Record

RefNoPP/8/33
Previous numbersPP/40/41
LevelFile
TitlePaper, 'On fluted craterless carbons for arc lighting' by James N [Nicholas] Douglass
Date1886
DescriptionDouglass writes: 'On the 8th December, 1858, at the South Foreland High Lighthouse [Dover, England], and with the direct current magneto machines of Holmes, the first important application of the electric arc light, as a rival to oil and gas for coast lighting, was carried out by the Trinity House, under the advice of Faraday. The carbons then used, and for several years afterwards, were sawn from the residuum carbon of gas retorts; they were square in section, 6¼ × 6¼ mm., and the mean intensity of the arc, measured in the horizonal plane, was 670 candle units, being 17 candle units nearly per square millimetre of cross sectional area of the carbon. The crater formed at the point of the upper carbon of the “Holmes” lamp was so small that no appreciable loss of light was found to occur, and the arc proved to be very perfect in affording an exceptionally large vertical angle of radiant light'.

Annotations in pencil and ink. Includes two pages of figures of fluted and cylindrical carbons.

Subject: Engineering

Received 4 June 1886. Read 10 June 1886. Communicated by William Thomson.

A version of this paper was published in volume 40 of the Proceedings of the Royal Society as 'On fluted craterless carbons for arc lighting'.
Extent9p
FormatManuscript
Drawing
PhysicalDescriptionInk and graphite pencil on paper
Digital imagesView item on Science in the Making
AccessStatusOpen
RelatedMaterialDOI: 10.1098/rspl.1886.0075
Fellows associated with this archive
CodePersonNameDates
NA6253Douglass; Sir; James Nicholas (1826 - 1898)1826 - 1898
NA8289Thomson; William (1824 - 1907); Baron Kelvin of Largs; physicist1824 - 1907
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