3. Before the machine is used, the cylinder should be wiped clean, with a linen cloth that is soft, dry, and warm; after which a clean hot piece of flannel, or old silk handkerchief, may be applied with advantage.—This done, if the cylinder be turned pretty fast, when the prime conductor and other instruments are removed, the electricity, upon applying the knuckle or other conductor, will issue from the glass with a crackling noise, accompanied with sparks; this indicates the machine to be in good order, so that the electrician may proceed to perform his experiments. But if, when the cylinder is turned and the knuckle applied, no sparks be perceived, then the fault is most probably in the rubber. If so, it must be removed and held to a fire, so that its silk part may be dried. Then take a little tallow from a candle and just pass it over the leather of the cushion, after which spread upon it, a little amalgam, and force it as much as possible into the leather. Replace it, and let the cylinder be again wiped; the machine is fit for use.
4. Sometimes the electric matter will not be well collected, because the machine is not sufficiently supplied with it from the earth; which happens, when the table upon which the electrical machine is placed and to which the chain or wire of the rubber is connected, is very dry, and consequently a bad conductor. In this case, the best method is to connect the chain or wire of the rubber with some moist ground, or with the iron-work of a water-pump, if convenient. Thus the rubber will be supplied with as much of the electric fluid as is required.
5. When the cylinder is very hot (say above 110° of Fahrenheit’s thermometer,) it will not collect the electric fluid well.
6. When a sufficient quantity of amalgam has been accumulated upon the leather of the rubber, and the machine does not work well, then, instead of putting more upon it, a small quantity of that which is already on the leather must be taken off.
7. After the cylinder has been used for some time it will contract black streaks, which continually increase, and greatly obstruct its electric power.—These streaks must be taken off, and the glass frequently wiped to prevent their being again formed.
8. Coated jars, before they are used, ought to be made a little warm. If this be done, they will receive and retain the charge much better.
9. If one of the jars of a battery, as is sometimes the case, make a spontaneous discharge prematurely, it will of course discharge the whole battery; and in such case the faulty jar should be exchanged for one which is free from this defect.
10. In making the discharge of an electrical battery, or of a single jar, the electrician must be careful not to place the discharging-rod upon the thinnest part of the glass, as that may cause the bursting of the jar.
11. In large batteries, some of the jars frequently burst in the discharge. To remedy this inconvenience, Mr. Nairne says that the discharging-rod should never be made of a good conducting substance, except the circuit be at least five feet long. But here it may be remarked, that the length of the circuit weakens the force of the shock proportionably; the highest degree of which is in many instances required. When a coated phial is cracked, either by a spontaneous discharge or otherwise, the outside coating must be removed from the fractured part; then make it moderately hot by holding it near the fire; in this situation apply burning sealing-wax to the part, so as to cover the fracture completely, taking care that the thickness of the wax be rather more than the thickness of the glass; lastly, cover all the sealing-wax, and part of the glass beyond it, with a composition made of four parts of bee’s-wax, one of rosin, one of turpentine, and a little oil of olives: which composition must be spread upon a piece of oiled silk, and applied in the form of a plaister. In this manner jars which have been broken may be repaired effectually.
12. When a jar, and especially a battery, has been discharged, the wires ought not to be touched with the hand before the discharging-rod has been applied a second, and even a third time; as there generally remains a residuum of the charge, which is sometimes very powerful. This residuum is in a great measure occasioned by the electricity, which, when the jar is charging, spreads itself over the uncoated part of the glass, and which is not discharged at first, but gradually returns to the coating after the first discharge is made.