Crystal Palace International Electric Exhibition 1881-82

År: 1882

Sider: 102

UDK: 621.30 : 06 (064)

DOI: 10.48563/dtu-0000189

Official Catalogue, Edited by W. Grist with Specially Prepared Plans, showing the position of each exhibitor and indicating the spaces lighted by the various sytems.

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Side af 120 Forrige Næste
67 210 .—F. L. Fatirig, Southampton. Arc Lamps. South Gallery. 211 .—A. L. Fyfe, 9 and 10, Maidenhead Court, Aldersgate Street, E.C. Arc Electric Lamps, to light up a completely- furnished tent. Queen’s Corridor. 212 .—The Hammond Electric Light and Power Supply Com- pany, Limited (Holders of the Patent Rights of the Brush. System for the Northern Counties of England, and for Sussex and Hampshire, and General Agents of the Brush. Com- pany), 110, Cannon Street, London; 36, Dale Street, Liver- pool; Wharncliffe Chambers, Sheffield; Post Office Buildings, Middlesborough. 64 Brush. Electric Lamps and Incandescent Lamps. These lights provide the whole of the illumination of all the corridors and staircases from the Low Level Station to the entrance to the Palace from the corridor; also for the avenue between Pompeian House and Chinese Court, the end of the West Corridor, the avenue between the Chinese and Birmingham Courts, the avenue in front of the Chinese Court, the pathway leading from the Upper Terrace to the Panorama of the Siege of Paris; also ah office in the Nave between the Jablochkoff Stand and the Electric Lightship, in which, is shown a Printing Press worked by power transmitted from a Brush. Dynamo. Railway Corridors, leading to L. B. ty S. 0. Railway, and Costume Court. 213 .—G-. Hawkes & Co., 9, Victoria Chambers, Westminster. 6 Electric Arc Lights of 6,000 candle-power each. A simple, neat, and self-regulating electric light, thoroughly free in its working from cogs, wheels, pulleys, strings, clockwork, or such, like mechanism. The arc is established by the passage of the current operating upon two magnets, and is controlled and sus- tained at its proper dimensions by a regulator which allows the carbons propsrly to approach, ©ach. other at an infinitesimally slow rate. The light can be maintained for any period required, varying from 6 to 20 hours, or longer, in a single lamp, and from 12 to 40 hours, or longer, in a double lamp. In the double lamp the current is automatically switched from one pair of carbons to the other at the proper time. (See Advt., p. 118.) Western Gallery,under Gymnasium. 214 .—W. T. Henley (W. T. Henley’s Telegraph Works Com- pany), 8, Draper's Gardens, Throgmorton Street, E.C. Lamps for Electric Light. North Nave, Western Gallery, and West Corridor. 215 .—Johnson & Phillips, 16, Union Court, London, E.C.; and Charlton, S.E. Brockie’s Patent Electric Lamp; Carbon Rods