Abstract
THE electrical equipment of a motor-car is now an essential portion of the whole vehicle. This is proved in a paper by Mr. E. A. Watson (J. Inst. Elec. Eng., March) describing the progress made during the last three years in the electrical equipment of cars. In the modern car, the driver should never be called upon to resort to hand-start ing. The starter handle is carried separately in the tool kit, and in many designs can only be inserted with difficulty, its main function being to turn the engine round for adjusting purposes and not for starting. The ignition now is almost always by electric coil and not by a magneto. To assist the convenience in driving, electric petrol pumps, windscreen wipers and horns are used. Recently the remarkable progress made in the combined textile and rubber driving-belt has led to a reversion to the belt-driven dynamo. These are entirely satisfactory and have a normal life of 20,000 miles or more. This drive possesses the advantage of quietness and simplicity, as compared with the gear or chain drive. The modern head-lamps, designed with a parabolic reflector and a focused filament, produce a beam which is slightly divergent. By means of prisms, some of the light is diverted on to the sides of the road and some in front of the car. The anti-dazzle problem has been partially solved, but the greatest problem of all has been, and it looks as if it always would be, driving in fog. The only alleviation seems to be to use a fog lamp which throws the light directly downwards on the road. This eliminates any rays in an upward direction which might be reflected back to the driver's eyes.
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Electrical Equipment of Automobiles. Nature 137, 650 (1936). https://doi.org/10.1038/137650a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/137650a0