Skip to content

Apparatus Section 2: Direct-current Commutating Machines: Armature Winding

Research workbench, not a finished commentary page.

This page is generated from processed source text and candidate catalogs. It exists to help researchers decide what to verify, promote, and deeply decode next.

FieldValue
SourceTheoretical Elements of Electrical Engineering
Year1915
Section IDtheoretical-elements-electrical-engineering-section-41
Locationlines 10520-10585
Statuscandidate
Word Count435
Equation Candidates In Section0
Figure Candidates In Section0
Quote Candidates In Section0
II. Armature Winding 37. Fig. 80 shows a six-pole multiple ring winding, and Fig. 81 a six-polar multiple drum winding. As seen, the armature coils are connected progressively all around the armature in closed circuit, and the connections between adjacent armature coils lead to the commutator. Such an armature winding has as many circuits in multiple, and requires as many sets of com- mutator brushes, as poles. Thirty-six coils are shown in Figs. 80 and 81, connected to 36 commutator segments, and the two sides of each coil distinguished by drawn and dotted lines. In a drum-wound machine, usually the one side of all coils forms the upper and the other side the lower layer of the armature winding. Fig. 82 shows a six-pole series drum winding with 36 slots and 36 commutator segments. In
... orm of series winding is the winding shown by Fig. 83. This figure shows a six-polar armature having 35 coils and 35 commutator segments. In consequence thereof the armature coils under corresponding poles which are connected in series are slightly displaced from each other, so that after pass- ing around all corresponding poles the winding leads symmetric- ally into the coil adjacent to the first armature coil. Hereby the necessity of commutator cross connections is avoided, and the ...
Concept CandidateHits In SectionStatus
Light1seeded
Term CandidateHits In SectionStatus
No chapter-local term hits yet--
Candidate IDOCR / PDF-Text CandidateSource Location
No chapter-local candidates yet--
Candidate IDOCR / PDF-Text CandidateSource Location
No chapter-local candidates yet--
Candidate IDCandidate PassageSource Location
No chapter-local candidates yet--
  • Radiation / light: Compare the chapter’s radiation vocabulary with modern electromagnetic radiation, spectral frequency, wavelength, absorption, and illumination engineering.
  • Radiation / light: Radiation and wave language can invite ether-field comparison, but source wording, modern radiation theory, and speculative synthesis must stay separated.
  1. Open the full source text and the scan or raw PDF.
  2. Verify the chapter boundary and surrounding context.
  3. Promote exact quotations only after checking the source image.
  4. Move mathematical candidates into canonical equation pages only after formula typography is corrected.
  5. Move diagram candidates into the diagram archive only after image extraction, crop verification, and manifest creation.
  6. Keep Steinmetz wording, modern translation, and ether-field interpretation in separate labeled layers.