
NO.
Bl^^^H^^^I^
fully explained in
74:
Loosen the stopper of the flask and very
cautiously try the odor of the fmnes.
Do
not inhale too much, but just enough to
give you the characteristic smell. [Notk:
In case j'ou have inhaled an overdose of
the gas, an antidote should be taken, by
iidialing the .\mmonia from a bottle containing .\mmonium Hydroxid).
Apply a lighted splint to the open mouth
of the flask. The splint should go out. due
to the fact that Hydrochloric acid gas is a
non-supporter of combustion, and non-com-
EXPERIMENT
E.61stSt.
^^^Q^^BD2I4I
Cleveland,
Na.SO.
Sodium
EXPERIMENT NO.
NO.
icripiivc booklet.
^^^K^^^^^B^M
Mtg.Co.
^^^^M^^^^ OSTER
EXPERIMENT
DoK
Hydrochloric
HydroKcn
Acid
Sodium Sulfate
Sulfuric
Chlorid
2.
221
we have Hydrochloric
acid in
it is reasonable to suppose that
Hydrogen gas will be liberated wdien Zinc
is treated with the liquid.
urititnj
Slcum
MinlniE
**
**
"
SlrrhnntrBl **
Mpfbaiilral llrsftlnr
Arrblrfdiiral llr(ltnr
AKCHITECTUKE
Name^
Addressto advertisers.
lADVERTISING
jSaieamanship
nOIIKMISTRT
Illufttratinn
Commercial L^w
Farm in
~ PoultryK
JBookkccpinK
iSlenoKraphy
French
I
jCivil Service
UUTOUUHILI^S
German
Italian
^SPANISH
222
July.
This
HALTn
is
the
test
for
the
positive
1917
con-
stituent.
EXPERIMEKT NO.
77:
To one add
bottle No. 1
a few drops
Soluble Chloeiiis:
made by
its
salts
dissolving
metal or some
which are transposed by it.
Hydrochloric
in
acid, either a
Insoluble Chlorids
in
EXPERIMENT
Mix
NO.
78:
EXPERIMENT NO.
79:
of Sulfuric acid [2 to 1]
into a flask supported on an asbestos mat
on a ring-stand, and add about 10 grams
of Sodium chlorid [Common salt]. Gently
rotate the flask so as to mi.x the acid with
the chlorid. Close the flask with a two-hole
stopper carrying a thistle tube and delivery
tube arranged as shown, for the collection
of gas by downward displacement in a dry
test tube.
If necessary heat the flask with
The contents of the flask
a small flame.
will bubble and froth, indicating the process of liberating the gas (Fig. 74).
Pour about 20
Postage on 8
lbs.
extra.
is
A world of electrical information; the entire electrical Progress fur one year; the
than the unbound
greatest reference book on current "Wireless" all at a price
Mind you. the book is durably bound with attractive green linen heavy
copies would bring.
have
You will be proud to have it in your library.
covers.
Letters stamped in gold.
only 400 copies, therefore be sure and order to-day. Shipping weight 8 lbs. Add a sufficient
for
postage.
amount
LOWER
We
Order today
book bargain
in the
World
to avoid delay
233 Fulton
You
benefit
Street,
New
Inc.
York, N. Y.
cc.
EXPERIMENT NO.
80:
with water and set it on the
table.
Take a test tube of gas collected
[which is made apparent when the fumes
are liberated in the air], close its mouth
tightly with the thumb, invert the test tube,
and hold its mouth below the surface of
Remove the thumb. Notice
the water.
how the water acts with the gas.
Fill a dish
EXPERIMENT
NO.
81:
thumb and
to
advertisers.
remove
it
test
from
July.
1917
(^
223
EJ
Exchange Columns
Scientific
you have at the present time some things lor which vou have no further use. Do yni wish to exchange them for something,
There is no surer and quicker way to do this than by advertising your articles in these columns.
for which you have immediate use?
More than "5.0U0 interested people
The I'l-ry people, the Only people, who could possibly have a use for your things read this journal.
Dealers' advertising accepted in (opportunity
cheapest advertising medium for you m the country.
the
furthermore
is
It
will see your ad.
UNDOUBTEDLY
...
OVER
WAiNTED 1 K.W.
less
nut
St.,
WANTED Omnigraph;
SACRIFICE
BRAND NEW
WANTED
WANTED
bulb
$6;
for
Murdock
M\ above brand
orders less than $5.
Address. Fred ."Mien, Vernon, Alabama.
new.
S.\LE (")R EXCHANGE Electrical TheraApparatus new and in good condition; all
Medical remedy for rheumatism, bad
equipments.
First good
circulation or any stagnetic element.
takes
it.
Jolin Ferguson, 113 West 63rd St.,
offer
FOR
peutic
Six
rifles.
STOPI
Coyd
LOOK!
MaJTet,
Opal,
Colorado.
Camp, Mo.
$3.
WANT 110
cash or
goods.
coil,
Send
list.
Want omnigraph. Thomas Kelly,
54th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Second-hand drafting instruments.
Send complete description
Highest prices paid.
Deutsch, 2358 Pitkin
and we will make offer.
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
3,000 Meter Navy
SACRIFICE:
Type Counler, $6.50; Murdock's 2,000 ohm Phones,
$3; Yi" Coil, $1.75: Complete 100 foot Aerial, $5;
Lead-in Insulator, 50c; Knapp Motor $1.25; Key,
Write Bernard
50c; Gap, 50c; Transformer, $2.
Brown, Troy, N. C.
big
S.
WANTED
BARGAINS
mill
WANTED
You
motor-
M.
J.
benefit by
A.
PRYER LANE,
|
H
Larchmont Manor, N. Y.
New York
B
1
|
|
City
Dear Sir:
Talk about
results!
got to give
m
i
B
I
=
B
1
H
m
a
it
out
On
came
reply
received a
m
|
g
b
You've
the day
and
Pa.
Alternator exchange.
ing current motor yi-Yi H.P. 110 vijlts 60 cycles.
Have 1/12 H.P. variable speed motor. Also want
Prteegor,
Carroll
lathe,
Drummond preferred.
Milton, Pa.
BARGAIN Smith Premier typewriter for sale.
Cost new $100, will take $25. Little used. Money
S. W. Bearing,
order or certified check accepted.
Covington, Tenn., Route 2.
SELL 110 volt .Mternating
EXCHANGE OR
Current
\i
will
truly,
Redemotor,
$8.
1
Motor Wheel, $35.
Both excellent condition
Enclose stamp
trade.
FOR
H.P.
Will
Wis
OR EXCHANGE Ford
spark coil,
$1; telephone transmitter, 50c; telephone magneto,
Sidney
you?
have
W'hat
list.
Write
for
75c.
Collisson. Keokuk. Iowa.
Brief-hand Manual, 35c; $7.50 deFOR
tective course, $1.50; $10 finger print course. $1;
Prepaid; back numbers
$5 hypnotism course. $1.
M.E.; A.B.: farm papers and others; elecE.E.
W. B. Bagley,
trical and wireless instruments.
S.\LE
SALE
K.W.
Transformer
coil
and
electrolytic
Iowa.
^_^
Frank Holton
M. coupler
W.
"23rd St.,
New York
City.
aerial,
fixtures,
mobile gasoline
and
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii^
CHEAP Smith
g
|
%
B
Yours
and Ammeter,
EXCHANC;E A
17
Voltmeter
Patton, Pa.
C.
exchange.
Have wireless and electrical
What do you want? C. H. Rauschenberg,
t-'harleroi.
What
two bulbs;
with
complete
transformer,
oscillation
Bargains All
repeating
panel
new
EXCHANGE
75,000
1614
high
Correspondence
Coil.
W'heatstone's Bridge. $3; Large Voltammeter. $3; all rest E. I. Co. goods; $1 Key. 60c;
Fixed Variable Condenser. 75c; 3. 15 Ampere
D.P.D.T. Switches, 20c each; Ammeter, 40c:
Hustler Motor, 40c: Receivers, 1000 ohm D.P.,
$1; 2, 75 ohm DP., $1; 2, 75 ohm S.P., 60c.
C. Krummenacker, 1034
Satisfaction guaranteed.
7.1 St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
$1.25;
SALE
S.M.E
OR EXCH.\NGE Two
wireless
receiv-
4x5
to adierliscrs.
...
224
1917
July.
=^
Opportunity Exchange
Most
good things in
in the country.
will probably find more opportunities and real bargains in these columns than anywhere else
VOL"
1 lite are hard to find and worth going after these little ads illustrate that point; you alone will be the real loser if you don t take the
time to scan through these columns.
j
per iline.
Count / words
j k , ,...-^;t,H
Advertisements in this section 4c. a word for each insertion.
Name and address must be included at the aV.ove rate. Cash should accompany all classified advertisements unless piaccd by an accredited
advertising agency.
Objectionable or mislea^ling advertisements not
Ten per cent, discount for 6 issues, 20 per cent, discount for 12 issues from above rate
accepted.
l
t
-inot
2d.
uflater
than
June
reach
Advertisements for the August issue should
OiTR
75,000
EXPERIMENTER PUBLISHING
New
Vcr,:.
\ Y
feg
AERIAL ACE. .Vmerica's only illustrated
weekly, presents the latest developments in aeroUp to the minute
nautics throughout the world.
aero-engines,
concerning
intormation
technical
Complete
patents.
and
accessories
aeroplanes,
Trial subscription
model news and instruction.
bample
six months, twentv-six issues. One Dollar
Aerial Age, 2S0 Madison Ave., New
copy free.
York
Read
the
dlustrated;
Weekly;
Photographer's
Amateur
weekly prize competitions; print criticisms; many
three months trial
year;
per
50
features:
SI.
unique
Abel Publishing Company. 401
subscription, 25c.
Ohio^
Cleveland.
Bldg.,
Caxton
BOOKS Scientific and wireless supplied. Let
us know what vou want and we will quote you.
Experimenter Pub. Co., 233 Fulton St., New ^ ork
over,
A BINDER
MENTER
^_^
Price 50c.
one todav.
NewY'ork
St.,
for
will
City.
April,
extra.
New
Postage on 7
Price, $1-25.
Experimenter Pub. Co., 233 Fulton
1916.
1915
lbs.
St.,
Y'ork City.
NUMBERSWe
have some
E.E. B.\CK
valuable old E.E. back numbers on hand as per
list below.
March .price each $.20
1915
"
"
"
April
.price each $.25
Jan. .
"
"
May .. . '*
Feb. ..
"
'
"
.
June
OLD
March
April
May
July
Sept.
..
August
Sept.
Oct.
Xov.
Oct.
..
Nor.
..
Jan.
Feb.
Dec. ..
1916
Jan.
Feb.
..
..
March
^0
April
tt
"
tl
*'
tt
"
*'
"
..
Dec. ..
1917
*'
August
..
June
July
..
"
"
"
.15
"
.(
"
"
"
"
"
"
**
. . .
"
can fill orders at once upon receipt of your
remittance and if you have not these numbers already now is your chance to get them as they probExperiably will be snapped up rery quickly.
menter Publishing Co., 233 Fulton St., New York
We
May
..
..
FIRE
SALE
OF
SLIGHTLY
DAMAGED
JOHN
for quickly applying Sl.OO postpaid.^ Globe Deca!comanie Co., Mfgs., Jersey City, X. J.
FORMULAS We
STAMPS 75,
all
different,
Inion Trust
YOUR OWX
BUILD
attorney-at-law
Bldg.,
Washington,
PHOXOGRAPH
etc..
PHOTOGRAPHY
FILMS DEVELOPED FREE.
30c dozen.
land, Ohio.
MOVIXG
SEXD
M
^
m
H
H
S
H
H
H
B
M
LAKE
131
AVE..
\'.
N.
Lancaster,
or
Drawings, instrucprofit.
Satisfaction guarTwenty-five Cents.
Associated Phonograph
Circular free.
anteed.
Co., Dept. E, CincJnnati-
tions,
We
Gentlemen
I
the
wish to
e.xceeded
tell
was a great
E.
E.
all
expectations.
in
and
success,
had
TWO
re-
paper covers.
H
H
=
mend
to
it
something
w ide
field voiir
the amateurs
that
to trade or sell.
Yours resfcctfully,
HORSEPOWER?
^
rn-ni "I'lTminiiniiiLi
"?raiiiiiiffi
Send
and
Certified
Your Protec-
Hines &
Co.,
593
Loan &
Trust
furnish a standard
will
I
revolution counter and directions for finding the
horsepower of any motor for 40c, counter alone
Louis E. Schwab, 3708 Brooklyn,
worth 75c.
Cleveland, Ohio.
FIRE
SALEWe
have a great
many
slightly
PATENT ATTORNEYS
model
ta-
E. Charleroi, Pa.
G. \V. Bradfopo.
p"
is
booed use your transformer, etc.. for high freI have the apparatus you
quency experiments.
want or can build it. C. H. Rauschenberg, Ex.
have
Bldg.,
Wash-
ington, D. C.
You
McLACHLEX,
Postage. 2c.
free.
Quaker Stamp
Mention paper.
Look
City.
M.
Patent causes.
D. C.
automobiles,
City.
WAXTED
PHOXOGRAPHS
for
ington^
MISCELLAXEOUS
BOYS:
fees.
attorney's
clerical positions,
Citv^
18
or
free
PATEXTS
HELP W.\NTED
WAR
BOOKS
TO GET BETTER PICTURES;
advance
Xot due
To
New York
City.
PATEXTSWithout
CHEMIC.M,S
AERONAUTICS
receivers, telephone cords, printing presses, telimphones, detectors, tuning coils, rotary condensers,
leyden jars, porcelain tube insulators, strap keys,
Gernsback relays. Inter-City transmitting outfits,
etc., etc.
Send for
list
231
to
Fulton
St..
advertisers.
Xew York
Wonder-
ucceei
This interesting story
to
This
is
man
the
not Kettintf a
day."
Lloyd D. Huffman
Dayton, O.
"
We consider
"Hawkins
art of
tion."
surely
condenainir
knowe the
Elbbidgb
informaF.
Ball
Buckland, Conn.
10
NUMBERS
IN
bound
in
ALL
A Number
PAYABLE
A Month
Send no money. Examine the books first. Decide for yourself that they
are the most complete library of Electricity ever published and that you cannot afford to be without them. Every book is complete in itself, but the complete set is
the best bargain. The last volumes are just coming off the press.
^^72Theo. Audel
& Co.
Ave,
^^^ F I'Kase
im
K K
^^
^^
^^
^^
p0d# P?l\f
rtir^tl4g
^ciymt?lll
^^y
A FEW OF THE SUBJECTS
Ma(tTH-ti-m Inrtin-tion Kxporinicnli Itynamos
^!lllt^lc
M.icluni-ry
M<it<n's
i-
Instrument Trstint'
Practical Manajremrnt
of Dvn.imoH ariit Motors Distribution SyHtems
Wirintf Wiriiur I)iaKr:mB Sitrn Flnshcrfi StoraK Hatteriffil*rinfii)lf3 of AltTnatinK Currents
YOUR
FREE
PON
Kcfcrtncc Index of
tlio
lU numbers.
and
offer
Each page-every
J^
^^
^^
illus-
^^T
^^
Theo.Audel&Go.^ ^^^
72
Fifth Ave.
NEW YORK
^^^
It
\v
N. Y.
liii
for
examination
k n s
Kleclrical
Ouldes (Prlce $1.00 each>
a
Tilx'^umberrit'sllViffactory
a^rec to send you ji.oo each
month
until paid.
-..
Signature
Occupation
Business Address.
Residence
Reference
i'ou benefit
Fifth
.-^i
^^
J^r
now
^^
July E.E.
lu advertisers.
nn
"There is not a man in power at the Bethlehem Steel Works today," says Charles M. Schwab, in
These leaders rose
the American Magazine, "who did not begin at the bottom and work his way up.
manifest
daily duty.
their
think
beyond
brains
to
normal
their
using
out
by
won
They
from the ranks.
His ability to out-think his job, coupled with
"Eight years ago Eugene Grace was switching engines.
him to the presidency of our corporation. Last year he earned more than a
million dollars.
ilECTRUAL ENGlNEElt
QEIectriciao
D Electric Wiring
D Electric Lighting
Telegraph Engineer
MECHAMIAL LM. INFER
Mechanical Dradiman
Machine Designer
Machine Shop Practice
Boilermaker or Designer
n Patternmaker
Toolmaker
Foundry Work
Blacksmith
Sheet-Meial Worker
AlTOMOUILtS
Automohile Repairing
STEAM
EN(;L\EEIt
Steam-Electric Engineer
Stationao' Fireman
Atarine Enginerr
Refrieeration Engineer
Gas Engineer
CIVIL E.NGI.NKKU
how
QBridge Engineer
Q Structural
in
the
TRAEFK' MA.NAtiEMENT
Draftsman
Cartoonist
D Structural Engineer
ILLCSTRATOR
Perspective Drawing
IIITEtT
D AU(
Architectural
Carpet Designer
Wallpaper Designer
Bookcover Designer
Monument Designer
Common School Subjecu
High School Subjects
QMunicipal Eoeineer
Draftsman
DContracior and Builder
QBullding Foreman
Lumberman
Concrete Builder
PLl BRER A STEAM FITTER QMathematic*
DPIumbiDg Inspector
D Foreman Plumber
DBCSl^ESS (Compute)
QConon Manu/ncturinc
QWooleo Manufacturine
DCIIEMU'AL ENtilNtEU
O Bookkeeper & Typist
Analytical Chemist
DStenographer
Onl>Ftl>KLn.i.\URNGI.\EEK
D Higher Accouniinc
DCertified Public AccouotaotQ Coal Mining
DRailway Accountant
O Metal Mining
U MetallurgUt or Prospector
D Commercial Law
Q Good English
Q Aaaayer
OSPAMSU
ONATIUATION
nSAI.ESJIANSIlIP
Boat Kuna'p G French
nADVEKTISlNt; BAS
D Motor
DGermao
D AtiKHl LTIKK
D Window Trimmer
D Fruit (;rowing Dltallan
D Show-card Writer
D Vegetable Growing
D Outdoor Sign Painter
QflVIL MKKVKE
DRailway Mail Clerk
DMail Carrier
D Poultry
Raiser
Poultry Breeder
Make your
hlame_
Occupation_
start
_Cmployer-
Streetand No.,
City
SlaU^
-^
NOW.
A^ark and