SIX of Edison's most famous inventions

ALKALINE STORAGE BATTERY: When the automobile was developed in the late 1800s, electric vehicles were more popular than those equipped with gasoline-burning internal combustion engines. But early electric cars had a big drawback—the batteries they used were heavy and tended to leak acid, which corroded the cars’ interiors. 

Edison decided to take on the challenge of inventing a lighter, more dependable and more powerful battery. After conducting extensive research and the embarrassing flop of an early design, Edison came up with a reliable alkaline battery, and in 1910 began production of it. His work, however, was soon overshadowed by Henry Ford’s development of the inexpensive Model T car that ran on an internal combustion engine. Nevertheless, Edison’s storage battery was used in mining lamps, trains and submarines and turned into the most successful product of Edison’s later career.


MOVIE CAMERA AND VIEWER: In the late 1880s, Edison supervised his lab’s development of a technology “that does for the eye what the phonograph does for the ear.” Most of the work on the Kinetograph, an early movie camera, and the Kinetoscope, a single-person peephole movie viewer, was actually performed by Edison’s employee William Kennedy-Laurie Dickson.

Movies became a big industry and Edison’s camera and viewer were quickly replaced by innovations such as the Lumière Cinématographe, a combination camera, printer and projector that allowed audiences to watch a film together. But Edison adjusted and his company became a thriving early movie studio, churning out scores of silent films between the 1890s and 1918 when it shut down production.


LIGHT BULB: Contrary to popular belief, Edison didn’t actually invent the incandescent light bulb. But he invented and marketed a design that was the first to be long-lasting enough to be practical for widespread use.

“Edison was one of a half dozen who were putting the elements of a viable lighting system together in those years, and since Edison was late to the race, he benefited from all his predecessors and rivals,” Ernest Freeberg explains.

In the late 1870s, Edison designed a vacuum bulb, in which a metal filament could be heated to create light. One night, after absent-mindedly rolling between his fingers a piece of lampblack, the material he used in his telephone receiver, he got the idea of switching to a carbonized filament. After initially using carbonized cardboard, he began experimenting with other materials and eventually settled upon bamboo, which possessed long fibers that made it more durable. Eventually, the combination of bamboo filaments and an improved vacuum pump that removed air more effectively enabled Edison to increase the lifetime of bulbs to approximately 1,200 hours.


CARBON TELEPHONE TRANSMITTER:
It was Alexander Graham Bell who patented the telephone in 1876. But Edison, with his knack for building upon others’ innovations, found a way to improve Bell’s transmitter, which was limited in how far apart phones could be by weak electrical current. Edison got the idea of using a battery to provide current on the phone line and to control its strength by using carbon to vary the resistance.

To do that, he designed a transmitter in which a small piece of lampblack (a black carbon made from soot) was placed behind the diaphragm. When someone spoke into the phone, the sound waves moved the diaphragm, and the pressure on the lampblack changed. Edison later replaced the lampblack with granules made from coal—a basic design that was used until the 1980s.


AUTOMATIC TELEGRAPH: While Samuel Morse’s invention of the telegraph in the 1830s and 1840s made it possible for the first time to communicate over long distances, the device had its drawbacks. An operator had to listen to incoming dots and dashes in Morse code, which slowed messages to a speed of 25 to 40 words per minute. A British system for automatically printing code in ink on paper only achieved 120 words tops. Between 1870 and 1874, Edison developed a vastly superior system, in which a telegraph receiver utilized a metal stylus to mark chemically-treated paper, which then could be run through a typewriter-like device. It was capable of recording up to 1,000 words a minute, which made it possible to send long messages quickly.


PHONOGRAPH: While developing his telephone transmitter, Edison got the idea of creating a machine that could record and play back telephone messages. That notion led him to imagine being able to record not just voices, but music and other sounds, by using sound to vibrate a diaphragm and push a stylus that made indentations on a cylinder covered with wax paper that was being turned by a crank.

In late 1877, he got a machinist to build the device, using tin foil instead of wax, and Edison recorded the nursery rhyme “Mary Had a Little Lamb.” The following year, he was granted a patent for the design, which also included a lighter needle to find the groves and transmit vibrations to a second diaphragm, which recreated the person’s voice.

Edison’s phonograph created a sensation and helped enhance his reputation as a great inventor. Eventually, he began to market and sell the machines and cylinder records, reverting again to using wax. But by the early 1900s, the Victor Talking Machine Company’s phonographs that played discs surpassed Edison’s cylinder phonographs in popularity. Even though cylinders produced better-quality sound, the early discs had a big advantage in that they could fit four minutes of music, compared to the two minutes that could fit on a cylinder.


 Thomas Edison's Patents:
Edison was a genius inventor himself, but also greatly developed, improved and marketed previous
inventions. He accumulated 2,332 patents worldwide , 1,093 in the United States. He executed the first of
his 1,093 successful U.S. patent applications on 13 October 1868, at the age of 21. He filed an estimated
500–600 unsuccessful or abandoned applications as well. Here are his 100 perhaps most important ones.
YEAR
FOR
  #909,169
 1909
 Waterproofing-Paint for Portland-Cement Structures
  #775,600
 1904
 Rotary Cement-Kiln
  #772,647
 1904
 Photographic Film for Moving-Picture Machines
  #750,102
 1904
 Electrical Automobile
  #722,502
 1903
 Means for Handling Cable-Drawn Cars on Inclines
  #678,722
 1901
 Reversible Galvanic Battery
  #661,238
 1900
 Machine for Forming Pulverized Material Into Briquets
  #657,922
 1900
 Apparatus for Reheating Compressed Air
  #641,281
 1900
 JanuExpanding Pulley
  #589,168
 1897
 Kinetographic Camera
  #493,426
 1893
 Apparatus for Exhibiting Photographs of Moving Objects
  #479,184
 1892
 Fac-Simile Telegraph
  #476,985
 1892
 Trolley for Electric Railways
  #476,984
 1892
 Expansible Pulley
  #470,930
 1892
 Dynamo-Electric Machine
  #470,928
 1892
 Alternating-Current Generator
  #470,927
 1892
 Driving Mechanism for Cars
  #465,970
 1892
 Armature Connection for Motors or Generators
  #457,343
 1892
 Magnetic Belting
  #439,391
 1890
 Junction-Box for Electric Wires
  #438,305
 1890
 Fuse-Block
  #434,589
 1890
 Propelling Mechanism for Electric Vehicles
  #434,587
 1890
 Thermo-Electric Battery
  #434,586
 1890
 Electric Generator
  #430,279
 1890
 Voltaic Battery
  #425,761
 1890
 Incandescent Lamp
  #397,705
 1889
 Method of Winding Field-Magnets
  #397,280
 1889
 Phonograph Recorder and Reproducer
  #393,463
 1888
 Machine for Making Phonogram-Blanks
  #386,974
 1888
 Phonograph
  #382,419
 1888
 Process of Duplicating Phonograms
  #382,416
 1888
 Feed and Return Mechanism for Phonographs
  #382,414
 1888
 Burnishing Attachment for Phonographs
  #380,100
 1888
 Pyromagnetic Motor
  #378,044
 1888
 Telephone-Transmitter
  #365,465
 1887
 Valve-Gear
  #350,235
 1886
 Railway-Telegraphy
  #340,709
 1886
 Telephone-Circuit
  #340,707
 1886
 Telephonic Repeater
  #314,115
 1885
 Chemical Stock Quotation Telegraph
  #304,084
 1884
 Device for Protecting Electric-Light Systems from Lightning
  #295,990
 1884
 Type-Writer
  #293,433
 1884
 Insulation of Railroad-Tracks Used for Electric Circuits
  #278,418
 1883
 Apparatus for Convert Electric Currents from High to Low Tension
  #273,715
 1883
 Art of Malleableizing Iron
  #273,493
 1883
 Valve-Gear for Electrical Generator-Engines
  #273,492
 1883
 Secondary Battery
  #273,491
 1883
 Regulator for Driving Engines of Electrical Generators
  #273,489
 1883
 Turn-Table for Electric Railways
  #271,614
 1883
 Shafting
YEAR
FOR
  #265,775
 1882
 Electric-Arc Light
  #263,149
 1882
 Commutator for Dynamo or Magneto Electric Machines
  #263,144
 1882
 Mold for Carbonizing Incandescents
  #263,132
 1882
 Electro-Magnetic Railway
  #251,552
 1881
 Underground Conductor
  #248,435
 1881
 Utilizing Electricity as a Motive Power
  #248,434
 1881
 Governor for Electric Engines
  #248,431
 1881
 Preserving Fruit
  #248,430
 1881
 Electro-Magnetic Brake
  #248,425
 1881
 Apparatus for Producing High Vacuums
  #242,901
 1881
 Electric Meter
  #240,678
 1881
 Webermeter
  #239,374
 1881
 Regulating the Generation of Electric Currents
  #239,153
 1881
 Electric Lamp
  #239,151
 1881
 Method of Forming Enlarged Ends on Carbon Filaments
  #239,148
 1881
 Treating Carbons for Electric Lamps
  #238,868
 1881
 Manufacture of Carbons for Incandescent Electric Lamps
  #230,621
 1880
 Addressing-Machine
  #228,617
 1880
 Brake for Electro-Magnetic Motors
  #228,329
 1880
 Magnetic Ore-Separator
  #223,898
 1880
 Electric Lamp
  #222,390
 1879
 Improvement in Carbon-Telephones
  #218,866
 1879
 Improvement in Electric Lighting Apparatus
  #218,166
 1879
 Improvement in Magneto-Electric Machines
  #217,781
 1879
 Improvement in Sextuplex Telegraphs
  #214,637
 1879
 Improvement in Thermal Regulators for Electric Lights
  #210,767
 1878
 Improvement in Vocal Engines
  #205,370
 1878
 Improvement in Pneumatic Stencil-Pens
  #203,329
 1878
 Improvement in Perforating-Pens
  #203,017
 1878
 Improvement in Telephone Call-Signals
  #201,760
 1878
 Improvement in Speaking-Machines
  #169,972
 1875
 Improvement in Electric-Signaling Instruments
  #154,788
 1874
 Improvement in District Telegraph Signal-Boxes
  #150,848
 1874
 Improvement in Chemical or Automatic Telegraphs
  #147,917
 1874
 Improvement in Duplex Telegraphs
  #146812
 1874
 Improvement in Telegraph-Signal Boxes
  #142,999
 1873
 Improvement in Galvanic Batteries
  #141,777
 1873
 Improvement in Relay-Magnets
  #133,841
 1872
 Improvement in Type-Writing Machines
  #132,455
 1872
 Improvement in Paper for Chemical Telegraphs
  #131,334
 1872
 Improvement in Rheotomes or Circuit-Directors
  #130,795
 1872
 Improvement in Electro-Magnets
  #128,608
 1872
 Improvement in Printing-Telegraph Instruments
  #114,657
 1871
 Improvement in Relay-Magnets for Telegraph Instruments
  #114,656
 1871
 Improvement in Telegraphic Transmitting Instruments
  #200,521
 1871
 Improvement in Phonograph or Speaking Machines
  #111,112
 1871
 Improvement in Governors for Electro-Motors
  #96,681
 1869
 Automatic Electrical Switch for Telegraph Apparatus
  #91,527
 1869
 Improvement in Printing-Telegraphs
  #90,646
 1869
 Improvement in Electrographic Vote-Recorder