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History of electric light

Chapter 32: “SUB-DIVIDING THE ELECTRIC LIGHT”
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About This Book

A chronological, technical survey of electric lighting traces developments from early experiments with friction machines, Leyden jars and voltaic piles through advances in batteries, electromagnetic discoveries and the invention of the dynamo. It follows the parallel evolution of arc and incandescent illumination, outlining experimental filament and arc-control methods and the move to commercial installations and distribution schemes such as series, multiple and three‑wire systems. Later sections review later lamp technologies—Nernst, mercury‑vapor, gas‑filled and tungsten types—together with transformers, rectifiers, standardized voltages and sockets. The book is illustrated and includes a chronology, cost and usage statistics, and a selected bibliography.

“SUB-DIVIDING THE ELECTRIC LIGHT”

While the arc lamp was being commercially established, it was at once seen that it was too large a unit for household use. Many inventors attacked the problem of making a smaller unit, or, as it was called, “sub-dividing the electric light.” In the United States there were four men prominent in this work: William E. Sawyer, Moses G. Farmer, Hiram S. Maxim and Thomas A. Edison. These men did not make smaller arc lamps but all attempted to make an incandescent lamp that would operate on the arc circuits.

Sawyer’s Incandescent Lamp, 1878.

This had a graphite burner operating in nitrogen gas.

Farmer’s Incandescent Lamp, 1878.

The graphite burner operated in nitrogen gas. This lamp is in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution.

Sawyer made several lamps in the years 1878–79 along the lines of the Russian scientists. All his lamps had a thick carbon burner operating in nitrogen gas. They had a long glass tube closed at one end and the other cemented to a brass base through which the gas was put in. Heavy fluted wires connected the burner with the base to radiate the heat, in order to keep the joint in the base cool. The burner was renewable by opening the cemented joint. Farmer’s lamp consisted of a pair of heavy copper rods mounted on a rubber cork, between which a graphite rod was mounted. This was inserted in a glass bulb and operated in nitrogen gas. Maxim made a lamp having a carbon burner operating in a rarefied hydrocarbon vapor. He also made a lamp consisting of a sheet of platinum operating in air.