The Project Gutenberg eBook of Electricity for Boys
Title: Electricity for Boys
Author: James Slough Zerbe
Release date: September 25, 2007 [eBook #22766]
Most recently updated: March 2, 2013
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Joe Longo and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
WARNING: This book of one hundred years ago describes
experiments which are too dangerous to attempt by either
adults or children. It is published for historical
interest only.
The "How-to-do-it" Books
ELECTRICITY FOR BOYS
|
THE "HOW-TO-DO-IT" BOOKS ELECTRICITY FOR BOYS
By J. S. ZERBE, M.E. AUTHOR OF CARPENTRY FOR BOYSPRACTICAL MECHANICS FOR BOYS THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY New York |
Copyright, 1914, by
THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY
CONTENTS
| Introductory | Page 1 | |
| I. | Electricity Considered. Brief Historical Events | Page 5 |
The Study of Electricity. First Historical Accounts. Bottling Electricity. Discovery of Galvanic Electricity. Electro-motive Force. Measuring Instruments. Rapidity of Modern Progress. How to Acquire the Vast Knowledge. The Means Employed. |
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| II. | What Tools and Apparatus are Needed | Page 11 |
Preparing the Workshop. Uses of Our Workshop. What to Build. What to Learn. Uses of the Electrical Devices. Tools. Magnet-winding Reel. |
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| III. | Magnets, Coils, Armatures, Etc. | Page 18 |
The Two Kinds of Magnets. Permanent Magnets. Electro-Magnets. Magnetism. Materials for Magnets. Non-magnetic Material. Action of a Second Magnet. What North and South Pole Mean. Repulsion and Attraction. Positives and Negatives. Magnetic Lines of Force. The Earth as a Magnet. Why the Compass Points North and South. Peculiarity of a Magnet. Action of the Electro-Magnet. Exterior Magnetic Influence Around a Wires Carrying a Current. Parallel Wires. |
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| IV. | Frictional, Voltaic or Galvanic and Electro-magnetic Electricity | Page 29 |
Three Electrical Sources. Frictional Electricity. Leyden p. iiJar. Voltaic or Galvanic Electricity. Voltaic Pile; How Made. Plus and Minus Signs. The Common Primary Cell. Battery Resistance. Electrolyte and Current. Electro-magnetic Electricity. Magnetic Radiation. Different Kinds of Dynamos. Direct Current Dynamos. Simple Magnet Construction. How to Wind. The Dynamo Fields. The Armature. Armature Windings. Mounting the Armature. The Commutator. Commutator Brushes. Dynamo Windings. The Field. Series-wound Field. Shunt-wound. Compound-wound. |
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| V. | How to Detect and Measure Electricity | Page 49 |
Measuring Instruments. The Detector. Direction of Current. Simple Current Detector. How to Place the Detector. Different Ways to Measure a Current. The Sulphuric Acid Voltameter. The Copper Voltameter. The Galvanoscope Electro-magnetic Method. The Calorimeter. The Light Method. The Preferred Method. How to Make a Sulphuric Acid Voltameter. How to Make a Copper Voltameter. Objections to the Calorimeter. |
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| VI. | Volts, Amperes, Ohms and Watts | Page 60 |
Understanding Terms. Intensity and Quantity. Voltage. Amperage Meaning of Watts and Kilowatt. A Standard of Measurement. The Ampere Standard. The Voltage Standard. The Ohm. Calculating the Voltage. |
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| VII. | Push Buttons, Switches, Annunciators, Bells and Like Apparatus | Page 65 |
Simple Switches. A Two-Pole Switch. Double-Pole Switch. Sliding Switch. Reversing Switch. Push Buttons. p. iiiElectric Bells. How Made. How Operated. Annunciators. Burglar Alarm. Wire Circuiting. Circuiting System with Two Bells and Push Buttons. The Push Buttons, Annunciators and Bells. Wiring Up a House. |
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| VIII. | Accumulators, Storage or Secondary Batteries | Page 82 |
Storing Up Electricity. The Accumulator. Accumulator Plates. The Grid. The Negative Pole. Connecting Up the Plates. Charging the Cells. The Initial Charge. The Charging Current. |
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| IX. | The Telegraph | Page 90 |
Mechanism in Telegraph Circuit. The Sending Key. The Sounder. Connecting Up the Key and Sounder. Two Stations in Circuit. The Double Click. Illustrating the Dot and the Dash. The Morse Telegraph Code. Example in Use. |
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| X. | High-tension Apparatus, Condensers, Etc. | Page 98 |
Induction. Low and High Tension. Elastic Property of Electricity. The Condenser. Connecting up a Condenser. The Interrupter. Uses of High-tension Coils. |
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| XI. | Wireless Telegraphy | Page 104 |
Telegraphing Without Wires. Surging Character of High-tension Currents. The Coherer. How Made. The Decoherer. The Sending Apparatus. The Receiving Apparatus. How the Circuits are Formed. |
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| XII. | The Telephone | Page 110 |
Vibrations. The Acoustic Telephone. Sound Waves. p. ivHearing Electricity. The Diaphragm in a Magnetic Field. A Simple Telephone Circuit. How to Make a Telephone. Telephone Connections. Complete Installation. The Microphone. Light Contact Points. How to Make a Microphone. Microphone, the Father of the Transmitter. Automatic Cut-outs for Telephones. Complete Circuiting with Transmitters. |
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| XIII. | Electrolysis, Water Purification, Electroplating | Page 123 |
Decomposing Liquids. Making Hydrogen and Oxygen. Purifying Water. Rust. Oxygen as a Purifier. Composition of Water. Common Air Not a Good Purifier. Pure Oxygen a Water Purifier. The Use of Hydrogen in Purification. Aluminum Electrodes. Electric Hand Purifier. Purification and Separation of Metals. Electroplating. Plating Iron with Copper. Direction of Current. |
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| XIV. | Electric Heating. Thermo-Electricity | Page 135 |
Generating Heat in a Wire. Resistance of Substances. Signs of Connectors. Comparison of Metals. A Simple Electric Heater. How to Arrange for Quantity of Current Used. An Electric Iron. Thermo-Electricity Converting Heat Directly into Electricity Metals. Electric, Positive, Negative. Thermo-electric Coupler. |
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| XV. | Alternating Currents, Choking Coil, Transformer | Page 145 |
Direct Current. Alternating Current. The Magnetic Field. Action of a Magnetized Wire. The Movement of a Current in a Charged Wire. Current Reversing Itself. Self-Induction. Brushes in a Direct Current Dynamo: p. vAlternating, Positive and Negative Poles. How an Alternating Current Dynamo is Made. The Windings. The Armature Wires. Choking Coils. The Transformer. How the Voltage is Determined. Voltage and Amperage in Transformers. |
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| XVI. | Electric Lighting | Page 161 |
Early conditions. Fuels. Reversibility of Dynamo. Electric arc. Mechanism to maintain the arc. Resistance coil. Parallel carbons for making arc. Series current. Incandescent system. Multiple circuit. Subdivision of electric light. The filament. The glass bulb. Metallic filaments. Vapor lamps. Directions for improvements. Heat in electric lighting. Curious superstitions concerning electricity. Magnetism. Amber. Discovery of the properties of a magnet. Electricity in mountain regions. Early beliefs as to magnetism and electricity. The lightning rod. Protests against using it. Pliny's explanation of electricity. |
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| XVII. | Power, and Various Other Electrical Manifestations | Page 175 |
Early beliefs concerning the dynamo. Experiments with magnets. Physical action of dynamo and motor. Electrical influence in windings. Comparing motor and dynamo. How the current acts in a dynamo. Its force in a motor. Loss in power transmission. The four ways in which power is dissipated. Disadvantages of electric power. Its advantages. Transmission of energy. High voltages. The transformer. Step-down transformers. Electric furnaces. Welding by electricity. Merging the particles of the joined ends. |
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| XVIII. | X-Ray, Radium and the Like | Page 184 p. vi |
The camera and the eye. Actinic rays. Hertzian waves. High-tension apparatus. Vacuum tubes. Character of the ultra-violet rays. How distinguished. The infra-red rays. Their uses. X-rays not capable of reflection. Not subject to refraction. Transmission through opaque substances. Reducing rates of vibration. Radium. Radio-activity. Radio-active materials. Pitchblende. A new form of energy. Electrical source. Healing power. Problems for scientists. |
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| Glossary of Words Used in the Text | Page 189 | |
| Index | Page 207 | |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
| 1. | Work bench | Frontispiece |
| PAGE | ||
| 2. | Top of magnet-winding reel | 14 |
| 3. | Side of magnet-winding reel | 14 |
| 4. | Journal block | 15 |
| 5. | Plain magnet bar | 19 |
| 6. | Severed magnet | 20 |
| 7. | Reversed magnets | 21 |
| 8. | Horseshoe magnet | 22 |
| 9. | Earth's magnetic lines | 23 |
| 10. | Two permanent magnets | 24 |
| 11. | Magnets in earth's magnetic field | 24 |
| 12. | Armatures for magnets | 25 |
| 13. | Magnetized field | 26 |
| 14. | Magnetized bar | 26 |
| 15. | Direction of current | 27 |
| 16. | Direction of induction current | 28 |
| 17. | Frictional-electricity machine | 30 |
| 18. | Leyden jar | 32 |
| 19. | Galvanic electricity. Crown of cups | 33 |
| 20. | Voltaic electricity | 34 |
| 21. | Primary battery | 36 |
| 22. | Dynamo field and pole piece | 39 |
| 23. | Base and fields assembled | 41 |
| 24. | Details of the armature, core | 42 |
| 25. | Details of the armature, body | 42 |
| 26. | Armature Journals | 43 p. viii |
| 27. | Commutator | 43 |
| 28. | End view of armature, mounted | 44 |
| 29. | Top view of armature on base | 45 |
| 30. | Field winding | 47 |
| 31. | Series-wound | 47 |
| 32. | Shunt-wound | 48 |
| 33. | Compound-wound | 48 |
| 34. | Compass magnet, swing to the right | 50 |
| 35. | Magnetic compass | 50 |
| 36. | Magnet, swing to the left | 50 |
| 37. | Indicating direction of current | 51 |
| 38. | The bridge of the detector | 52 |
| 39. | Details of detector | 53 |
| 40. | Cross-section of detector | 54 |
| 41. | Acid voltameter | 56 |
| 42. | Copper voltameter | 56 |
| 43. | Two-pole switch | 66 |
| 44. | Double-pole switch | 66 |
| 45. | Sliding switch | 67 |
| 46. | Rheostat form of switch | 68 |
| 47. | Reversing switch | 69 |
| 48. | Push button | 70 |
| 49. | Electric bell | 71 |
| 50. | Armature of electric bell | 72 |
| 51. | Vertical section of annunciator | 72 |
| 52. | Front view of annunciator | 72 |
| 53. | Horizontal section of annunciator | 72 |
| 54. | Front plate of annunciator | 72 |
| 55. | Alarm switch on window | 76 |
| 56. | Burglar alarm on window | 76 |
| 57. | Burglar alarm contact | 77 |
| 58. | Neutral position of contact | 78 |
| 59. | Circuiting for electric bell | 79 p. ix |
| 60. | Annunciators in circuit | 80 |
| 61. | Wiring system for a house | 80 |
| 62. | Accumulator grids | 83 |
| 63. | Assemblage of accumulator grids | 85 |
| 64. | Connecting up storage battery in series | 87 |
| 65. | Parallel series | 88 |
| 66. | Charging circuit | 88 |
| 67. | Telegraph sending key | 91 |
| 68. | Telegraph sounder | 92 |
| 69. | A telegraph circuit | 94 |
| 70. | Induction coil and circuit | 99 |
| 71. | Illustrating elasticity | 100 |
| 72. | Condenser | 101 |
| 73. | High-tension circuit | 102 |
| 74. | Current interrupter | 103 |
| 75. | Wireless-telegraphy coherer | 105 |
| 76. | Wireless sending-apparatus | 107 |
| 77. | Wireless receiving-apparatus | 108 |
| 78. | Acoustic telephone | 111 |
| 79. | Illustrating vibrations | 111 |
| 80. | The magnetic field | 112 |
| 81. | Section of telephone receiver | 114 |
| 82. | The magnet and receiver head | 115 |
| 83. | Simple telephone connection | 116 |
| 84. | Telephone stations in circuit | 117 |
| 85. | Illustrating light contact points | 118 |
| 86. | The microphone | 119 |
| 87. | The transmitter | 119 |
| 88. | Complete telephone circuit | 121 |
| 89. | Device for making hydrogen and oxygen | 124 |
| 90. | Electric-water purifier | 127 |
| 91. | Portable electric purifier | 129p. x |
| 92. | Section of positive plate | 130 |
| 93. | Section of negative plate | 130 |
| 94. | Positive and negative in position | 130 |
| 95. | Form of the insulator | 130 |
| 96. | Simple electric heater | 137 |
| 97. | Side view of resistance device | 139 |
| 98. | Top view of resistance device | 139 |
| 99. | Plan view of electric iron | 140 |
| 100. | Section of electric iron | 141 |
| 101. | Thermo-electric couple | 143 |
| 102. | Cutting a magnetic field | 146 |
| 103. | Alternations, first position | 148 |
| 104. | Alternations, second position | 148 |
| 105. | Alternations, third position | 148 |
| 106. | Alternations, fourth position | 148 |
| 107. | Increasing alternations, first view | 149 |
| 108. | Increasing alternations, second view | 149 |
| 109. | Connection of alternating dynamo armature | 150 |
| 110. | Direct current dynamo | 151 |
| 111. | Circuit wires in direct current dynamo | 152 |
| 112. | Alternating polarity lines | 154 |
| 113. | Alternating current dynamo | 155 |
| 114. | Choking coil | 157 |
| 115. | A transformer | 158 |
| 116. | Parallel carbons | 164 |
| 117. | Arc-lighting circuit | 165 |
| 118. | Interrupted conductor | 166 |
| 119. | Incandescent circuit | 167 |
| 120. | Magnetic action in dynamo, 1st | 177 |
| 121. | Magnetic action in dynamo, 2d | 177 |
| 122. | Magnetic action in dynamo, 3d | 178 |
| 123. | Magnetic action in dynamo, 4th | 178p. xi |
| 124. | Magnetic action in motor, 1st | 179 |
| 125. | Magnetic action in motor, 2d | 179 |
| 126. | Magnetic action in motor, 3d | 180 |
| 127. | Magnetic action in motor, 4th | 180 |
INTRODUCTORY
Electricity, like every science, presents two phases to the student, one belonging to a theoretical knowledge, and the other which pertains to the practical application of that knowledge. The boy is directly interested in the practical use which he can make of this wonderful phenomenon in nature.
It is, in reality, the most successful avenue by which he may obtain the theory, for he learns the abstract more readily from concrete examples.
It is an art in which shop practice is a greater educator than can be possible with books. Boys are not, generally, inclined to speculate or theorize on phenomena apart from the work itself; but once put them into contact with the mechanism itself, let them become a living part of it, and they will commence to reason and think for themselves.
It would be a dry, dull and uninteresting thing to tell a boy that electricity can be generated byp. 2 riveting together two pieces of dissimilar metals, and applying heat to the juncture. But put into his hands the metals, and set him to perform the actual work of riveting the metals together, then wiring up the ends of the metals, heating them, and, with a galvanometer, watching for results, it will at once make him see something in the experiment which never occurred when the abstract theory was propounded.
He will inquire first what metals should be used to get the best results, and finally, he will speculate as to the reasons for the phenomena. When he learns that all metals are positive-negative or negative-positive to each other, he has grasped a new idea in the realm of knowledge, which he unconsciously traces back still further, only to learn that he has entered a field which relates to the constitution of matter itself. As he follows the subject through its various channels he will learn that there is a common source of all things; a manifestation common to all matter, and that all substances in nature are linked together in a most wonderful way.
An impulse must be given to a boy's training. The time is past for the rule-and-rote method. The rule can be learned better by a manual application than by committing a sentence to memory.
In the preparation of this book, therefore, Ip. 3 have made practice and work the predominating factors. It has been my aim to suggest the best form in which to do the things in a practical way, and from that work, as the boy carries it out, to deduce certain laws and develop the principles which underlie them. Wherever it is deemed possible to do so, it is planned to have the boy make these discoveries for himself, so as to encourage him to become a thinker and a reasoner instead of a mere machine.
A boy does not develop into a philosopher or a scientist through being told he must learn the principles of this teaching, or the fundamentals of that school of reasoning. He will unconsciously imbibe the spirit and the willingness if we but place before him the tools by which he may build even the simple machinery that displays the various electrical manifestations.
CHAPTER I
THE STUDY OF ELECTRICITY. HISTORICAL
There is no study so profound as electricity. It is a marvel to the scientist as well as to the novice. It is simple in its manifestations, but most complex in its organization and in its ramifications. It has been shown that light, heat, magnetism and electricity are the same, but that they differ merely in their modes of motion.
First Historical Account.—The first historical account of electricity dates back to 600 years B. C. Thales of Miletus was the first to describe the properties of amber, which, when rubbed, attracted and repelled light bodies. The ancients also described what was probably tourmaline, a mineral which has the same qualities. The torpedo, a fish which has the power of emitting electric impulses, was known in very early times.
From that period down to about the year 1600 no accounts of any historical value have been given. Dr. Gilbert, of England, made a number of researches at that time, principally with amber and other materials, and Boyle, in 1650, made numerous experiments with frictional electricity.
Sir Isaac Newton also took up the subject atp. 6 about the same period. In 1705 Hawksbee made numerous experiments; also Gray, in 1720, and a Welshman, Dufay, at about the same time. The Germans, from 1740 to 1780, made many experiments. In 1740, at Leyden, was discovered the jar which bears that name. Before that time, all experiments began and ended with frictional electricity.
The first attempt to "bottle" electricity was attempted by Muschenbrœck, at Leyden, who conceived the idea that electricity in materials might be retained by surrounding them with bodies which did not conduct the current. He electrified some water in a jar, and communication having been established between the water and the prime conductor, his assistant, who was holding the bottle, on trying to disengage the communicating wire, received a sudden shock.
In 1747 Sir William Watson fired gunpowder by an electric spark, and, later on, a party from the Royal Society, in conjunction with Watson, conducted a series of experiments to determine the velocity of the electric fluid, as it was then termed.
Benjamin Franklin, in 1750, showed that lightning was electricity, and later on made his interesting experiments with the kite and the key.
Discovering Galvanic Electricity.—The great discovery of Galvani, in 1790, led to the recognitionp. 7 of a new element in electricity, called galvanic or voltaic (named after the experimenter, Volta), and now known to be identical with frictional electricity. In 1805 Poisson was the first to analyze electricity; and when Œrsted of Copenhagen, in 1820, discovered the magnetic action of electricity, it offered a great stimulus to the science, and paved the way for investigation in a new direction. Ampere was the first to develop the idea that a motor or a dynamo could be made operative by means of the electro-magnetic current; and Faraday, about 1830, discovered electro-magnetic rotation.
Electro-magnetic Force.—From this time on the knowledge of electricity grew with amazing rapidity. Ohm's definition of electro-motive force, current strength and resistance eventuated into Ohm's law. Thomson greatly simplified the galvanometer, and Wheatstone invented the rheostat, a means of measuring resistance, about 1850. Then primary batteries were brought forward by Daniels, Grove, Bunsen and Thomson, and electrolysis by Faraday. Then came the instruments of precision—the electrometer, the resistance bridge, the ammeter, the voltmeter—all of the utmost value in the science.
Measuring Instruments.—The perfection of measuring instruments did more to advance electricityp. 8 than almost any other field of endeavor; so that after 1875 the inventors took up the subject, and by their energy developed and put into practical operation a most wonderful array of mechanism, which has become valuable in the service of man in almost every field of human activity.
Rapidity of Modern Progress.—This brief history is given merely to show what wonders have been accomplished in a few years. The art is really less than fifty years old, and yet so rapidly has it gone forward that it is not at all surprising to hear the remark, that the end of the wonders has been reached. Less than twenty-five years ago a high official of the United States Patent Office stated that it was probable the end of electrical research had been reached. The most wonderful developments have been made since that time; and now, as in the past, one discovery is but the prelude to another still more remarkable. We are beginning to learn that we are only on the threshold of that storehouse in which nature has locked her secrets, and that there is no limit to human ingenuity.
How to Acquire the Vast Knowledge.—As the boy, with his limited vision, surveys this vast accumulation of tools, instruments and machinery, and sees what has been and is now beingp. 9 accomplished, it is not to be wondered at that he should enter the field with timidity. In his mind the great question is, how to acquire the knowledge. There is so much to learn. How can it be accomplished?
The answer to this is, that the student of to-day has the advantage of the knowledge of all who have gone before; and now the pertinent thing is to acquire that knowledge.
The Means Employed.—This brings us definitely down to an examination of the means that we shall employ to instil this knowledge, so that it may become a permanent asset to the student's store of information.
The most significant thing in the history of electrical development is the knowledge that of all the great scientists not one of them ever added any knowledge to the science on purely speculative reasoning. All of them were experimenters. They practically applied and developed their theories in the laboratory or the workshop. The natural inference is, therefore, that the boy who starts out to acquire a knowledge of electricity, must not only theorize, but that he shall, primarily, conduct the experiments, and thereby acquire the information in a practical way, one example of which will make a more lasting impression than pages of dry text
Throughout these pages, therefore, I shall, as briefly as possible, point out the theories involved, as a foundation for the work, and then illustrate the structural types or samples; and the work is so arranged that what is done to-day is merely a prelude or stepping-stone to the next phase of the art. In reality, we shall travel, to a considerable extent, the course which the great investigators followed when they were groping for the facts and discovering the great manifestations in nature.
CHAPTER IIToC
WHAT TOOLS AND APPARATUS ARE NEEDED
Preparing the Workshop.—Before commencing actual experiments we should prepare the workshop and tools. Since we are going into this work as pioneers, we shall have to be dependent upon our own efforts for the production of the electrical apparatus, so as to be able, with our home-made factory, to provide the power, the heat and the electricity. Then, finding we are successful in these enterprises, we may look forward for "more worlds to conquer."
By this time our neighbors will become interested in and solicit work from us.
Uses of Our Workshops.—They may want us to test batteries, and it then becomes necessary to construct mechanism to detect and measure electricity; to install new and improved apparatus; and to put in and connect up electric bells in their houses, as well as burglar alarms. To meet the requirements, we put in a telegraph line, having learned, as well as we are able, how they are made and operated. But we find the telegraph too slow and altogether unsuited for our purposes, as well as for the uses of the neighborhood,p. 12 so we conclude to put in a telephone system.
What to Build.—It is necessary, therefore, to commence right at the bottom to build a telephone, a transmitter, a receiver and a switch-board for our system. From the telephone we soon see the desirability of getting into touch with the great outside world, and wireless telegraphy absorbs our time and energies.
But as we learn more and more of the wonderful things electricity will do, we are brought into contact with problems which directly interest the home. Sanitation attracts our attention. Why cannot electricity act as an agent to purify our drinking water, to sterilize sewage and to arrest offensive odors? We must, therefore, learn something about the subject of electrolysis.
What to Learn.—The decomposition of water is not the only thing that we shall describe pertaining to this subject. We go a step further, and find that we can decompose metals as well as liquids, and that we can make a pure metal out of an impure one, as well as make the foulest water pure. But we shall also, in the course of our experiments, find that a cheap metal can be coated with a costly one by means of electricity—that we can electroplate by electrolysis.
Uses of the Electrical Devices.—While allp. 13 this is progressing and our factory is turning out an amazing variety of useful articles, we are led to inquire into the uses to which we may devote our surplus electricity. The current may be diverted for boiling water; for welding metals; for heating sad-irons, as well as for other purposes which are daily required.
Tools.—To do these things tools are necessary, and for the present they should not be expensive. A small, rigidly built bench is the first requirement. This may be made, as shown in Fig. 1, of three 2-inch planks, each 10 inches wide and 6 feet long, mounted on legs 36 inches in height. In the front part are three drawers for your material, or the small odds and ends, as well as for such little tools as you may accumulate. Then you will need a small vise, say, with a 2-inch jaw, and you will also require a hand reel for winding magnets. This will be fully described hereafter.
You can also, probably, get a small, cheap anvil, which will be of the greatest service in your work. It should be mounted close up to the work bench. Two small hammers, one with an A-shaped peon, and the other with a round peon, should be selected, and also a plane and a small wood saw with fine teeth. A bit stock, or a ratchet drill, if you can afford it, with a variety of small drills; two wood chisels, say of ⅜-inch and ¾-inch widths;p. 14 small cold chisels; hack saw, 10-inch blade; small iron square; pair of dividers; tin shears; wire cutters; 2 pairs of pliers, one flat and the other round-nosed; 2 awls, centering punch, wire cutters, and, finally, soldering tools.