登陆注册
14731600000064

第64章

No doubt he often supplied the germinal ideas, while his assistants only carried them out. But occasionally the suggestion was nothing more than this: 'I want something that will do so-and-so. I believe it will be a good thing, and can be done.' The assistant was on his mettle, and either failed or triumphed. The results of the experiments and researches were all chronicled in a book, for the new facts, if not then required, might become serviceable at a future time. If a rare material was wanted, it was procured at any cost.

With such facilities, an invention is rapidly matured. Sometimes the idea was conceived in the morning, and a working model was constructed by the evening. One day, we are told, a discovery was made at 4 P.M., and Edison telegraphed it to his patent agent, who immediately drew up the specification, and at nine o'clock next morning cabled it to London.

Before the inventor was out of bed, he received an intimation that his patent had been already deposited in the British Patent Office. Of course, the difference of time was in his favour.

When Edison arrived at the laboratory in the morning, he read his letters, and then overlooked his employees, witnessing their results and offering his suggestions; but it often happened that he became totally engrossed with one experiment or invention. His work was frequently interrupted by curious visitors, who wished to see the laboratory and the man. Although he had chosen that out-of-the-way place to avoid disturbance, they were never denied: and he often took a pleasure in showing his models, or explaining the work on which he was engaged.

There was no affectation of mystery, no attempt at keeping his experiments a secret. Even the laboratory notes were open to inspection. Menlo Park became a kind of Mecca to the scientific pilgrim; the newspapers and magazines despatched reporters to the scene; excursion parties came by rail, and country farmers in their buggies; till at last an enterprising Yankee even opened a refreshment room.

The first of Edison's greater inventions in Menlo Park was the 'loud-speaking telephone.' Professor Graham Bell had introduced his magneto-electric telephone, but its effect was feeble. It is, we believe, a maxim in biology that a similarity between the extremities of a creature is an infallible sign of its inferiority, and that in proportion as it rises in the scale of being, its head is found to differ from its tail.

Now, in the Bell apparatus, the transmitter and the receiver were alike, and hence Clerk Maxwell hinted that it would never be good for much until they became differentiated from each other. Consciously or unconsciously Edison accomplished the feat. With the hardihood of genius, he attempted to devise a telephone which would speak out loud enough to be heard in any corner of a large hall.

In the telephone of Bell, the voice of the speaker is the motive power which generates the current in the line. The vibrations of the sound may be said to transform themselves into electrical undulations. Hence the current is very weak, and the reproduction of the voice is relatively faint. Edison adopted the principle of making the vibrations of the voice control the intensity of a current which was independently supplied to the line by a voltaic battery. The plan of Bell, in short, may be compared to a man who employs his strength to pump a quantity of water into a pipe, and that of Edison to one who uses his to open a sluice, through which a stream of water flows from a capacious dam into the pipe. Edison was acquainted with two experimental facts on which to base the invention.

In 1873, or thereabout, he claimed to have observed, while constructing rheostats, or electrical resistances for making an artificial telegraph line, that powdered plumbago and carbon has the property of varying in its resistance to the passage of the current when under pressure. The variation seemed in a manner proportional to the pressure. As a matter of fact, powdered carbon and plumbago had been used in making small adjustable rheostats by M. Clerac, in France, and probably also in Germany, as early as 1865 or 1866. Clerac's device consisted of a small wooden tube containing the material, and fitted with contacts for the current, which appear to have adjusted the pressure. Moreover, the Count Du Moncel, as far back as 1856, had clearly discovered that when powdered carbon was subjected to pressure, its electrical resistance altered, and had made a number of experiments on the phenomenon. Edison may have independently observed the fact, but it is certain he was not the first, and his claim to priority has fallen to the ground.

Still he deserves the full credit of utilising it in ways which were highly ingenious and bold. The 'pressure-relay,' produced in 1877, was the first relay in which the strength of the local current working the local telegraph instrument was caused to vary in proportion to the variation; of the current in the main line. It consisted of an electro-magnet with double poles and an armature which pressed upon a disc or discs of plumbago, through which the local current Passed. The electro-magnet was excited by the main line current and the armature attracted to its poles at every signal, thus pressing on the plumbago, and by reducing its resistance varying the current in the local circuit.

According as the main line current was strong or weak, the pressure on the plumbago was more or less, and the current in the local circuit strong or weak. Hence the signals of the local receiver were in accordance with the currents in the main line.

同类推荐
  • 山家绪余集

    山家绪余集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 台阳笔记

    台阳笔记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 假谲

    假谲

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 云叟住禅师语录

    云叟住禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 小儿语_续小儿语_女小儿语

    小儿语_续小儿语_女小儿语

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 金龙魔尊

    金龙魔尊

    “等着我,总有一天,我会站在和你一样的高度,和你并肩看这云起云落.....”叶子恒坚定对着远处大喊。这是一部为了男人的诺言努力奋斗的故事,有甜美的爱情,温暖的亲情,肝胆相照的友情,同样充满了阴暗,狡诈,背叛。看叶子恒是怎么披荆斩棘一路向那不可能顶点一点点靠近。
  • 子衿

    子衿

    一夜之间,故土亡尽,她平静的深山生活就此结束。血海深仇,她发誓不惜一切代价令仇人得到报应。而更加残酷的身世之谜,远在千里之外等她揭开。命运的暗流开始涌动,他是否还能如相遇时那般冷眼旁观?悲伤的轮回,扭曲的人性,复杂的面孔,一切都变了……
  • 穿越之是凤是凰

    穿越之是凤是凰

    一朝胎穿,她成了最受宠信的王爷之女。为了七个未知的任务,她决定女扮男装离家出走。她究竟该怎么做?只要时间的车辙仍旧转动,她就无法确定自己下一秒会身处哪个世界。她无法许诺,因为这样缥缈的她能许下什么呢?
  • 照着做,你就是最能干的人

    照着做,你就是最能干的人

    为了实施“细化”和“循序渐进”,在大致掌握工作整体内容的基础上,必须对应该做的事情进行具体的步骤划分。在学习“四个技能”之前,先要学习本章的“认准目的”“了解内容”“考虑顺序”这“三个铁则”,而这也正是一切工作整理术的基石。
  • 理事大人的韩娱

    理事大人的韩娱

    你好,初次见面我叫李哲铭,S.M公司理事请叫我理事大
  • 创天之源

    创天之源

    龙源机缘穿越到鸿蒙前的虚无空间,看他给我们带来什么样的传奇,神秘的源界,宇之宇,宙之宙,看主角怎么逍遥都市,又怎么君令源界和各个空间,解开一个又一个隐秘
  • 血色战国

    血色战国

    某军高级参谋陈羽在一次名为“塞外逐鹿”的军事演习中意外穿越道了战国时代。这是一个列国纷争狼烟四起的世界。陈羽则重生在了一个边塞小国的中山公十四公子身上,陈羽则变成了一个纨绔败家的公子羽。公子羽决定改变自己被人白眼的命运,却遭到兄长们的暗算,子羽被贬看守王陵,太子弑父夺位,终于在闾丘小昭的帮助下逃出中山国流亡天涯,遭到无尽追杀。从此公子羽便踏上一条步步惊心的道路。他要披荆斩棘,他要书写自己的神话,他要缔造属于他的大一统中山帝国。什么赵国的李牧廉颇,什么秦国的战神白起,通通都不在话下,历史就要重写,自己就要创造一个不一样的战国!哼,秦始皇,大秦帝国,你们就胎死腹中吧,既然我陈羽有幸来到这个精彩纷呈,英雄辈出的时代,中国历史上这浓墨重彩的一笔,就因该由我来书写!本书已建群,号码174343767
  • 查理九世之孤独的友谊

    查理九世之孤独的友谊

    孤独的友谊,曾经的背叛,如今的创伤。【①】【读者QQ群:620169589,欢迎各位希稀冰加入。】
  • 史上最强枭雄

    史上最强枭雄

    一事无成的古吴成在而立之年终于混成了一名乞丐,本想碰瓷却弄巧成拙,讹诈不成反被当场撞死。不想老天开眼,他竟然穿越到了一个名叫天和大陆的异界,华丽转身成为汉唐大将军古奉的独子古天应。原本以为苦尽甘来可以享受荣华富贵,过上纨绔子弟挥金如土的好日子。哪成想穿越第一天就遇到变故,沦落成为一名朝廷的逃犯。为了活下来,不负这生奇遇,古天应从此踏上了一条布满荆棘,通往巅峰人生的道路。快意恩仇的江湖,热血折戟的沙场,醉梦红纱的柔情,且看古天应如何踏碎凌霄,成为史上最强的枭雄!
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、