Fig. 28.
Central-Station.
The ring contacts are arranged in a line in such a manner that a circular contact-piece, made of thin sheets of copper, can be forced through them in turn by means of a central screw spindle. The mains for charge and discharge are attached to the fixed disc contacts on the central screws, and the regulating cells of the battery are coupled to their respective contact rings by sockets at the back of the board.
The difficulty with the battery transformer system is the introduction of 400 to 500 volts into the houses, which would be necessary without the batteries are always fixed in sub-stations from which a low-pressure current, say of 100 volts E. M. F., could only be distributed.
A method has been devised by Mr. Henry Edmunds to obviate this disadvantage. He also uses the high-tension current to charge the batteries, but by means of a distributor, which is automatically worked by the current, each group of cells is charged in turn, when it is entirely cut off from the supply main to the house, through which current is perhaps being taken for lighting purposes. The system is now being adopted by the Cadogan Electricity Supply Company, Chelsea.
Direct-Current Transformers or Dynamotors.
The method of transforming by direct current without the aid of batteries is not practically at work; but, as the advantages are so obvious and its development is only a question of time, a description of the system may not be considered out of place.
The electrical exhibition at Philadelphia in 1884 contained a dynamotor which was exhibited by the Van de Poele Electric-Light Company, but, as far as could be ascertained, was not worked, and, as it was simply described as an induction machine for distributing currents for the use of incandescent and other lights, it attracted little attention.