THE FIRST COMMERCIAL INSTALLATION OF AN ELECTRIC LIGHT
In 1862 a Serrin type of arc lamp was installed in the Dungeness lighthouse in England. Current was supplied by a dynamo made by the Alliance Company, which had been originally designed in 1850 by Nollet, a professor of Physics in the Military School in Brussels. Nollet’s original design was of a dynamo having several rows of permanent magnets mounted radially on a stationary frame, with an equal number of bobbins mounted on a shaft which rotated and had a commutator so direct current could be obtained. A company was formed to sell hydrogen gas for illuminating purposes, the gas to be made by the decomposition of water with current from this machine. Nollet died and the company failed, but it was reorganized as the Alliance Company a few years later to exploit the arc lamp.
Alliance Dynamo, 1862.
This was the dynamo used in the first commercial installation of an arc light in the Dungeness Lighthouse, England, 1862.
About the only change made in the dynamo was to substitute collector rings for the commutator to overcome the difficulties of commutation. Alternating current was therefore generated in this first commercial machine. It had a capacity for but one arc light, which probably consumed less than ten amperes at about 45 volts, hence delivered in the present terminology not over 450 watts or about two-thirds of a horsepower. As the bobbins of the armature undoubtedly had a considerable resistance, the machine had an efficiency of not over 50 per cent and therefore required at least one and a quarter horsepower to drive it.
FURTHER DYNAMO DEVELOPMENTS
In the summer of 1886 Sir Charles Wheatstone constructed a self-excited machine on the principle of using the residual magnetism in the field poles to set up a feeble current in the armature which, passing through the field coils, gradually strengthened the fields until they built up to normal strength. It was later found that this idea had been thought of by an unknown man, being disclosed by a clause in a provisional 1858 English patent taken out by his agent. Wheatstone’s machine was shown to the Royal Society in London and a paper on it read before the Society on February 14, 1867. The field coils were shunt wound.
Wheatstone’s Self-Excited Dynamo, 1866.