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ENGLAND’S
SECOND LARGEST AIRSHIP READY TO TAKE FLIGHT
With
the completion of the rigid airship, R-100, England now has the two
largest airships in the world. Like the R-101, which has been in the air
for about two months, the new ship has a capacity of 5,000,000 cubic
feet, as compared with the 2,600,000 cubic feet of the Los Angeles and
the 3,708,000 cubic feet of the Graf Zeppelin.
ELECTRIC
EYE
Constantly
measuring the smoke and haze in the Holland Tunnel under the Hudson
River connecting New York and Jersey City is the latest job for science’s
magic lamp, the photoelectric cell, that has made television and talking
movies practicable.
Above
the main tube of the tunnel, through which traffic passes, is an exhaust
duct, a long, cave-like chamber near the New York end. Through this duct
is drawn the exhaust air from the tunnel. The duct is at the point where
the roadway grade is greatest and where there are the most exhaust gases
from the heavy truck traffic. Except for the light admitted through the
air openings, the duct is dark.
Here
General Electric engineers have installed experimentally a photoelectric
device to measure the smoke and haze. A large box contains a lamp and a
photoelectric cell in adjacent compartments, light-tight except for a
lens at the front of each. The lens in front of the light makes a narrow
beam, which shines on a mirror 150 feet away. Thence it is reflected to
a second mirror and back to the box, where the other lens focuses the
light on the cell. The current from the cell is amplified by vacuum
tubes, and passes over wires to the recording device in the tunnel
office a half mile away. Here it controls the movement of a pencil over
a moving strip of paper.
When
the amount of smoke in the air duct increases, the intensity of the
light returning to the photoelectric cell is reduced, and the moving
pencil immediately indicates the fact. Then the tunnel engineers can
turn on more of the ventilating fans to keep the air clear.
Uses for such a
device in homes and business offices are foreseen, where it can be used
to detect smoke and act as a fire alarm. For some time the Holland
Tunnel has used a somewhat similar device to count traffic, by the
interruptions by automobiles of a beam of light across the exit. |