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IT is possible to imagine a time to come when
the hours of work and rest will once more be
regulated by the sun. But the course of
civilization has been marked by an artificial
lengthening of the day, and by a constant
striving after more perfect means of
illumination. Why mankind should sleep through
several hours of sunlight in the morning, and
stay awake through a needless time in the
evening, can probably only be attributed to
total depravity. It is certainly a most
stupid, expensive, and harmful habit. In no
one thing has man shown greater fertility of
invention than in lighting; to nothing does he
cling more tenaciously than to his devices for
furnishing light. Electricity to-day reigns
supreme in the field of illumination, but every
other kind of artificial light that has ever been
known is still in use somewhere. Toward its
light-bringers the race has assumed an attitude
of veneration, though it has forgotten, if it
ever heard, the names of those who first
brightened its gloom and dissipated its
darkness. If the tallow candle, hitherto
unknown, were now invented, its creator would
be hailed as one of the greatest benefactors of
the present age.
Up to the close of the eighteenth century, the
means of house and street illumination were of
two generic kinds--grease and oil; but then
came a swift and revolutionary change in the
adoption of gas. The ideas and methods of
Murdoch and Lebon soon took definite shape,
and "coal smoke" was piped from its place of
origin to distant points of consumption. As
early as 1804, the first company ever
organized for gas lighting was formed in
London, one side of Pall Mall being lit up by
the enthusiastic pioneer, Winsor, in
1807. Equal activity was shown in
America, and Baltimore began the practice of
gas lighting in 1816. It is true that there
were explosions, and distinguished men like
Davy and Watt opined that the illuminant was
too dangerous; but the "spirit of coal" had
demonstrated its usefulness convincingly, and a
commercial development began, which, for extent
and rapidity, was not inferior to that marking
the concurrent adoption of steam in industry and
transportation.
Meantime the wax candle and the Argand oil lamp
held their own bravely. The whaling fleets,
long after gas came into use, were one of the
greatest sources of our national wealth. To
New Bedford, Massachusetts, alone, some
three or four hundred ships brought their whale
and sperm oil, spermaceti, and whalebone; and
at one time that port was accounted the richest
city in the United States in proportion to its
population. The ship-owners and refiners of
that whaling metropolis were slow to believe that
their monopoly could ever be threatened by newer
sources of illumination; but gas had become
available in the cities, and coal-oil and
petroleum were now added to the list of
illuminating materials. The American whaling
fleet, which at the time of Edison's birth
mustered over seven hundred sail, had dwindled
probably to a bare tenth when he took up the
problem of illumination; and the competition of
oil from the ground with oil from the sea, and
with coal-gas, had made the artificial
production of light cheaper than ever before,
when up to the middle of the century it had
remained one of the heaviest items of domestic
expense. Moreover, just about the time that
Edison took up incandescent lighting,
water-gas was being introduced on a large scale
as a commercial illuminant that could be produced
at a much lower cost than coal-gas.
Throughout the first half of the nineteenth
century the search for a practical electric light
was almost wholly in the direction of employing
methods analogous to those already familiar; in
other words, obtaining the illumination from the
actual consumption of the light-giving
material. In the third quarter of the century
these methods were brought to practicality, but
all may be referred back to the brilliant
demonstrations of Sir Humphry Davy at the
Royal Institution, circa 1809-10,
when, with the current from a battery of two
thousand cells, he produced an intense voltaic
arc between the points of consuming sticks of
charcoal. For more than thirty years the arc
light remained an expensive laboratory
experiment; but the coming of the dynamo placed
that illuminant on a commercial basis. The mere
fact that electrical energy from the least
expensive chemical battery using up zinc and
acids costs twenty times as much as that from a
dynamo--driven by steam-engine--is in itself
enough to explain why so many of the electric
arts lingered in embryo after their fundamental
principles had been discovered. Here is seen
also further proof of the great truth that one
invention often waits for another.
From 1850 onward the improvements in both
the arc lamp and the dynamo were rapid; and
under the superintendence of the great Faraday,
in 1858, protecting beams of intense
electric light from the voltaic arc were shed
over the waters of the Straits of Dover from
the beacons of South Foreland and Dungeness.
By 1878 the arc-lighting industry had
sprung into existence in so promising a manner as
to engender an extraordinary fever and furor of
speculation. At the Philadelphia Centennial
Exposition of 1876, Wallace-Farmer
dynamos built at Ansonia, Connecticut, were
shown, with the current from which arc lamps
were there put in actual service. A year or two
later the work of Charles F. Brush and
Edward Weston laid the deep foundation of
modern arc lighting in America, securing as
well substantial recognition abroad.
Thus the new era had been ushered in, but it
was based altogether on the consumption of some
material --carbon--in a lamp open to the
air. Every lamp the world had ever known did
this, in one way or another. Edison himself
began at that point, and his note-books show
that he made various experiments with this type
of lamp at a very early stage. Indeed, his
experiments had led him so far as to anticipate
in 1875 what are now known as "flaming
arcs," the exceedingly bright and generally
orange or rose-colored lights which have been
introduced within the last few years, and are
now so frequently seen in streets and public
places. While the arcs with plain carbons are
bluish-white, those with carbons containing
calcium fluoride have a notable golden glow.
He was convinced, however, that the greatest
field of lighting lay in the illumination of
houses and other comparatively enclosed areas,
to replace the ordinary gas light, rather than
in the illumination of streets and other outdoor
places by lights of great volume and brilliancy.
Dismissing from his mind quickly the commercial
impossibility of using arc lights for general
indoor illumination, he arrived at the
conclusion that an electric lamp giving light by
incandescence was the solution of the problem.
Edison was familiar with the numerous but
impracticable and commercially unsuccessful
efforts that had been previously made by other
inventors and investigators to produce electric
light by incandescence, and at the time that he
began his experiments, in 1877, almost the
whole scientific world had pronounced such an
idea as impossible of fulfilment. The leading
electricians, physicists, and experts of the
period had been studying the subject for more
than a quarter of a century, and with but one
known exception had proven mathematically and by
close reasoning that the "Subdivision of the
Electric Light," as it was then termed, was
practically beyond attainment. Opinions of this
nature have ever been but a stimulus to Edison
when he has given deep thought to a subject, and
has become impressed with strong convictions of
possibility, and in this particular case he was
satisfied that the subdivision of the electric
light--or, more correctly, the subdivision of
the electric current--was not only possible but
entirely practicable.
It will have been perceived from the foregoing
chapters that from the time of boyhood, when he
first began to rub against the world, his
commercial instincts were alert and predominated
in almost all of the enterprises that he set in
motion. This characteristic trait had grown
stronger as he matured, having received, as it
did, fresh impetus and strength from his one
lapse in the case of his first patented
invention, the vote-recorder. The lesson he
then learned was to devote his inventive
faculties only to things for which there was a
real, genuine demand, and that would subserve
the actual necessities of humanity; and it was
probably a fortunate circumstance that this
lesson was learned at the outset of his career as
an inventor. He has never assumed to be a
philosopher or "pure scientist."
In order that the reader may grasp an adequate
idea of the magnitude and importance of
Edison's invention of the incandescent lamp,
it will be necessary to review briefly the
"state of the art" at the time he began his
experiments on that line. After the invention
of the voltaic battery, early in the last
century, experiments were made which determined
that heat could be produced by the passage of the
electric current through wires of platinum and
other metals, and through pieces of carbon, as
noted al- ready, and it was, of course, also
observed that if sufficient current were passed
through these conductors they could be brought
from the lower stage of redness up to the
brilliant white heat of incandescence. As early
as 1845 the results of these experiments were
taken advantage of when Starr, a talented
American who died at the early age of
twenty-five, suggested, in his English patent
of that year, two forms of small incandescent
electric lamps, one having a burner made from
platinum foil placed under a glass cover without
excluding the air; and the other composed of a
thin plate or pencil of carbon enclosed in a
Torricellian vacuum. These suggestions of
young Starr were followed by many other
experimenters, whose improvements consisted
principally in devices to increase the
compactness and portability of the lamp, in the
sealing of the lamp chamber to prevent the
admission of air, and in means for renewing the
carbon burner when it had been consumed. Thus
Roberts, in 1852, proposed to cement the
neck of the glass globe into a metallic cup, and
to provide it with a tube or stop-cock for
exhaustion by means of a hand-pump.
Lodyguine, Konn, Kosloff, and Khotinsky,
between 1872 and 1877, proposed various
ingenious devices for perfecting the joint
between the metal base and the glass globe, and
also provided their lamps with several short
carbon pencils, which were automatically brought
into circuit successively as the pencils were
consumed. In 1876 or 1877, Bouliguine
proposed the employment of a long carbon pencil,
a short section only of which was in circuit at
any one time and formed the burner, the lamp
being provided with a mechanism for automatically
pushing other sections of the pencil into
position between the contacts to renew the
burner. Sawyer and Man proposed, in
1878, to make the bottom plate of glass
instead of metal, and provided ingenious
arrangements for charging the lamp chamber with
an atmosphere of pure nitrogen gas which does not
support combustion.
These lamps and many others of similar
character, ingenious as they were, failed to
become of any commercial value, due, among
other things, to the brief life of the carbon
burner. Even under the best conditions it was
found that the carbon members were subject to a
rapid disintegration or evaporation, which
experimenters assumed was due to the disrupting
action of the electric current; and hence the
conclusion that carbon contained in itself the
elements of its own destruction, and was not a
suitable material for the burner of an
incandescent lamp. On the other hand,
platinum, although found to be the best of all
materials for the purpose, aside from its great
expense, and not combining with oxygen at high
temperatures as does carbon, required to be
brought so near the melting-point in order to
give light, that a very slight increase in the
temperature resulted in its destruction. It was
assumed that the difficulty lay in the material
of the burner itself, and not in its
environment.
It was not realized up to such a comparatively
recent date as 1879 that the solution of the
great problem of subdivision of the electric
current would not, however, be found merely in
the production of a durable incandescent electric
lamp--even if any of the lamps above referred
to had fulfilled that requirement. The other
principal features necessary to subdivide the
electric current successfully were: the burning
of an indefinite number of lights on the same
circuit; each light to give a useful and
economical degree of illumination; and each
light to be independent of all the others in
regard to its operation and extinguishment.
The opinions of scientific men of the period on
the subject are well represented by the two
following extracts--the first, from a lecture
at the Royal United Service Institution,
about February, 1879, by Mr. (Sir)
W. H. Preece, one of the most eminent
electricians in England, who, after discussing
the question mathematically, said: "Hence the
sub-division of the light is an absolute ignis
fatuus." The other extract is from a book
written by Paget Higgs, LL.D.,
D.Sc., published in London in 1879, in
which he says: "Much nonsense has been talked
in relation to this subject. Some inventors
have claimed the power to `indefinitely divide'
the electric current, not knowing or forgetting
that such a statement is incompatible with the
well-proven law of conservation of energy."
"Some inventors," in the last sentence just
quoted, probably--indeed, we think
undoubtedly--refers to Edison, whose earlier
work in electric lighting (1878) had been
announced in this country and abroad, and who
had then stated boldly his conviction of the
practicability of the subdivision of the
electrical current. The above extracts are good
illustrations, however, of scientific opinions
up to the end of 1879, when Mr. Edison's
epoch-making invention rendered them entirely
untenable. The eminent scientist, John
Tyndall, while not sharing these precise
views, at least as late as January 17,
1879, delivered a lecture before the Royal
Institution on "The Electric Light,"
when, after pointing out the development of the
art up to Edison's work, and showing the
apparent hopelessness of the problem, he said:
"Knowing something of the intricacy of the
practical problem, I should certainly prefer
seeing it in Edison's hands to having it in
mine."
The reader may have deemed this sketch of the
state of the art to be a considerable
digression; but it is certainly due to the
subject to present the facts in such a manner as
to show that this great invention was neither the
result of improving some process or device that
was known or existing at the time, nor due to
any unforeseen lucky chance, nor the accidental
result of other experiments. On the contrary,
it was the legitimate outcome of a series of
exhaustive experiments founded upon logical and
original reasoning in a mind that had the courage
and hardihood to set at naught the confirmed
opinions of the world, voiced by those generally
acknowledged to be the best exponents of the
art--experiments carried on amid a storm of
jeers and derision, almost as contemptuous as if
the search were for the discovery of perpetual
motion. In this we see the man foreshadowed by
the boy who, when he obtained his books on
chemistry or physics, did not accept any
statement of fact or experiment therein, but
worked out every one of them himself to ascertain
whether or not they were true.
Although this brings the reader up to the year
1879, one must turn back two years and
accompany Edison in his first attack on the
electric-light problem. In 1877 he sold
his telephone invention (the carbon
transmitter) to the Western Union Telegraph
Company, which had previously come into
possession also of his quadruplex inventions, as
already related. He was still busily engaged on
the telephone, on acoustic electrical
transmission, sextuplex telegraphs, duplex
telegraphs, miscellaneous carbon articles, and
other inventions of a minor nature. During the
whole of the previous year and until late in the
summer of 1877, he had been working with
characteristic energy and enthusiasm on the
telephone; and, in developing this invention to
a successful issue, had preferred the use of
carbon and had employed it in numerous forms,
especially in the form of carbonized paper.
Eighteen hundred and seventy-seven in
Edison's laboratory was a veritable carbon
year, for it was carbon in some shape or form
for interpolation in electric circuits of various
kinds that occupied the thoughts of the whole
force from morning to night. It is not
surprising, therefore, that in September of
that year, when Edison turned his thoughts
actively toward electric lighting by
incandescence, his early experiments should be
in the line of carbon as an illuminant. His
originality of method was displayed at the very
outset, for one of the first experiments was the
bringing to incandescence of a strip of carbon in
the open air to ascertain merely how much current
was required. This conductor was a strip of
carbonized paper about an inch long,
one-sixteenth of an inch broad, and six or
seven one-thousandths of an inch thick, the
ends of which were secured to clamps that formed
the poles of a battery. The carbon was lighted
up to incandescence, and, of course, oxidized
and disintegrated immediately. Within a few
days this was followed by experiments with the
same kind of carbon, but in vacuo by means of a
hand-worked air-pump. This time the carbon
strip burned at incandescence for about eight
minutes. Various expedients to prevent
oxidization were tried, such, for instance, as
coating the carbon with powdered glass, which in
melting would protect the carbon from the
atmosphere, but without successful results.
Edison was inclined to concur in the prevailing
opinion as to the easy destructibility of
carbon, but, without actually settling the
point in his mind, he laid aside temporarily
this line of experiment and entered a new field.
He had made previously some trials of platinum
wire as an incandescent burner for a lamp, but
left it for a time in favor of carbon. He now
turned to the use of almost infusible metals--
such as boron, ruthenium, chromium,
etc.--as separators or tiny bridges between
two carbon points, the current acting so as to
bring these separators to a high degree of
incandescence, at which point they would emit a
brilliant light. He also placed some of these
refractory metals directly in the circuit,
bringing them to incandescence, and used silicon
in powdered form in glass tubes placed in the
electric circuit. His notes include the use of
powdered silicon mixed with lime or other very
infusible non-conductors or semi- conductors.
Edison's conclusions on these substances were
that, while in some respects they were within
the bounds of possibility for the subdivision of
the electric current, they did not reach the
ideal that he had in mind for commercial
results.
Edison's systematized attacks on the problem
were two in number, the first of which we have
just related, which began in September,
1877, and continued until about January,
1878. Contemporaneously, he and his force
of men were very busily engaged day and night on
other important enterprises and inventions.
Among the latter, the phonograph may be
specially mentioned, as it was invented in the
late fall of 1877. From that time until
July, 1878, his time and attention day and
night were almost completely absorbed by the
excitement caused by the invention and exhibition
of the machine. In July, feeling entitled to
a brief vacation after several years of
continuous labor, Edison went with the
expedition to Wyoming to observe an eclipse of
the sun, and incidentally to test his
tasimeter, a delicate instrument devised by him
for measuring heat transmitted through immense
distances of space. His trip has been already
described. He was absent about two months.
Coming home rested and refreshed, Mr. Edison
says: "After my return from the trip to
observe the eclipse of the sun, I went with
Professor Barker, Professor of Physics in
the University of Pennsylvania, and Doctor
Chandler, Professor of Chemistry in Columbia
College, to see Mr. Wallace, a large
manufacturer of brass in Ansonia,
Connecticut. Wallace at this time was
experimenting on series arc lighting. Just at
that time I wanted to take up something new,
and Professor Barker suggested that I go to
work and see if I could subdivide the electric
light so it could be got in small units like
gas. This was not a new suggestion, because I
had made a number of experiments on electric
lighting a year before this. They had been laid
aside for the phonograph. I determined to take
up the search again and continue it. On my
return home I started my usual course of
collecting every kind of data about gas; bought
all the transactions of the gas- engineering
societies, etc., all the back volumes of gas
journals, etc. Having obtained all the data,
and investigated gas-jet distribution in New
York by actual observations, I made up my mind
that the problem of the subdivision of the
electric current could be solved and made
commercial." About the end of August,
1878, he began his second organized attack
on the subdivision of the current, which was
steadily maintained until he achieved signal
victory a year and two months later.
The date of this interesting visit to Ansonia
is fixed by an inscription made by Edison on a
glass goblet which he used. The legend in
diamond scratches runs: "Thomas A. Edison,
September 8, 1878, made under the
electric light." Other members of the party
left similar memorials, which under the
circumstances have come to be greatly prized. A
number of experiments were witnessed in arc
lighting, and Edison secured a small
Wallace-Farmer dynamo for his own work, as
well as a set of Wallace arc lamps for lighting
the Menlo Park laboratory. Before leaving
Ansonia, Edison remarked, significantly:
"Wallace, I believe I can beat you making
electric lights. I don't think you are working
in the right direction." Another date which
shows how promptly the work was resumed is
October 14, 1878, when Edison filed an
application for his first lighting patent:
"Improvement in Electric Lights." In after
years, discussing the work of Wallace, who was
not only a great pioneer electrical
manufacturer, but one of the founders of the
wire-drawing and brass-working industry,
Edison said: "Wallace was one of the earliest
pioneers in electrical matters in this country.
He has done a great deal of good work, for
which others have received the credit; and the
work which he did in the early days of electric
lighting others have benefited by largely, and
he has been crowded to one side and forgotten."
Associated in all this work with Wallace at
Ansonia was Prof. Moses G. Farmer, famous
for the introduction of the fire-alarm system;
as the discoverer of the self-exciting principle
of the modern dynamo; as a pioneer experimenter
in the electric-railway field; as a telegraph
engineer, and as a lecturer on mines and
explosives to naval classes at Newport. During
1858, Farmer, who, like Edison, was a
ceaseless investigator, had made a series of
studies upon the production of light by
electricity, and had even invented an automatic
regulator by which a number of platinum lamps in
multiple arc could be kept at uniform voltage for
any length of time. In July, 1859, he
lit up one of the rooms of his house at Salem,
Massachusetts, every evening with such lamps,
using in them small pieces of platinum and
iridium wire, which were made to incandesce by
means of current from primary batteries. Farmer
was not one of the party that memorable day in
September, but his work was known through his
intimate connection with Wallace, and there is
no doubt that reference was made to it. Such
work had not led very far, the "lamps" were
hopelessly short- lived, and everything was
obviously experimental; but it was all helpful
and suggestive to one whose open mind refused no
hint from any quarter.
At the commencement of his new attempts,
Edison returned to his experiments with carbon
as an incandescent burner for a lamp, and made a
very large number of trials, all in vacuo. Not
only were the ordinary strip paper carbons tried
again, but tissue- paper coated with tar and
lampblack was rolled into thin sticks, like
knitting-needles, carbonized and raised to
incandescence in vacuo. Edison also tried hard
carbon, wood carbons, and almost every
conceivable variety of paper carbon in like
manner. With the best vacuum that he could then
get by means of the ordinary air-pump, the
carbons would last, at the most, only from ten
to fifteen minutes in a state of incandescence.
Such results were evidently not of commercial
value.
Edison then turned his attention in other
directions. In his earliest consideration of
the problem of subdividing the electric current,
he had decided that the only possible solution
lay in the employment of a lamp whose
incandescing body should have a high resistance
combined with a small radiating surface, and be
capable of being used in what is called
"multiple arc," so that each unit, or lamp,
could be turned on or off without interfering
with any other unit or lamp. No other
arrangement could possibly be considered as
commercially practicable.
The full significance of the three last
preceding sentences will not be obvious to
laymen, as undoubtedly many of the readers of
this book may be; and now being on the threshold
of the series of Edison's experiments that led
up to the basic invention, we interpolate a
brief explanation, in order that the reader may
comprehend the logical reasoning and work that in
this case produced such far-reaching results.
If we consider a simple circuit in which a
current is flowing, and include in the circuit a
carbon horseshoe-like conductor which it is
desired to bring to incandescence by the heat
generated by the current passing through it, it
is first evident that the resistance offered to
the current by the wires themselves must be less
than that offered by the burner, because,
otherwise current would be wasted as heat in the
conducting wires. At the very foundation of the
electric- lighting art is the essentially
commercial consideration that one cannot spend
very much for conductors, and Edison determined
that, in order to use wires of a practicable
size, the voltage of the current (i.e., its
pressure or the characteristic that overcomes
resistance to its flow) should be one hundred
and ten volts, which since its adoption has been
the standard. To use a lower voltage or
pressure, while making the solution of the
lighting problem a simple one as we shall see,
would make it necessary to increase the size of
the conducting wires to a prohibitive extent.
To increase the voltage or pressure materially,
while permitting some saving in the cost of
conductors, would enormously increase the
difficulties of making a sufficiently high
resistance conductor to secure light by
incandescence. This apparently remote
consideration --weight of copper used--was
really the commercial key to the problem, just
as the incandescent burner was the scientific key
to that problem. Before Edison's invention
incandescent lamps had been suggested as a
possibility, but they were provided with carbon
rods or strips of relatively low resistance, and
to bring these to incandescence required a
current of low pressure, because a current of
high voltage would pass through them so readily
as not to generate heat; and to carry a current
of low pressure through wires without loss would
require wires of enormous size.[8] Having a
current of relatively high pressure to contend
with, it was necessary to provide a carbon
burner which, as compared with what had
previously been suggested, should have a very
great resistance. Carbon as a material,
determined after patient search, apparently
offered the greatest hope, but even with this
substance the necessary high resistance could be
obtained only by making the burner of extremely
small cross-section, thereby also reducing its
radiating surface. Therefore, the crucial
point was the production of a hair-like carbon
filament, with a relatively great resistance and
small radiating surface, capable of withstanding
mechanical shock, and susceptible of being
maintained at a temperature of over two thousand
degrees for a thousand hours or more before
breaking. And this filamentary conductor
required to be supported in a vacuum chamber so
perfectly formed and constructed that during all
those hours, and subjected as it is to varying
temperatures, not a particle of air should enter
to disintegrate the filament. And not only so,
but the lamp after its design must not be a mere
laboratory possibility, but a practical
commercial article capable of being manufactured
at low cost and in large quantities. A
statement of what had to be done in those days of
actual as well as scientific electrical darkness
is quite sufficient to explain Tyndall's
attitude of mind in preferring that the problem
should be in Edison's hands rather than in his
own. To say that the solution of the problem
lay merely in reducing the size of the carbon
burner to a mere hair, is to state a half-truth
only; but who, we ask, would have had the
temerity even to suggest that such an attenuated
body could be maintained at a white heat,
without disintegration, for a thousand hours?
The solution consisted not only in that, but in
the enormous mass of patiently worked-out
details--the manufacture of the filaments,
their uniform carbonization, making the globes,
producing a perfect vacuum, and countless other
factors, the omission of any one of which would
probably have resulted eventually in failure.
Continuing the digression one step farther in
order to explain the term "multiple arc," it
may be stated that there are two principal
systems of distributing electric current, one
termed "series," and the other "multiple
arc." The two are illustrated,
diagrammatically, side by side, the arrows
indicating flow of current. The series system,
it will be seen, presents one continuous path
for the current. The current for the last lamp
must pass through the first and all the
intermediate lamps. Hence, if any one light
goes out, the continuity of the path is broken,
current cannot flow, and all the lamps are
extinguished unless a loop or by-path is
provided. It is quite obvious that such a
system would be commercially impracticable where
small units, similar to gas jets, were
employed. On the other hand, in the
multiple-arc system, current may be considered
as flowing in two parallel conductors like the
vertical sides of a ladder, the ends of which
never come together. Each lamp is placed in a
separate circuit across these two conductors,
like a rung in the ladder, thus making a
separate and independent path for the current in
each case. Hence, if a lamp goes out, only
that individual subdivision, or ladder step, is
affected; just that one particular path for the
current is interrupted, but none of the other
lamps is interfered with. They remain lighted,
each one independent of the other. The reader
will quite readily understand, therefore, that
a multiple-arc system is the only one
practically commercial where electric light is to
be used in small units like those of gas or oil.
Such was the nature of the problem that
confronted Edison at the outset. There was
nothing in the whole world that in any way
approximated a solution, although the most
brilliant minds in the electrical art had been
assiduously working on the subject for a quarter
of a century preceding. As already seen, he
came early to the conclusion that the only
solution lay in the use of a lamp of high
resistance and small radiating surface, and,
with characteristic fervor and energy, he
attacked the problem from this standpoint,
having absolute faith in a successful outcome.
The mere fact that even with the successful
production of the electric lamp the assault on
the complete problem of commercial lighting would
hardly be begun did not deter him in the
slightest. To one of Edison's enthusiastic
self-confidence the long vista of difficulties
ahead--we say it in all sincerity-- must have
been alluring.
After having devoted several months to
experimental trials of carbon, at the end of
1878, as already detailed, he turned his
attention to the platinum group of metals and
began a series of experiments in which he used
chiefly platinum wire and iridium wire, and
alloys of refractory metals in the form of wire
burners for incandescent lamps. These metals
have very high fusing-points, and were found to
last longer than the carbon strips previously
used when heated up to incandescence by the
electric current, although under such conditions
as were then possible they were melted by excess
of current after they had been lighted a
comparatively short time, either in the open air
or in such a vacuum as could be obtained by means
of the ordinary air-pump.
Nevertheless, Edison continued along this line
of experiment with unremitting vigor, making
improvement after improvement, until about
April, 1879, he devised a means whereby
platinum wire of a given length, which would
melt in the open air when giving a light equal to
four candles, would emit a light of twenty-five
candle-power without fusion. This was
accomplished by introducing the platinum wire
into an all-glass globe, completely sealed and
highly exhausted of air, and passing a current
through the platinum wire while the vacuum was
being made. In this, which was a new and
radical invention, we see the first step toward
the modern incandescent lamp. The knowledge
thus obtained that current passing through the
platinum during exhaustion would drive out
occluded gases (i.e., gases mechanically held
in or upon the metal), and increase the
infusibility of the platinum, led him to aim at
securing greater perfection in the vacuum, on
the theory that the higher the vacuum obtained,
the higher would be the infusibility of the
platinum burner. And this fact also was of the
greatest importance in making successful the
final use of carbon, because without the
subjection of the carbon to the heating effect of
current during the formation of the vacuum, the
presence of occluded gases would have been a
fatal obstacle.
Continuing these experiments with most fervent
zeal, taking no account of the passage of time,
with an utter disregard for meals, and but
scanty hours of sleep snatched reluctantly at odd
periods of the day or night, Edison kept his
laboratory going without cessation. A great
variety of lamps was made of the
platinum-iridium type, mostly with thermal
devices to regulate the temperature of the burner
and prevent its being melted by an excess of
current. The study of apparatus for obtaining
more perfect vacua was unceasingly carried on,
for Edison realized that in this there lay a
potent factor of ultimate success. About
August he had obtained a pump that would produce
a vacuum up to about the one-hundred-
thousandth part of an atmosphere, and some time
during the next month, or beginning of
October, had obtained one that would produce a
vacuum up to the one-millionth part of an
atmosphere. It must be remembered that the
conditions necessary for MAINTAINING
this high vacuum were only made possible by his
invention of the one-piece all-glass globe, in
which all the joints were hermetically sealed
during its manufacture into a lamp, whereby a
high vacuum could be retained continuously for
any length of time.
In obtaining this perfection of vacuum
apparatus, Edison realized that he was
approaching much nearer to a solution of the
problem. In his experiments with the
platinum-iridium lamps, he had been working all
the time toward the proposition of high
resistance and small radiating surface, until he
had made a lamp having thirty feet of fine
platinum wire wound upon a small bobbin of
infusible material; but the desired economy,
simplicity, and durability were not obtained in
this manner, although at all times the burner
was maintained at a critically high temperature.
After attaining a high degree of perfection with
these lamps, he recognized their impracticable
character, and his mind reverted to the opinion
he had formed in his early experiments two years
before --viz., that carbon had the requisite
resistance to permit a very simple conductor to
accomplish the object if it could be used in the
form of a hair-like "filament," provided the
filament itself could be made sufficiently
homogeneous. As we have already seen, he could
not use carbon successfully in his earlier
experiments, for the strips of carbon he then
employed, although they were much larger than
"filaments," would not stand, but were
consumed in a few minutes under the imperfect
conditions then at his command.
Now, however, that he had found means for
obtaining and maintaining high vacua, Edison
immediately went back to carbon, which from the
first he had conceived of as the ideal substance
for a burner. His next step proved conclusively
the correctness of his old deductions. On
October 21, 1879, after many patient
trials, he carbonized a piece of cotton sewing-
thread bent into a loop or horseshoe form, and
had it sealed into a glass globe from which he
exhausted the air until a vacuum up to
one-millionth of an atmosphere was produced.
This lamp, when put on the circuit, lighted up
brightly to incandescence and maintained its
integrity for over forty hours, and lo! the
practical incandescent lamp was born. The
impossible, so called, had been attained;
subdivision of the electric- light current was
made practicable; the goal had been reached;
and one of the greatest inventions of the century
was completed. Up to this time Edison had
spent over $40,000 in his electric-light
experiments, but the results far more than
justified the expenditure, for with this lamp he
made the discovery that the FILAMENT of
carbon, under the conditions of high vacuum,
was commercially stable and would stand high
temperatures without the disintegration and
oxidation that took place in all previous
attempts that he knew of for making an
incandescent burner out of carbon. Besides,
this lamp possessed the characteristics of high
resistance and small radiating surface,
permitting economy in the outlay for conductors,
and requiring only a small current for each unit
of light--conditions that were absolutely
necessary of fulfilment in order to accomplish
commercially the subdivision of the
electric-light current.
This slender, fragile, tenuous thread of
brittle carbon, glowing steadily and
continuously with a soft light agreeable to the
eyes, was the tiny key that opened the door to a
world revolutionized in its interior
illumination. It was a triumphant vindication
of Edison's reasoning powers, his clear
perceptions, his insight into possibilities,
and his inventive faculty, all of which had
already been productive of so many startling,
practical, and epoch-making inventions. And
now he had stepped over the threshold of a new
art which has since become so world-wide in its
application as to be an integral part of modern
human experience.[9]
No sooner had the truth of this new principle
been established than the work to establish it
firmly and commercially was carried on more
assiduously than ever. The next immediate step
was a further investigation of the possibilities
of improving the quality of the carbon filament.
Edison had previously made a vast number of
experiments with carbonized paper for various
electrical purposes, with such good results that
he once more turned to it and now made fine
filament-like loops of this material which were
put into other lamps. These proved even more
successful (commercially considered) than the
carbonized thread--so much so that after a
number of such lamps had been made and put
through severe tests, the manufacture of lamps
from these paper carbons was begun and carried on
continuously. This necessitated first the
devising and making of a large number of special
tools for cutting the carbon filaments and for
making and putting together the various parts of
the lamps. Meantime, great excitement had been
caused in this country and in Europe by the
announcement of Edison's success. In the Old
World, scientists generally still declared the
impossibility of subdividing the electric-light
current, and in the public press Mr. Edison
was denounced as a dreamer. Other names of a
less complimentary nature were applied to him,
even though his lamp were actually in use, and
the principle of commercial incandescent lighting
had been established.
Between October 21, 1879, and December
21, 1879, some hundreds of these
paper-carbon lamps had been made and put into
actual use, not only in the laboratory, but in
the streets and several residences at Menlo
Park, New Jersey, causing great excitement
and bringing many visitors from far and near.
On the latter date a full-page article appeared
in the New York Herald which so intensified
the excited feeling that Mr. Edison deemed it
advisable to make a public exhibition. On New
Year's Eve, 1879, special trains were
run to Menlo Park by the Pennsylvania
Railroad, and over three thousand persons took
advantage of the opportunity to go out there and
witness this demonstration for themselves. In
this great crowd were many public officials and
men of prominence in all walks of life, who were
enthusiastic in their praises.
In the mean time, the mind that conceived and
made practical this invention could not rest
content with anything less than perfection, so
far as it could be realized. Edison was not
satisfied with paper carbons. They were not
fully up to the ideal that he had in mind. What
he sought was a perfectly uniform and homogeneous
carbon, one like the "One- Hoss Shay,"
that had no weak spots to break down at
inopportune times. He began to carbonize
everything in nature that he could lay hands on.
In his laboratory note-books are innumerable
jottings of the things that were carbonized and
tried, such as tissue- paper, soft paper, all
kinds of cardboards, drawing- paper of all
grades, paper saturated with tar, all kinds of
threads, fish-line, threads rubbed with tarred
lampblack, fine threads plaited together in
strands, cotton soaked in boiling tar,
lamp-wick, twine, tar and lampblack mixed with
a proportion of lime, vulcanized fibre,
celluloid, boxwood, cocoanut hair and shell,
spruce, hickory, baywood, cedar and maple
shavings, rosewood, punk, cork, bagging,
flax, and a host of other things. He also
extended his searches far into the realms of
nature in the line of grasses, plants, canes,
and similar products, and in these experiments
at that time and later he carbonized, made into
lamps, and tested no fewer than six thousand
different species of vegetable growths.
The reasons for such prodigious research are not
apparent on the face of the subject, nor is this
the occasion to enter into an explanation, as
that alone would be sufficient to fill a
fair-sized book. Suffice it to say that
Edison's omnivorous reading, keen
observation, power of assimilating facts and
natural phenomena, and skill in applying the
knowledge thus attained to whatever was in hand,
now came into full play in determining that the
results he desired could only be obtained in
certain directions.
At this time he was investigating everything
with a microscope, and one day in the early part
of 1880 he noticed upon a table in the
laboratory an ordinary palm-leaf fan. He
picked it up and, looking it over, observed
that it had a binding rim made of bamboo, cut
from the outer edge of the cane; a very long
strip. He examined this, and then gave it to
one of his assistants, telling him to cut it up
and get out of it all the filaments he could,
carbonize them, put them into lamps, and try
them. The results of this trial were
exceedingly successful, far better than with
anything else thus far used; indeed, so much
so, that after further experiments and
microscopic examinations Edison was convinced
that he was now on the right track for making a
thoroughly stable, commercial lamp; and shortly
afterward he sent a man to Japan to procure
further supplies of bamboo. The fascinating
story of the bamboo hunt will be told later; but
even this bamboo lamp was only one item of a
complete system to be devised--a system that
has since completely revolutionized the art of
interior illumination.
Reference has been made in this chapter to the
preliminary study that Edison brought to bear on
the development of the gas art and industry.
This study was so exhaustive that one can only
compare it to the careful investigation made in
advance by any competent war staff of the
elements of strength and weakness, on both
sides, in a possible campaign. A popular idea
of Edison that dies hard, pictures a breezy,
slap-dash, energetic inventor arriving at new
results by luck and intuition, making boastful
assertions and then winning out by mere chance.
The native simplicity of the man, the absence
of pose and ceremony, do much to strengthen this
notion; but the real truth is that while gifted
with unusual imagination, Edison's march to
the goal of a new invention is positively humdrum
and monotonous in its steady progress. No one
ever saw Edison in a hurry; no one ever saw him
lazy; and that which he did with slow, careful
scrutiny six months ago, he will be doing with
just as much calm deliberation of research six
months hence--and six years hence if
necessary. If, for instance, he were asked to
find the most perfect pebble on the Atlantic
shore of New Jersey, instead of hunting here,
there, and everywhere for the desired object,
we would no doubt find him patiently screening
the entire beach, sifting out the most perfect
stones and eventually, by gradual exclusion,
reaching the long-sought-for pebble; and the
mere fact that in this search years might be
taken, would not lessen his enthusiasm to the
slightest extent.
In the "prospectus book" among the series of
famous note-books, all the references and data
apply to gas. The book is numbered 184,
falls into the period now dealt with, and runs
along casually with items spread out over two or
three years. All these notes refer specifically
to "Electricity vs. Gas as General
Illuminants," and cover an astounding range of
inquiry and comment. One of the very first
notes tells the whole story: "Object, Edison
to effect exact imitation of all done by gas, so
as to replace lighting by gas by lighting by
electricity. To improve the illumination to
such an extent as to meet all requirements of
natural, artificial, and commercial
conditions." A large programme, but fully
executed! The notes, it will be understood,
are all in Edison's handwriting. They go on
to observe that "a general system of
distribution is the only possible means of
economical illumination," and they dismiss
isolated- plant lighting as in mills and
factories as of so little importance to the
public--"we shall leave the con- sideration
of this out of this book." The shrewd prophecy
is made that gas will be manufactured less for
lighting, as the result of electrical
competition, and more and more for heating,
etc., thus enlarging its market and increasing
its income. Comment is made on kerosene and its
cost, and all kinds of general statistics are
jotted down as desirable. Data are to be
obtained on lamp and dynamo efficiency, and
"Another review of the whole thing as worked
out upon pure science principles by Rowland,
Young, Trowbridge; also Rowland on the
possibilities and probabilities of cheaper
production by better manufacture--higher
incandescence without decrease of life of
lamps." Notes are also made on meters and
motors. "It doesn't matter if electricity is
used for light or for power"; while small
motors, it is observed, can be used night or
day, and small steam-engines are inconvenient.
Again the shrewd comment: "Generally poorest
district for light, best for power, thus
evening up whole city--the effect of this on
investment."
It is pointed out that "Previous inventions
failed-- necessities for commercial success and
accomplishment by Edison. Edison's great
effort--not to make a large light or a blinding
light, but a small light having the mildness of
gas." Curves are then called for of iron and
copper investment--also energy line--curves
of candle-power and electromotive force; curves
on motors; graphic representation of the
consumption of gas January to December; tables
and formulae; representations graphically of
what one dollar will buy in different kinds of
light; "table, weight of copper required
different distance, 100-ohm lamp, 16
candles"; table with curves showing increased
economy by larger engine, higher power, etc.
There is not much that is dilettante about all
this. Note is made of an article in April,
1879, putting the total amount of gas
investment in the whole world at that time at
$1,500,000,000; which is now
(1910) about the amount of the
electric-lighting investment in the United
States. Incidentally a note remarks: "So
unpleasant is the effect of the products of gas
that in the new Madison Square Theatre every
gas jet is ventilated by special tubes to carry
away the products of combustion." In short,
there is no aspect of the new problem to which
Edison failed to apply his acutest powers; and
the speed with which the new system was worked
out and introduced was simply due to his initial
mastery of all the factors in the older art.
Luther Stieringer, an expert gas engineer and
inventor, whose services were early enlisted,
once said that Edison knew more about gas than
any other man he had ever met. The remark is an
evidence of the kind of preparation Edison gave
himself for his new task.
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