13. When an experiment is to be performed which requires only a small part of the apparatus, the remaining part should be removed from the table.—Candles should never be placed near the prime-conductor; for the effluvia of their flames carry off much of the electric matter.
14. One or two inches of the lower part of a Leyden phial should be coated with some thick paint, in order to prevent the amalgam, which is often scattered upon the table, from corroding the tin-foil, and thereby diminishing the charge.
15. When a prime-conductor is used, those sparks are strongest which are taken from the extremity farthest from the cylinder.
16. The longest sparks are drawn from any conductor along an electric substance. Thus, if the conductor be supported by pillars of glass or baked wood, the longest sparks may be taken close to the pillar. If the conductor be bent a little inward, so as to make the surface concave, a particularly large and undivided spark may be drawn from that place: but where the surface is convex, the spark is more apt to be divided and weakened.
17. It sometimes happens that cylindric or globe machines do not work well, owing to the air within them being too much rarefied by the heat of the cement, when the caps are fixed on. To remedy this, a small hole may be bored through one of the caps, so as to admit air into the cylinder or globe.
18. If the electric by any means become scratched, the working of the machine will be greatly impeded, if not altogether prevented. This is accounted for upon the principle that smooth and rough glass electrify differently when excited by the same rubber, and the two different states destroy one another. This may be remedied by filling up the scratches with a little tallow.
EPITOME
OF
ELECTRICITY.