Author Topic: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls  (Read 579 times)

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rangerrebew

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Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls

    February 19, 2018

by Paul Ratner
 
 

Some brilliant people among us are able to see what the ordinary eyes and minds cannot. When inventor Nikola Tesla thought of the Niagara Falls, he saw it not just as a stunning display of nature’s might and majesty but as a way to create energy for human endeavors. In 1895, Tesla and industrialist George Westinghouse created the world’s first hydroelectric power plant at the Niagara Falls, beating out Tesla’s rival Thomas Edison and changing the way we look at such powerful natural forces.

http://bigthink.com/paul-ratner/why-nikola-teslas-greatest-achievement-may-be-in-niagara-falls

Offline WingNot

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #1 on: February 19, 2018, 02:55:15 pm »
The Tesla family should sue that chump Musk for sullying Nicola's good name by putting it on his turd of a car company.
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Offline thackney

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #2 on: February 19, 2018, 03:14:26 pm »
Quote
Caught up in what was dubbed by the press “the War of the Currents,” Tesla and Edison were competing against each other’s system of transmitting electricity. Tesla’s was called “alternating current” (AC) while Edison invented the “direct current” (DC). The “war” involved public competitions and demonstrations of the technology, trying to assuage concerns over commercial applications and safety. The AC system used a transformer that was able to regulate voltage in different situations like long-distance transmissions or indoor lighting and proved to be more efficient and less expensive.

Edison did not invent direct current. 

Benjamin Franklin did experiments in DC systems, charging and discharging capacitors.  As well others before him.

http://franklinpapers.org/franklin/framedVolumes.jsp?vol=3&page=352a

Michael Faraday built a DC generator in 1931 1831 called the Faraday Disk.  ~16 years before Edison was born.
« Last Edit: February 19, 2018, 03:22:04 pm by thackney »
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Offline Neverdul

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #3 on: February 19, 2018, 03:18:34 pm »
Edison did not invent direct current. 

Benjamin Franklin did experiments in DC systems, charging and discharging capacitors.  As well others before him.

http://franklinpapers.org/franklin/framedVolumes.jsp?vol=3&page=352a

Michael Faraday built a DC generator in 1931 called the Faraday Disk.  ~16 years before Edison was born.

Did you mean 1831?
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Offline thackney

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #4 on: February 19, 2018, 03:21:11 pm »
In 1895, Tesla and industrialist George Westinghouse created the world’s first hydroelectric power plant at the Niagara Falls

By 1895, the real first hydroelectric power plant had been operating for 4 years.  The Ames hydro plant on the South Fork of the San Miguel River in southwest Colorado made hydropower history in 1891 when it utilized alternating current for the very first time.

http://www.hydroworld.com/articles/hr/print/volume-32/issue-7/articles/ames-hydro-making-history-since-1891.html
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Offline dfwgator

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #5 on: February 19, 2018, 03:21:31 pm »
NIAGARA FALLS!

Slowly I turned....step...by....step......inch...by....inch.....

Offline thackney

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #6 on: February 19, 2018, 03:21:36 pm »
Did you mean 1831?

Yes, thanks for the correction, I'll fix it.
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Offline WingNot

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #7 on: February 19, 2018, 03:27:46 pm »
NIAGARA FALLS!

Slowly I turned....step...by....step......inch...by....inch.....

You know all the Classics!
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Offline thackney

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #8 on: February 19, 2018, 03:41:35 pm »
For those interested in the history of early electric power:

History of Power: The Evolution of the Electric Generation Industry
http://www.powermag.com/history-of-power-the-evolution-of-the-electric-generation-industry/
10/01/2017

The history of power generation is long and convoluted, marked by myriad technological milestones, conceptual and technical, from hundreds of contributors. Many accounts begin power’s story at the demonstration of electric conduction by Englishman Stephen Gray, which led to the 1740 invention of glass friction generators in Leyden, Germany. That development is said to have inspired Benjamin Franklin’s famous experiments, as well as the invention of the battery by Italy’s Alessandro Volta in 1800, Humphry Davy’s first effective “arc lamp” in 1808, and in 1820, Hans Christian Oersted’s demonstration of the relationship between electricity and magnetism. In 1820, in arguably the most pivotal contribution to modern power systems, Michael Faraday and Joseph Henry invented a primitive electric motor, and in 1831, documented that an electric current can be produced in a wire moving near a magnet—demonstrating the principle of the generator.

Invention of the first rudimentary dynamo is credited to Frenchman Hippolyte Pixii in 1832. Antonio Pacinotti improved it to provide continuous direct current power by 1860. In 1867, Werner von Siemens, Charles Wheatstone, and S.A. Varley nearly simultaneously devised the “self-exciting dynamo-electric generator.” Perhaps the most important improvement then arrived in 1870, when a Belgian inventor, Zenobe Gramme, devised a dynamo that produced a steady direct current well-suited to powering motors—a discovery that generated a burst of enthusiasm about electricity’s potential to light and power the world.

By 1877—as the streets of many cities across the world were being lit up by arc lighting (but not ordinary rooms because arc lights were still blindingly bright)—Ohio-based Charles F. Brush had developed and begun selling the most reliable dynamo design to that point, and a host of forward thinkers were actively exploring the promise of large-scale electricity distribution. Eventually, Thomas Edison invented a less powerful incandescent lamp in 1879, and in September 1882—only a month before the inaugural issue of POWER magazine was published—he established a central generating station at Pearl Street (Figure 1) in lower Manhattan....

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Offline Elderberry

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #9 on: February 19, 2018, 04:19:59 pm »
When I went thru the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, I went thru room after room devoted to Edison.

I remember only seeing one wall plaque for Tesla.

I just did a search on their site.

Edison 191 hits.

Tesla 31 hits.
« Last Edit: February 19, 2018, 04:21:30 pm by Elderberry »

Offline thackney

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #10 on: February 19, 2018, 04:29:35 pm »
When I went thru the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, I went thru room after room devoted to Edison.

I remember only seeing one wall plaque for Tesla.

I just did a search on their site.

Edison 191 hits.

Tesla 31 hits.

Edison had 2,332 patents worldwide. 1,093 in the US.

Tesla had 278 patents worldwide.  111 in the US.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Edison_patents

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nikola_Tesla_patents

Tesla talked about the Niagara Falls project.  Westinghouse is the one that really made it happen.
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Offline Elderberry

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #11 on: February 19, 2018, 04:31:31 pm »
https://www.quora.com/When-was-electricity-invented-and-how-was-it-first-used

Electricity is a form of energy and it occurs in nature, so it was not “invented.” As to who discovered it, many misconceptions abound. Some give credit to Benjamin Franklin for discovering electricity, but his experiments only helped establish the connection between lightning and electricity, nothing more.

The truth about the discovery of electricity is a bit more complex than a man flying his kite. It actually goes back more than two thousand years.

In about 600 BC, the Ancient Greeks discovered that rubbing fur on amber (fossilized tree resin) caused an attraction between the two – and so what the Greeks discovered was actually static electricity. Additionally, researchers and archeologists in the 1930’s discovered pots with sheets of copper inside that they believe may have been ancient batteries meant to produce light at ancient Roman sites. Similar devices were found in archeological digs near Baghdad meaning ancient Persians may have also used an early form of batteries.

But by the 17th century, many electricity-related discoveries had been made, such as the invention of an early electrostatic generator, the differentiation between positive and negative currents, and the classification of materials as conductors or insulators.

In the year 1600, English physician William Gilbert used the Latin word “electricus” to describe the force that certain substances exert when rubbed against each other. A few years later another English scientist, Thomas Browne, wrote several books and he used the word “electricity” to describe his investigations based on Gilbert’s work.

1752, Ben Franklin conducted his experiment with a kite, a key, and a storm. This simply proved that lightning and tiny electric sparks were the same thing.

Italian physicist Alessandro Volta discovered that particular chemical reactions could produce electricity, and in 1800 he constructed the voltaic pile (an early electric battery) that produced a steady electric current, and so he was the first person to create a steady flow of electrical charge. Volta also created the first transmission of electricity by linking positively-charged and negatively-charged connectors and driving an electrical charge, or voltage, through them.

In 1831 electricity became viable for use in technology when Michael Faraday created the electric dynamo (a crude power generator), which solved the problem of generating electric current in an ongoing and practical way. Faraday’s rather crude invention used a magnet that was moved inside a coil of copper wire, creating a tiny electric current that flowed through the wire. This opened the door to American Thomas Edison and British scientist Joseph Swan who each invented the incandescent filament light bulb in their respective countries in about 1878.

And so, it was not just one person who discovered electricity. While the concept of electricity was known for thousands of years, when it came time to develop it commercially and scientifically, there were several great minds working on the problem at the same time.

Offline Elderberry

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #12 on: February 19, 2018, 05:04:49 pm »
 
In 1888, Nikola Tesla had patented an idea for an AC motor, and Westinghouse promptly bought up the patents and was working on developing the motor.

Westinghouse bought up the patents on the Tesla motors almost immediately and set to work trying to adapt them to the single-phase system then in use. This didn't work. So he started developing a two-phase system. But in December 1890, because of the company's financial straits--the company had incurred large liabilities through the purchase of a number of smaller companies, and had to temporarily cut back on research and development projects--Westinghouse stopped the work on polyphase.

George Westinghouse recommended that the best way to transport Niagara Falls power to Buffalo would be by compressed air. Westinghouse was likely to know. As the inventor of the air brake, he was the acknowledged expert on pneumatic systems.

In 1890, Westinghouse installed a 12-mile, 4000-volt transmission line from Willamette Falls to Portland, Oregon. And in Telluride, Colorado, in 1891, the company installed the first transmission line for electricity for power rather than just for lighting. The transmission distance was just three miles, but at the end of the line, the electricity was used to operate a 100-horsepower synchronous motor, in conjunction with a Tesla induction motor to start the synchronous motor.

In April 1892, the Cataract Company hired George Forbes as a consultant. His hiring was a sign of the way the company must have been thinking. Forbes had submitted the sole AC polyphase plan to the International Niagara Commission. The purpose for which he was hired was to assist in judging among the competitors for the design and construction of the equipment. However, Forbes soon set to work on a new preliminary design of the generator.

About this time, the Westinghouse Company decided to push development of the two-phase system. Work was resumed on the induction motor and pursued on the rotary converter. The rotary converter, which was used to convert AC to DC, was essentially a combination of an AC motor operating a DC generator.

The Westinghouse Company won the contract. Despite the objections. Or perhaps because of them. The Niagara company apparently meant what it said about appreciating proposed alterations. The umbrella-type generator was used, but the generating voltage was set at a more reasonable 2200, and a compromise was reached on frequency at 25 cycles. The initial contract was for the three 5000-horsepower generators. Power was first produced in Niagara Falls on August 26, 1895.

https://library.buffalo.edu/projects/cases/niagara.htm





Offline thackney

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Offline IsailedawayfromFR

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Re: Why Nikola Tesla's greatest achievement may be in Niagara Falls
« Reply #14 on: February 19, 2018, 06:58:45 pm »
What I have read about Tesla is he was far above other contemporaries in ingenuity and ability to put into experimentation his work.
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