登陆注册
38544000000025

第25章 CHAPTER IV THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ART(5)

A five-mile trench was dug beside a railway track. The work was done handily and cheaply by the labor-saving plan of hitching a locomotive to a plough. Five ploughs were jerked apart before the work was finished. Then, into this trench were laid wires with every known sort of covering. Most of them, naturally, were wrapped with rubber or gutta-percha, after the fashion of a submarine cable. When all were in place, the willing locomotive was harnessed to a huge wooden drag, which threw the ploughed soil back into the trench and covered the wires a foot deep. It was the most professional cable-laying that any one at that time could do, and it succeeded, not brilliantly, but well enough to encourage the telephone engineers to go ahead.

Several weeks later, the first two cables for actual use were laid in Boston and Brooklyn;and in 1883 Engineer J. P. Davis was set to grapple with the Herculean labor of putting a complete underground system in the wire-bound city of New York. This he did in spite of a bombardment of explosions from leaky gas-pipes, and with a woeful lack of experts and standard materials. All manner of makeshifts had to be tried in place of tile ducts, which were not known in 1883. Iron pipe was used at first, then asphalt, concrete, boxes of sand and creosoted wood. As for the wires, they were first wrapped in cotton, and then twisted into cables, usually of a hundred wires each. And to prevent the least taint of moisture, which means sudden death to a telephone current, these cables were invariably soaked in oil.

This oil-filled type of cable carried the telephone business safely through half a dozen years.

But it was not the final type. It was preliminary only, the best that could be made at that time. Not one is in use to-day. In 1888 Theodore Vail set on foot a second series of experiments, to see if a cable could be made that was better suited as a highway for the delicate electric currents of the telephone. A young engineer named John A. Barrett, who had already made his mark as an expert, by finding a way to twist and transpose the wires, was set apart to tackle this problem. Being an economical Vermonter, Barrett went to work in a little wooden shed in the backyard of a Brooklyn foundry. In this foundry he had seen a unique machine that could be made to mould hot lead around a rope of twisted wires. This was a notable discovery.

It meant TIGHT COVERINGS. It meant a victory over that most troublesome of enemies--moisture.

Also, it meant that cables could henceforth be made longer, with fewer sleeves and splices, and without the oil, which had always been an unmitigated nuisance.

Next, having made the cable tight, Barrett set out to produce it more cheaply and by accident stumbled upon a way to make it immensely more efficient. All wires were at that time wrapped with cotton, and his plan was to find some less costly material that would serve the same purpose. One of his workmen, a Virginian, suggested the use of paper twine, which had been used in the South during the Civil War, when cotton was scarce and expensive.

Barrett at once searched the South for paper twine and found it. He bought a barrel of it from a small factory in Richmond, but after a trial it proved to be too flimsy. If such paper could be put on flat, he reasoned, it would be stronger. Just then he heard of an erratic genius who had an invention for winding paper tape on wire for the use of milliners.

Paper-wound bonnet-wire! Who could imagine any connection between this and the telephone?

Yet this hint was exactly what Barrett needed. He experimented until he had devised a machine that crumpled the paper around the wire, instead of winding it tightly. This was the finishing touch. For a time these paper-wound cables were soaked in oil, but in 1890 Engineer F. A. Pickernell dared to trust to the tightness of the lead sheathing, and laid a "dry core"cable, the first of the modern type, in one of the streets of Philadelphia. This cable was the event of the year. It was not only cheaper. It was the best-talking cable that had ever been harnessed to a telephone.

What Barrett had done was soon made clear.

By wrapping the wire with loose paper, he had in reality cushioned it with AIR, which is the best possible insulator. Not the paper, but the air in the paper, had improved the cable. More air was added by the omission of the oil. And presently Barrett perceived that he had merely reproduced in a cable, as far as possible, the conditions of the overhead wires, which are separated by nothing but air.

By 1896 there were two hundred thousand miles of wire snugly wrapped in paper and lying in leaden caskets beneath the streets of the cities, and to-day there are six million miles of it owned by the affiliated Bell companies. Instead of blackening the streets, the wire nerves of the telephone are now out of sight under the roadway, and twining into the basements of buildings like a new sort of metallic ivy. Some cables are so large that a single spool of cable will weigh twenty-six tons and require a giant truck and a sixteen-horse team to haul it to its resting-place.

As many as twelve hundred wires are often bunched into one sheath, and each cable lies loosely in a little duct of its own. It is reached by manholes where it runs under the streets and in little switching-boxes placed at intervals it is frayed out into separate pairs of wires that blossom at length into telephones.

Out in the open country there are still the open wires, which in point of talking are the best. In the suburbs of cities there are neat green posts with a single gray cable hung from a heavy wire. Usually, a telephone pole is made from a sixty-year-old tree, a cedar, chestnut, or juniper. It lasts twelve years only, so that the one item of poles is still costing the telephone companies several millions a year. The total number of poles now in the United States, used by telephone and telegraph companies, once covered an area, before they were cut down, as large as the State of Rhode Island.

同类推荐
  • 文渊阁书目

    文渊阁书目

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 德宗神武孝文皇帝挽

    德宗神武孝文皇帝挽

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 元代奏议集录

    元代奏议集录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 杂着

    杂着

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • A Bundle of Ballads

    A Bundle of Ballads

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 殃华

    殃华

    沉香亭畔,春风牡丹,一窗恣意不聘的相思,宛如灯火阑珊处的水色胭脂,轻弹如梦的江南,一双烟霞旖旎的眸柔似春风,润若雨露柳眉细描这一弯情幽,双燕归时陌上可相逢?若君不解花语,花儿与谁缠绵?一脉弱不禁风的相思,纤柔地舒展,嫣然若清起流转,柔肠回环,思情阑珊,一袭梨花白,颦眸流盼莲步姗。静水流深,沧笙踏歌;三生阴晴圆缺,一朝悲欢离合……
  • 斗罗之嬉笑者

    斗罗之嬉笑者

    【半黑暗文】【斗罗大陆1同人作品】富n代千笑受不了太过无聊的世界自杀而死,穿越到斗罗大陆,成为千仞学的弟弟、比比东的第二子千笑,到达新世界而兴致大发的千笑决定在斗罗大陆探索。主角三观不正,是世人眼中的疯子,一切行动皆因有趣而发,慎入。
  • 驱魔战姬

    驱魔战姬

    辉夜:伯爵给妾身恶魔的制造方式。不给?打!千年伯爵“Σ(°△°|||)︴辉夜:伯爵给妾身一个诺亚来玩不给??打!!千年伯爵:%>_<%辉夜:伯爵给妾身把圣洁都交出来不给???打!!!千年伯爵:o(TヘTo)辉夜:伯爵把方舟操纵权给妾身还敢不给?!!打的你妈妈都不认识你!!!!千年伯爵:(╯‵□′)╯︵┻━┻吾辈不做伯爵了!。。。。这只是个简介
  • tfboys之心星萌

    tfboys之心星萌

    你让人提笔去描绘一切绮丽和自己脆弱的神经你就是诗意是烈日下的透明是你而不是爱情让人饱含热泪永远年轻但你的温暖是冰在发烫是黑夜里的一点亮可迷途的人不会返航
  • 网游之不尽传说

    网游之不尽传说

    传说,带来的是机遇还是危险。天寒,凭着什么,走向巅峰。本书无11,无YY,只有另一个世界。
  • 望你能爱上我

    望你能爱上我

    “到了,下车。”楚晚宁一动不动,问道:“你为什么送我回家啊?”“当然是报恩啊!我凌旭是什么人,你去打听打听。”楚晚宁小声的说了一声哦,就下车了。凌旭看着楚晚宁离开的背影,不自觉的微笑起来,“有点意思…”
  • 少爷第n次找夫人

    少爷第n次找夫人

    一个算命先生说盛家大少爷命中有一劫,需要一位名字中有玥的女孩。谁知竟找来了她——沈离玥!一开始她爱他,恨不得掏心掏肺....可他——盛北霖,却厌恶她,只因他已经有了自己喜欢的女孩。谁知,这场没有感情的婚姻本就是一场错误......夕阳无限好,只是近黄昏。。
  • 少女安娜与蓝胡子

    少女安娜与蓝胡子

    因为一个阴谋,少女安娜陷入险境,她机智的奋起反抗,却被蓝胡子割去了双手,也因此陷入了疲于奔命的逃亡中。。。三天,只有三天,如果三天之后没被抓住,蓝胡子就会放她一条生路。在这场生死较量中,安娜会赢吗?。。。。。
  • 不会拒绝的女恶魔

    不会拒绝的女恶魔

    我,罗杰,变成了某RPG游戏里一个用剑的艺术家,职业等级被鉴定为区区一百级的女性恶魔,但,没有人,可以在我的领地内杀死我,不管用什么办法,我都可以躲过一劫。但是,我在我的领地外却是,属性削弱百分之八十,而且还被任何比自己低级的人百分百空手接白刃……然而,还有有一种办法可以做到规避这个蛋疼的法则,那就是寻找一个比自己弱的契约者,这样,就可以用降临的办法让自己的本体呆在魔王领。所以,我就这么把我的业务范围拓展到全世界了……呵呵呵……你才是真正的穿越者吧!
  • 梦公主天亮了

    梦公主天亮了

    在所有的魔迷女巫死前预言那个女孩才能拯救她们……在那个女孩苏醒后却中了噬意毒,永远的生活在梦境里。只有他们才能拯救她,只有她才能拯救她们,让她们再次拯救莫希国……