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Alexanderson alternator

An Alexanderson alternator is a rotating machine invented by Ernst Alexanderson in 1904 for the generation of high-frequency alternating current for use as a radio transmitter. It was one of the first devices capable of generating the continuous radio waves needed for transmission of amplitude modulated signals by radio. It was used from about 1910 in a few "superpower" longwave radiotelegraphy stations to transmit transoceanic message traffic by Morse code to similar stations all over the world.

200 kW Alexanderson alternator preserved at the Grimeton radiotelegraphy station, Sweden, the only remaining example of an Alexanderson transmitter.

Although superseded in the early 1920s by the development of vacuum-tube transmitters, the Alexanderson alternator continued to be used until World War II. It is on the list of IEEE Milestones as a key achievement in electrical engineering.[1]

History edit

Prior developments edit

After radio waves were discovered in 1887, the first generation of radio transmitters, the spark gap transmitters, produced strings of damped waves, pulses of radio waves which died out to zero quickly. By the 1890s it was realized that damped waves had disadvantages; their energy was spread over a broad frequency band so transmitters on different frequencies interfered with each other, and they could not be modulated with an audio signal to transmit sound. Efforts were made to invent transmitters that would produce continuous waves -- a sinusoidal alternating current at a single frequency.

In an 1891 lecture, Frederick Thomas Trouton pointed out that, if an electrical alternator were run at a great enough cycle speed (that is, if it turned fast enough and was built with a large enough number of magnetic poles on its armature) it would generate continuous waves at radio frequency.[2] Starting with Elihu Thomson in 1889,[3][4][5][6] a series of researchers built high frequency alternators, Nikola Tesla[7][8] (1891, 15 kHz), Salomons and Pyke[8] (1891, 9 kHz), Parsons and Ewing (1892, 14 kHz.), Siemens[8] (5 kHz), B. G. Lamme[8] (1902, 10 kHz), but none was able to reach the frequencies required for radio transmission, above 20 kHz.[5]

 
Alexanderson 200-kW motor-alternator set installed at the US Navy's New Brunswick, NJ station, 1920.

Construction edit

In 1904, Reginald Fessenden contracted with General Electric for an alternator that generated a frequency of 100,000 hertz[citation needed] for continuous wave radio. The alternator was designed by Ernst Alexanderson. The Alexanderson alternator was extensively used for long-wave radio communications by shore stations, but was too large and heavy to be installed on most ships. In 1906 the first 50-kilowatt alternators were delivered. One was to Reginald Fessenden at Brant Rock, Massachusetts, another to John Hays Hammond, Jr. in Gloucester, Massachusetts and another to the American Marconi Company in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

Alexanderson would receive a patent in 1911 for his device. The Alexanderson alternator followed Fessenden's rotary spark-gap transmitter as the second radio transmitter to be modulated to carry the human voice. Until the invention of vacuum-tube (valve) oscillators in 1913 such as the Armstrong oscillator, the Alexanderson alternator was an important high-power radio transmitter, and allowed amplitude modulation radio transmission of the human voice. The last remaining operable Alexanderson alternator is at the VLF transmitter Grimeton in Sweden and was in regular service until 1996. It continues to be operated for a few minutes on Alexanderson Day, which is either the last Sunday in June or first Sunday in July every year.

World War I and the formation of RCA edit

The outbreak of World War I forced European nations to temporarily abandon development of international radio communications networks, while the United States increased efforts to develop transoceanic radio. By the end of the war the Alexanderson alternator was operating to reliably provide transoceanic radio service. British Marconi offered General Electric $5,000 in business in exchange for exclusive rights to use the alternator, but just as the deal was about to go through, the American president Woodrow Wilson requested that GE decline the offer, which would have given the British (who were the leader in submarine communications cables) dominance over worldwide radio communications. GE complied with the request and joined with American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T), the United Fruit Company, the Western Electric Company and the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company to form the Radio Corporation of America (RCA), giving American companies control of American radio for the first time.[9]

Stations edit

Thorn L. Mayes identified the production of ten pairs of 200 KW Alexanderson alternators, totaling 20 transmitters, in the period up to 1924:[10][11]

No. Location Call
sign
Wavelength (m) Frequency (kHz) Installed Idled Scrapped Remarks
1 New Brunswick, New Jersey, US WII 13,761 21.8 6/1918 1948 1953 Replaced a 50 KW alternator installed in February 1917
2 WRT 13,274 22.6 2/1920 1948 1953
3 Marion, Massachusetts, US WQR 13,423 22.3 4/1920 1932 1961 Replaced a Marconi timed spark transmitter
4 WSO 11,628 25.8 7/1922 1932 1969 To Haiku, Hawaii in 1942
5 Bolinas, California, US KET 13,100 22.9 10/1920 1930 1946 Replaced a Marconi timed spark transmitter
6 KET 15,600 19.2 1921 1930 1969 To Haiku, Hawaii in 1942
7 Radio Central, Rocky Point, New York, US WQK 16,484 18.2 11/1921 1948 1951
8 WSS 15,957 18.8 1921 1948 To Marion, Massachusetts 1949. Later Smithsonian Institution.
9 Kahuku, Hawaii, US KGI 16,120 18.6 1920 1930 1938
10 KIE 16,667 18.0 1921 1930 1938
11 Tuckerton, New Jersey, US WCI 16,304 18.4 3/1921 1948 1955 Replaced a Goldschmidt alternator
12 WGG 13,575 22.1 1922 1948 1955
13 Caernarvon, Wales, UK MUU 14,111 21.2 4/1921 1939
14 GLC 9,592 31.3 1921 1939
15 Varberg, Sweden SAQ 17,442 17.2 1924 1946 1960 Initially 18.600 m, parallel connection
16 SAQ 17,442 17.2 1924 1946 Operational Preserved at Grimeton, Sweden.
17 Warsaw, Poland AXO 21,127 14.2 12/1923 Seized by German army 9/1939, who destroyed the stations in 1945
18 AXL 18,293 16.4 1923
19 Pernambuco, Recife, Brazil never 1927 Delivered 1924, returned to Radio Central Rocky Point in 1926 because more efficient vacuum tube transmitters were now available
20 never 1927

U.S. military use during and after World War II edit

Beginning in 1941, seven of the twenty original 200 KW alternators were put into service by the U.S. Navy and Air Force:[12]

No. Location Call
Sign
Original
Location
Navy
Operation
Air Force
Operation
Scrapped
1 Haiku, Hawaii Marion, Massachusetts (WSO) 1942-1946 1947-1957 1969
2 Bolinas, California (KET) 1942-1946 1947-1957 1969
3 Marion, Massachusetts Marion, Massachusetts (WQR) 1941-1948 1949-1957 1961
4 AFA2[13] Radio Central (WSS) 1949-1957 Smithsonian
5 Tuckerton, New Jersey Tuckerton, New Jersey (WCI) 1942-1948 1955
6 Tuckerton, New Jersey (WGG) 1942-1948 1955
7 Bolinas, California Bolinas, California (KET) 1942-1946 1946

During World War II the U.S. Navy recognized the need for reliable distant longwave (VLF) transmissions to the Pacific fleet. A new facility was constructed at Haiku in Hawaii, where two 200 KW Alexanderson alternators transferred from the mainland were installed. The Navy also operated an existing transmitter at Bolinas, California, again for Pacific ocean communication.[14] Both Haiku alternators were sold for salvage in 1969, possibly to Kreger Company of California.

In the late 1940s the Air Force assumed control of the Haiku and Marion, Massachusetts facilities. The Air Force found that longwave transmissions were more reliable than shortwave when sending weather information to Arctic researchers as well as bases in Greenland, Labrador, and Iceland. The two Marion transmitters were used until 1957. One was scrapped in 1961 and the other was reportedly handed over to the U.S. Bureau of Standards[15] and stored in a Smithsonian Institution warehouse.[16]

Design edit

 
Rotor of 200 kW alternator
 
Closeup of above rotor. It has 300 narrow slots cut through the rotor. The "teeth" between the slots are the magnetic poles of the machine.

The Alexanderson alternator works similarly to an AC electric generator, but generates higher-frequency current, in the very low frequency (VLF) radio frequency range. The rotor has no conductive windings or electrical connections; it consists of a solid disc of high tensile strength magnetic steel, with narrow slots cut in its circumference to create a series of narrow "teeth" that function as magnetic poles. The space between the teeth is filled with nonmagnetic material, to give the rotor a smooth surface to decrease aerodynamic drag. The rotor is turned at a high speed by an electric motor through a speed–increaser gearbox.

The machine operates by variable reluctance (similar to an electric guitar pickup), changing the magnetic flux linking two coils. The periphery of the rotor is embraced by a circular iron stator with a C-shaped cross-section, divided into narrow poles, the same number as the rotor has, carrying two sets of coils. One set of coils is energized with direct current and produces a magnetic field in the air gap in the stator, which passes axially (sideways) through the rotor.

As the rotor turns, alternately either an iron section of the disk is in the gap between each pair of stator poles, allowing a high magnetic flux to cross the gap, or else a non-magnetic slot is in the stator gap, allowing less magnetic flux to pass. Thus the magnetic flux through the stator varies sinusoidally at a rapid rate. These changes in flux induce a radio-frequency voltage in a second set of coils on the stator.

The RF collector coils are all interconnected by an output transformer, whose secondary winding is connected to the antenna circuit. Modulation or telegraph keying of the radio frequency energy was done by a magnetic amplifier, which was also used for amplitude modulation and voice transmissions.

The frequency of the current generated by an Alexanderson alternator in hertz is the product of the number of rotor poles and the revolutions per second. Higher radio frequencies thus require more poles, a higher rotational speed, or both. Alexanderson alternators were used to produce radio waves in the very low frequency (VLF) range, for transcontinental wireless communication. A typical alternator with an output frequency of 100 kHz had 300 poles and rotated at 20,000 revolutions per minute (RPM) (333 revolutions per second). To produce high power, the clearance between the rotor and stator had to be kept to only 1 mm. The manufacture of precision machines rotating at such high speeds presented many new problems, and Alexanderson transmitters were bulky and very expensive.

Frequency control edit

The output frequency of the transmitter is proportional to the speed of the rotor. To keep the frequency constant, the speed of the electric motor turning it was controlled with a feedback loop. In one method, a sample of the output signal is applied to a high-Q tuned circuit, whose resonant frequency is slightly above the output frequency. The generator's frequency falls on the "skirt" of the LC circuit's impedance curve, where the impedance increases rapidly with frequency. The output of the LC circuit is rectified, and the resulting voltage is compared with a constant reference voltage to produce a feedback signal to control the motor speed. If the output frequency gets too high, the impedance presented by the LC circuit increases, and the amplitude of the RF signal getting through the LC circuit drops. The feedback signal to the motor drops, and the motor slows down. Thus the alternator output frequency is "locked" to the tuned circuit resonant frequency.

The sets were built to operate at wavelengths of 10,500 to 24,000 meters (28.57 to 12.5 KHz). This was accomplished by three design variables. The alternators were built with 1220, 976 or 772 poles. Three gearboxes were available with ratios of 2.675, 2.973 and 3.324 and the 900 RPM driving motor was operated at slips of 4% to 20%, giving speeds of 864 to 720 RPM. Transmitters installed in Europe, operating on 50-cycle power, had a wavelength range of 12,500 to 28,800 meters due to the lower speed of the driving motor.

Performance advantages edit

A large Alexanderson alternator might produce 500 kW of output radio-frequency energy and would be water- or oil-cooled. One such machine had 600 pole pairs in the stator winding, and the rotor was driven at 2170 RPM, for an output frequency near 21.7 kHz. To obtain higher frequencies, higher rotor speeds were required, up to 20,000 RPM.

Along with the arc converter invented in 1903, the Alexanderson alternator was one of the first radio transmitters that generated continuous waves. In contrast, the earlier spark-gap transmitters generated a string of damped waves. These were electrically "noisy"; the energy of the transmitter was spread over a wide frequency range, so they interfered with other transmissions and operated inefficiently. With a continuous-wave transmitter, all of the energy was concentrated within a narrow frequency band, so for a given output power they could communicate over longer distances. In addition, continuous waves could be modulated with an audio signal to carry sound. The Alexanderson alternator was one of the first transmitters to be used for AM transmission.

The Alexanderson alternator produced "purer" continuous waves than the arc converter, whose nonsinusoidal output generated significant harmonics, so the alternator was preferred for long-distance telegraphy.

Disadvantages edit

Because of the extremely high rotational speed compared to a conventional alternator, the Alexanderson alternator required continuous maintenance by skilled personnel. Efficient lubrication and oil or water cooling was essential for reliability which was difficult to achieve with the lubricants available at the time. In fact, early editions of the Royal Navy's "Admiralty Handbook of Wireless Telegraphy" cover this in considerable detail, mostly as an explanation as to why the navy did not use that particular technology. However, the US Navy did.

Other major problems were that changing the operating frequency was a lengthy and complicated process, and unlike a spark transmitter, the carrier signal could not be switched on and off at will. The latter problem greatly complicated "listening through" (that is, stopping the transmission to listen for any answer). There was also the risk that it would allow enemy vessels to detect the presence of the ship.

Because of the limits of the number of poles and rotational speed of a machine, the Alexanderson alternator is capable of generating transmission frequencies up to around 600kHz in the lower Medium wave band, with shortwave and higher frequencies being physically impossible.[a]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Nowadays, it would be technically possible to construct an Alexanderson alternator operating at higher frequencies (for instance, an Alexanderson alternator with a 10,000-pole rotor spinning at 300,000 RPM would produce a transmission frequency of 50 MHz, into the lower portion of the VHF band), but the advances in technology required to allow a large rotor to be spun at the immensely high speeds necessary without suffering catastrophic failure did not occur until long after the Alexanderson alternator had become obsolete.

References edit

  1. ^ "Milestones:Alexanderson Radio Alternator, 1904". IEEE Global History Network. IEEE. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  2. ^ "Radiation of Electric Energy" by Frederick Trouton, The Electrician (London), January 22, 1892, page 302.
  3. ^ "Prof. Thomson's new alternating generator". The Electrical Engineer. Electrical Engineer Co. 11 (154): 437. April 15, 1891. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
  4. ^ Thomson, Elihu (September 12, 1890). "letter". The Electrician. London. 25: 529–530. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
  5. ^ a b Aitken, Hugh G.J. (2014). The Continuous Wave: Technology and American Radio, 1900-1932. Princeton Univ. Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-1400854608.
  6. ^ Fessenden, R. A. (1908). "Wireless Telephony". Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution. Government Printing Office: 172. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
  7. ^ U.S. Patent 447,921, Nikola Tesla "Alternating Electric Current Generator" (March 10, 1891)
  8. ^ a b c d Fleming, John Ambrose (1910). The principles of electric wave telegraphy and telephony, 2nd Ed. London: Longmans, Green and Co. pp. 5–10.
  9. ^ Harbord, J.G. (1929). "The Commercial Uses of Radio". The Annals of the American Academy. 142: 57–63. doi:10.1177/0002716229142001S09. S2CID 144710174.
  10. ^ "200 KW Alexanderson Alternator Transmitters" (table), Wireless Communication in the United States by Thorn L. Mayes, The New England Wireless and Steam Museum, Inc., 1989, page 182. Includes the note "Call letters and wave lengths in meters from RCA listing Long Wave Stations, Dec. 5, 1928". The "Frequency" column has been added, using 300,000 meters/second as the speed-of-light for the calculations.
  11. ^ Thorn L. Mayes. "The Alexanderson 200-kW Alternator Transmitters". "Ports O' Call" Vol 4. 1975. Appendix D.
  12. ^ "200 Kilowatt Alexanderson Transmitters Used in U.S.A. during and after WW II" (table), Mayes (1989), page 183.
  13. ^ "The Alexanderson Alternator" by Jerry Proc (jproc.ca)
  14. ^ Mayes (1989), pages 176-177.
  15. ^ Mayes (1989), page 176.
  16. ^ Mayes (1989), quoting July 15, 1976 correspondence from "the Commanding Officer of the USCG Station Hawaii", page 180.

Further reading edit

  • , Antique Wireless Association column edited by Frank Lotito
  • David E. Fisher and Marshall J. Fisher, Tube, the Invention of Television Counterpoint, Washington D.C. USA, (1996) ISBN 1-887178-17-1
  • Hammond, John Winthrop. Men and Volts, the Story of General Electric. Philadelphia & New York: J. B. Lippincott (1941), pp. 349–352, 372.
  • Notes from the Navy Institute proceedings 1952 from M.G. Abernathy files.
  • Letter to M.G. Abernathy from G. Warren Clark Captain USNR (Ret)
  • Letter to Mr. Mayes from Lt. Francis J. Kishima Commanding Officer USCG Omega Station Hawaii
  • Milestones:Yosami Radio Transmitting Station, 1929
  • E. F. W. Alexanderson, U.S. Patent 1,008,577 High Frequency Alternator
  • N. Tesla, U.S. Patent 447,921

External links edit

  • "The World's Greatest Wireless Station" (Radio Central), The Book of Radio by Charles Taussig, pages 312-327.
  • "American Marconi Station, Marion, MA" by Henry Brown
  • by David Jessup
  • "Kahuku Marconi Wireless Station, O'ahu, Hawaii" by Jonathan H, June 20, 2007
  • (picture gallery) by David Jessup, 2012
  • "Tuckerton Wireless 1912-1955" (gallery)
  • "The Radio Station SAQ Grimeton" Alexanderson alternator preserved at UNESCO World Heritage Site in Grimeton, Sweden

alexanderson, alternator, rotating, machine, invented, ernst, alexanderson, 1904, generation, high, frequency, alternating, current, radio, transmitter, first, devices, capable, generating, continuous, radio, waves, needed, transmission, amplitude, modulated, . An Alexanderson alternator is a rotating machine invented by Ernst Alexanderson in 1904 for the generation of high frequency alternating current for use as a radio transmitter It was one of the first devices capable of generating the continuous radio waves needed for transmission of amplitude modulated signals by radio It was used from about 1910 in a few superpower longwave radiotelegraphy stations to transmit transoceanic message traffic by Morse code to similar stations all over the world 200 kW Alexanderson alternator preserved at the Grimeton radiotelegraphy station Sweden the only remaining example of an Alexanderson transmitter Although superseded in the early 1920s by the development of vacuum tube transmitters the Alexanderson alternator continued to be used until World War II It is on the list of IEEE Milestones as a key achievement in electrical engineering 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Prior developments 1 2 Construction 1 3 World War I and the formation of RCA 1 4 Stations 1 5 U S military use during and after World War II 2 Design 2 1 Frequency control 3 Performance advantages 4 Disadvantages 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editPrior developments edit After radio waves were discovered in 1887 the first generation of radio transmitters the spark gap transmitters produced strings of damped waves pulses of radio waves which died out to zero quickly By the 1890s it was realized that damped waves had disadvantages their energy was spread over a broad frequency band so transmitters on different frequencies interfered with each other and they could not be modulated with an audio signal to transmit sound Efforts were made to invent transmitters that would produce continuous waves a sinusoidal alternating current at a single frequency In an 1891 lecture Frederick Thomas Trouton pointed out that if an electrical alternator were run at a great enough cycle speed that is if it turned fast enough and was built with a large enough number of magnetic poles on its armature it would generate continuous waves at radio frequency 2 Starting with Elihu Thomson in 1889 3 4 5 6 a series of researchers built high frequency alternators Nikola Tesla 7 8 1891 15 kHz Salomons and Pyke 8 1891 9 kHz Parsons and Ewing 1892 14 kHz Siemens 8 5 kHz B G Lamme 8 1902 10 kHz but none was able to reach the frequencies required for radio transmission above 20 kHz 5 nbsp Alexanderson 200 kW motor alternator set installed at the US Navy s New Brunswick NJ station 1920 Construction edit In 1904 Reginald Fessenden contracted with General Electric for an alternator that generated a frequency of 100 000 hertz citation needed for continuous wave radio The alternator was designed by Ernst Alexanderson The Alexanderson alternator was extensively used for long wave radio communications by shore stations but was too large and heavy to be installed on most ships In 1906 the first 50 kilowatt alternators were delivered One was to Reginald Fessenden at Brant Rock Massachusetts another to John Hays Hammond Jr in Gloucester Massachusetts and another to the American Marconi Company in New Brunswick New Jersey Alexanderson would receive a patent in 1911 for his device The Alexanderson alternator followed Fessenden s rotary spark gap transmitter as the second radio transmitter to be modulated to carry the human voice Until the invention of vacuum tube valve oscillators in 1913 such as the Armstrong oscillator the Alexanderson alternator was an important high power radio transmitter and allowed amplitude modulation radio transmission of the human voice The last remaining operable Alexanderson alternator is at the VLF transmitter Grimeton in Sweden and was in regular service until 1996 It continues to be operated for a few minutes on Alexanderson Day which is either the last Sunday in June or first Sunday in July every year World War I and the formation of RCA edit The outbreak of World War I forced European nations to temporarily abandon development of international radio communications networks while the United States increased efforts to develop transoceanic radio By the end of the war the Alexanderson alternator was operating to reliably provide transoceanic radio service British Marconi offered General Electric 5 000 in business in exchange for exclusive rights to use the alternator but just as the deal was about to go through the American president Woodrow Wilson requested that GE decline the offer which would have given the British who were the leader in submarine communications cables dominance over worldwide radio communications GE complied with the request and joined with American Telephone and Telegraph AT amp T the United Fruit Company the Western Electric Company and the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company to form the Radio Corporation of America RCA giving American companies control of American radio for the first time 9 Stations edit Thorn L Mayes identified the production of ten pairs of 200 KW Alexanderson alternators totaling 20 transmitters in the period up to 1924 10 11 No Location Callsign Wavelength m Frequency kHz Installed Idled Scrapped Remarks1 New Brunswick New Jersey US WII 13 761 21 8 6 1918 1948 1953 Replaced a 50 KW alternator installed in February 19172 WRT 13 274 22 6 2 1920 1948 19533 Marion Massachusetts US WQR 13 423 22 3 4 1920 1932 1961 Replaced a Marconi timed spark transmitter4 WSO 11 628 25 8 7 1922 1932 1969 To Haiku Hawaii in 19425 Bolinas California US KET 13 100 22 9 10 1920 1930 1946 Replaced a Marconi timed spark transmitter6 KET 15 600 19 2 1921 1930 1969 To Haiku Hawaii in 19427 Radio Central Rocky Point New York US WQK 16 484 18 2 11 1921 1948 19518 WSS 15 957 18 8 1921 1948 To Marion Massachusetts 1949 Later Smithsonian Institution 9 Kahuku Hawaii US KGI 16 120 18 6 1920 1930 193810 KIE 16 667 18 0 1921 1930 193811 Tuckerton New Jersey US WCI 16 304 18 4 3 1921 1948 1955 Replaced a Goldschmidt alternator12 WGG 13 575 22 1 1922 1948 195513 Caernarvon Wales UK MUU 14 111 21 2 4 1921 193914 GLC 9 592 31 3 1921 193915 Varberg Sweden SAQ 17 442 17 2 1924 1946 1960 Initially 18 600 m parallel connection16 SAQ 17 442 17 2 1924 1946 Operational Preserved at Grimeton Sweden 17 Warsaw Poland AXO 21 127 14 2 12 1923 Seized by German army 9 1939 who destroyed the stations in 194518 AXL 18 293 16 4 192319 Pernambuco Recife Brazil never 1927 Delivered 1924 returned to Radio Central Rocky Point in 1926 because more efficient vacuum tube transmitters were now available20 never 1927U S military use during and after World War II edit Beginning in 1941 seven of the twenty original 200 KW alternators were put into service by the U S Navy and Air Force 12 No Location CallSign OriginalLocation NavyOperation Air ForceOperation Scrapped1 Haiku Hawaii Marion Massachusetts WSO 1942 1946 1947 1957 19692 Bolinas California KET 1942 1946 1947 1957 19693 Marion Massachusetts Marion Massachusetts WQR 1941 1948 1949 1957 19614 AFA2 13 Radio Central WSS 1949 1957 Smithsonian5 Tuckerton New Jersey Tuckerton New Jersey WCI 1942 1948 19556 Tuckerton New Jersey WGG 1942 1948 19557 Bolinas California Bolinas California KET 1942 1946 1946During World War II the U S Navy recognized the need for reliable distant longwave VLF transmissions to the Pacific fleet A new facility was constructed at Haiku in Hawaii where two 200 KW Alexanderson alternators transferred from the mainland were installed The Navy also operated an existing transmitter at Bolinas California again for Pacific ocean communication 14 Both Haiku alternators were sold for salvage in 1969 possibly to Kreger Company of California In the late 1940s the Air Force assumed control of the Haiku and Marion Massachusetts facilities The Air Force found that longwave transmissions were more reliable than shortwave when sending weather information to Arctic researchers as well as bases in Greenland Labrador and Iceland The two Marion transmitters were used until 1957 One was scrapped in 1961 and the other was reportedly handed over to the U S Bureau of Standards 15 and stored in a Smithsonian Institution warehouse 16 Design edit nbsp Rotor of 200 kW alternator nbsp Closeup of above rotor It has 300 narrow slots cut through the rotor The teeth between the slots are the magnetic poles of the machine The Alexanderson alternator works similarly to an AC electric generator but generates higher frequency current in the very low frequency VLF radio frequency range The rotor has no conductive windings or electrical connections it consists of a solid disc of high tensile strength magnetic steel with narrow slots cut in its circumference to create a series of narrow teeth that function as magnetic poles The space between the teeth is filled with nonmagnetic material to give the rotor a smooth surface to decrease aerodynamic drag The rotor is turned at a high speed by an electric motor through a speed increaser gearbox The machine operates by variable reluctance similar to an electric guitar pickup changing the magnetic flux linking two coils The periphery of the rotor is embraced by a circular iron stator with a C shaped cross section divided into narrow poles the same number as the rotor has carrying two sets of coils One set of coils is energized with direct current and produces a magnetic field in the air gap in the stator which passes axially sideways through the rotor As the rotor turns alternately either an iron section of the disk is in the gap between each pair of stator poles allowing a high magnetic flux to cross the gap or else a non magnetic slot is in the stator gap allowing less magnetic flux to pass Thus the magnetic flux through the stator varies sinusoidally at a rapid rate These changes in flux induce a radio frequency voltage in a second set of coils on the stator The RF collector coils are all interconnected by an output transformer whose secondary winding is connected to the antenna circuit Modulation or telegraph keying of the radio frequency energy was done by a magnetic amplifier which was also used for amplitude modulation and voice transmissions The frequency of the current generated by an Alexanderson alternator in hertz is the product of the number of rotor poles and the revolutions per second Higher radio frequencies thus require more poles a higher rotational speed or both Alexanderson alternators were used to produce radio waves in the very low frequency VLF range for transcontinental wireless communication A typical alternator with an output frequency of 100 kHz had 300 poles and rotated at 20 000 revolutions per minute RPM 333 revolutions per second To produce high power the clearance between the rotor and stator had to be kept to only 1 mm The manufacture of precision machines rotating at such high speeds presented many new problems and Alexanderson transmitters were bulky and very expensive Frequency control edit The output frequency of the transmitter is proportional to the speed of the rotor To keep the frequency constant the speed of the electric motor turning it was controlled with a feedback loop In one method a sample of the output signal is applied to a high Q tuned circuit whose resonant frequency is slightly above the output frequency The generator s frequency falls on the skirt of the LC circuit s impedance curve where the impedance increases rapidly with frequency The output of the LC circuit is rectified and the resulting voltage is compared with a constant reference voltage to produce a feedback signal to control the motor speed If the output frequency gets too high the impedance presented by the LC circuit increases and the amplitude of the RF signal getting through the LC circuit drops The feedback signal to the motor drops and the motor slows down Thus the alternator output frequency is locked to the tuned circuit resonant frequency The sets were built to operate at wavelengths of 10 500 to 24 000 meters 28 57 to 12 5 KHz This was accomplished by three design variables The alternators were built with 1220 976 or 772 poles Three gearboxes were available with ratios of 2 675 2 973 and 3 324 and the 900 RPM driving motor was operated at slips of 4 to 20 giving speeds of 864 to 720 RPM Transmitters installed in Europe operating on 50 cycle power had a wavelength range of 12 500 to 28 800 meters due to the lower speed of the driving motor Performance advantages editA large Alexanderson alternator might produce 500 kW of output radio frequency energy and would be water or oil cooled One such machine had 600 pole pairs in the stator winding and the rotor was driven at 2170 RPM for an output frequency near 21 7 kHz To obtain higher frequencies higher rotor speeds were required up to 20 000 RPM Along with the arc converter invented in 1903 the Alexanderson alternator was one of the first radio transmitters that generated continuous waves In contrast the earlier spark gap transmitters generated a string of damped waves These were electrically noisy the energy of the transmitter was spread over a wide frequency range so they interfered with other transmissions and operated inefficiently With a continuous wave transmitter all of the energy was concentrated within a narrow frequency band so for a given output power they could communicate over longer distances In addition continuous waves could be modulated with an audio signal to carry sound The Alexanderson alternator was one of the first transmitters to be used for AM transmission The Alexanderson alternator produced purer continuous waves than the arc converter whose nonsinusoidal output generated significant harmonics so the alternator was preferred for long distance telegraphy Disadvantages editBecause of the extremely high rotational speed compared to a conventional alternator the Alexanderson alternator required continuous maintenance by skilled personnel Efficient lubrication and oil or water cooling was essential for reliability which was difficult to achieve with the lubricants available at the time In fact early editions of the Royal Navy s Admiralty Handbook of Wireless Telegraphy cover this in considerable detail mostly as an explanation as to why the navy did not use that particular technology However the US Navy did Other major problems were that changing the operating frequency was a lengthy and complicated process and unlike a spark transmitter the carrier signal could not be switched on and off at will The latter problem greatly complicated listening through that is stopping the transmission to listen for any answer There was also the risk that it would allow enemy vessels to detect the presence of the ship Because of the limits of the number of poles and rotational speed of a machine the Alexanderson alternator is capable of generating transmission frequencies up to around 600kHz in the lower Medium wave band with shortwave and higher frequencies being physically impossible a See also editAlexanderson Day Grimeton Radio Station Tonewheel Resolver electrical Notes edit Nowadays it would be technically possible to construct an Alexanderson alternator operating at higher frequencies for instance an Alexanderson alternator with a 10 000 pole rotor spinning at 300 000 RPM would produce a transmission frequency of 50 MHz into the lower portion of the VHF band but the advances in technology required to allow a large rotor to be spun at the immensely high speeds necessary without suffering catastrophic failure did not occur until long after the Alexanderson alternator had become obsolete References edit Milestones Alexanderson Radio Alternator 1904 IEEE Global History Network IEEE Retrieved 29 July 2011 Radiation of Electric Energy by Frederick Trouton The Electrician London January 22 1892 page 302 Prof Thomson s new alternating generator The Electrical Engineer Electrical Engineer Co 11 154 437 April 15 1891 Retrieved April 18 2015 Thomson Elihu September 12 1890 letter The Electrician London 25 529 530 Retrieved April 18 2015 a b Aitken Hugh G J 2014 The Continuous Wave Technology and American Radio 1900 1932 Princeton Univ Press p 53 ISBN 978 1400854608 Fessenden R A 1908 Wireless Telephony Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution Government Printing Office 172 Retrieved April 18 2015 U S Patent 447 921 Nikola Tesla Alternating Electric Current Generator March 10 1891 a b c d Fleming John Ambrose 1910 The principles of electric wave telegraphy and telephony 2nd Ed London Longmans Green and Co pp 5 10 Harbord J G 1929 The Commercial Uses of Radio The Annals of the American Academy 142 57 63 doi 10 1177 0002716229142001S09 S2CID 144710174 200 KW Alexanderson Alternator Transmitters table Wireless Communication in the United States by Thorn L Mayes The New England Wireless and Steam Museum Inc 1989 page 182 Includes the note Call letters and wave lengths in meters from RCA listing Long Wave Stations Dec 5 1928 The Frequency column has been added using 300 000 meters second as the speed of light for the calculations Thorn L Mayes The Alexanderson 200 kW Alternator Transmitters Ports O Call Vol 4 1975 Appendix D 200 Kilowatt Alexanderson Transmitters Used in U S A during and after WW II table Mayes 1989 page 183 The Alexanderson Alternator by Jerry Proc jproc ca Mayes 1989 pages 176 177 Mayes 1989 page 176 Mayes 1989 quoting July 15 1976 correspondence from the Commanding Officer of the USCG Station Hawaii page 180 Further reading edit Below 535 A Historical Review of Continuous Wave Radio Frequency Power Generators Antique Wireless Association column edited by Frank Lotito David E Fisher and Marshall J Fisher Tube the Invention of Television Counterpoint Washington D C USA 1996 ISBN 1 887178 17 1 Hammond John Winthrop Men and Volts the Story of General Electric Philadelphia amp New York J B Lippincott 1941 pp 349 352 372 Notes from the Navy Institute proceedings 1952 from M G Abernathy files Letter to M G Abernathy from G Warren Clark Captain USNR Ret Letter to Mr Mayes from Lt Francis J Kishima Commanding Officer USCG Omega Station Hawaii Milestones Yosami Radio Transmitting Station 1929 E F W Alexanderson U S Patent 1 008 577 High Frequency Alternator N Tesla U S Patent 447 921External links edit The World s Greatest Wireless Station Radio Central The Book of Radio by Charles Taussig pages 312 327 American Marconi Station Marion MA by Henry Brown Alexanderson Alternators at Haiku Valley Oahu by David Jessup Kahuku Marconi Wireless Station O ahu Hawaii by Jonathan H June 20 2007 Marion Mass Alternators picture gallery by David Jessup 2012 Tuckerton Wireless 1912 1955 gallery The Radio Station SAQ Grimeton Alexanderson alternator preserved at UNESCO World Heritage Site in Grimeton Sweden Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexanderson alternator amp oldid 1182808164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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