Fig. 115.—Completed Astatic Galvanometer.
The upper end of the fiber is tied to a small hook in the end of the arm. The wire hook may be twisted so that the needles may be brought to zero on the scale. Zero should lie on a line parallel to the two coils.
The fiber used for suspending the needles should be as fine as possible. The finer the fiber is, the more sensitive will the instrument be.
The lower needle should swing inside of the two coils, and the upper needle above the disk.
How to Make a Wheatstone Bridge
The amateur experimenter will find many occasions when it is desirable to know the resistance of some of his electrical apparatus. Telephone receivers, telegraph relays, etc., are all graded according to their resistance in ohms. The measurement of resistance in any electrical instrument or circuit is usually accomplished by comparing its resistance with that of some known circuit, such as a coil of wire which has been previously tested.
The simplest method of measuring resistance is by means of a device known as the Wheatstone bridge. This instrument is very simple but at the same time is remarkably sensitive if properly made. A Wheatstone bridge is shown in Figure 116.
The base is a piece of well-seasoned hard wood, thirty inches long, six inches wide, and three-quarters of an inch thick.
Secure a long strip of No. 18 B. & S. gauge sheet-copper, one inch wide, and cut it into three pieces, making two of the pieces three inches long, and the other piece twenty-three and one-half inches long.