The Thompson-Houston System of Electric Lighting

audiobook

The Thompson-Houston System of Electric Lighting

by H. T. (Harry Thomas) Cory

EN·~45 minutes·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

The Thompson-Houston System of Electric Lighting.

6:24
2

The Thomson-Houston Dynamo.

9:07
3

Armature

2:33
4

Commutator

1:36
5

Thomson Air Blast.

0:42
6

The Field-Magnets,

1:07
7

The Thomson Regulating Gear

2:07
8

The Brushes,

0:54
9

Thomson Houston Dynamo Operates.

7:09
10

The Thomson Rice Arc Lamp.

6:35

Description

This concise yet thorough treatise guides listeners through the early days of electric illumination, focusing on the Thomson‑Houston system that helped shape modern lighting. Beginning with a clear statement of electricity’s practical importance, the author compares the emerging dynamo to the well‑known steam engine, highlighting the rapid advances and efficiency gains that set electrical power apart.

The narrative weaves historical anecdotes with technical insight, explaining how pioneers—often mechanics rather than theoreticians—turned raw mechanical energy into bright, reliable light. Along the way, readers learn about the parallels between early dynamos and their steam counterparts, the surprising resurgence of older electric methods, and the broader vision of electricity as a future power source for heating, cooking, and motors. Ideal for anyone curious about the foundations of today’s electric world, this lecture‑style presentation makes the science and its early challenges both accessible and engaging.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~45 minutes (43K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2017-01-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

H. T. (Harry Thomas) Cory

H. T. (Harry Thomas) Cory

1870–1955

Best known as an engineer and professor, he also wrote clear, practical books that captured the excitement of early electric lighting and large-scale water projects. His work bridges technical history and popular explanation, making it surprisingly readable today.

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