CHAP. V.
Promiscuous Experiments.

We shall in this chapter, describe a variety of experiments, which are easily made, and which may serve to illustrate the principles of electricity in general.

EXPERIMENTS.
The electrical Jack.

This is an invention of Dr. Franklin, and turns with considerable force, so that it may sometimes be used for the purposes of a common jack. The construction of it is as follows.—A slender shaft of wood passes, at right angles, through the centre of a thin, round board, about twelve inches in diameter, and turns upon a sharp point of iron, fixed in the lower end; while a strong wire in the upper end passes through a hole in a brass plate, which keeps the shaft truly vertical. About thirty radii, of equal length, made of sash glass, cut into narrow slips, issue horizontally from the circumference of the round board, the ends farthest from the centre, being about four inches apart, and each furnished with a metallic ball or thimble.

If the wire of a jar, electrified in the common way, be brought near the circumference of the wheel, it will attract the nearest ball or thimble, and put the wheel in motion. That ball or thimble, passing by the knob of the jar, receives a spark from it, and being thereby electrified, is repelled, and driven forward; while the second, being attracted, approaches the knob, receives a spark from it, and is driven after the first. This process is repeated till the wheel has made one revolution; when the thimbles, before electrified, approaching the wire, instead of being attracted are repelled, and the motion presently ceases.—But if another jar, charged through the coating, or otherwise electrified negatively, be placed near the same wheel, its wire will attract the thimble or ball, repelled by the first jar, and thereby double the force which carries round the wheel.

The self-charging Tube.

Take a glass tube, about eighteen inches long, and an inch, or an inch and a half, in diameter; coat the inside with tin-foil, from one extremity of it as far as the middle; then fix a cork to the aperture of the coated end, and let a knobbed wire pass through it, and come in contact with the coating.

The instrument being thus prepared, hold it in one hand by the uncoated part, and with the hand clean and dry, or with a piece of buckskin, which has had some amalgam spread upon it, rub the outside of the coated part; after every two or three strokes, you must remove the rubbing hand, and by applying it to the knobbed wire, you will receive sparks from it. By this means the coated end will gradually acquire a charge, which may be increased to a considerable degree. Now, if you grasp the outside of the coated end with one hand, and touch the knobbed wire with the other, you will receive a shock.

In this experiment, the coated part of the tube answers the double purpose of the electrical machine and Leyden phial; the uncoated part serving as a handle, to hold the instrument by. The friction on the outside accumulates a quantity of positive electricity upon it, and this electricity, in virtue of its sphere of action, forces out a quantity from the inside. Then, by taking the sparks from the knobbed wire, this inside electricity is removed, and it consequently remains under-charged, or negatively electrified; and it also follows, that the positive electricity of the outside, comes closer to the surface of the glass, and begins to form the charge.