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James Slough Zerbe
Electricity for Boys
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066122027
Table of Contents
THE STUDY OF ELECTRICITY. HISTORICAL
WHAT TOOLS AND APPARATUS ARE NEEDED
MAGNETS, COILS, ARMATURES, ETC.
FRICTIONAL, VOLTAIC OR GALVANIC, AND ELECTRO-MAGNETIC ELECTRICITY
HOW TO DETECT AND MEASURE ELECTRICITY
VOLTS, AMPERES, OHMS AND WATTS
PUSH BUTTONS, SWITCHES, ANNUNCIATORS, BELLS AND LIKE APPARATUS
ACCUMULATORS. STORAGE OR SECONDARY BATTERIES
HIGH TENSION APPARATUS, CONDENSERS, ETC.
ELECTROLYSIS, WATER PURIFICATION, ELECTROPLATING
ELECTRIC HEATING, THERMO ELECTRICITY
ALTERNATING CURRENTS, CHOKING COILS, TRANSFORMERS, CONVERTERS AND RECTIFIERS
POWER, AND VARIOUS OTHER ELECTRICAL MANIFESTATIONS
GLOSSARY OF WORDS USED IN TEXT OF THIS VOLUME ToC
INTRODUCTORY
Electricity, like every science, presents two phases to the student, one belonging to a theoretical knowledge, and the other which pertains to the practical application of that knowledge. The boy is directly interested in the practical use which he can make of this wonderful phenomenon in nature.
It is, in reality, the most successful avenue by which he may obtain the theory, for he learns the abstract more readily from concrete examples.
It is an art in which shop practice is a greater educator than can be possible with books. Boys are not, generally, inclined to speculate or theorize on phenomena apart from the work itself; but once put them into contact with the mechanism itself, let them become a living part of it, and they will commence to reason and think for themselves.
It would be a dry, dull and uninteresting thing to tell a boy that electricity can be generated byp. 2 riveting together two pieces of dissimilar metals, and applying heat to the juncture. But put into his hands the metals, and set him to perform the actual work of riveting the metals together, then wiring up the ends of the metals, heating them, and, with a galvanometer, watching