Skip to content

Apparatus Section 6: Direct-current Commutating Machines: Effect of Commutating Poles

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-52
Locationlines 11126-11131
Statuscandidate
Word Count28
Equation Candidates In Section0
Figure Candidates In Section0
Quote Candidates In Section0
VI. Effect of Commutating Poles 48. With the commutator brushes of a generator set midway between the field poles, as in Fig. 94, the m.m.f. of armature reac-
VI. Effect of Commutating Poles 48. With the commutator brushes of a generator set midway between the field poles, as in Fig. 94, the m.m.f. of armature reac-
Concept CandidateHits In SectionStatus
No chapter-local term hits yet--
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--
  • Field language: Read for whether field language is mechanical, geometrical, causal, descriptive, or simply a convenient engineering model.
  • Field language: Field-pressure or field-gradient interpretations can be explored here only after the explicit source passage and modern engineering translation are kept distinct.
  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.