1996 >> December >> Letters  

Letters

Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", December 1996, page 7

MORE INFORMATION ON SIMONDS PATENT

A New Insulator

W.E. Simonds, of Hartford, Conn., has invented an insulator on the principle suggested in THE JOURNAL of June 1. A description has been sent us, but without cuts, which however, are unnecessary. Beneath the bell of the ordinary glass insulator, and of such diminished diameter as to be inside of it, is affixed a cup filled with paraffine, which offers a successful obstacle to moisture passing from the stem to the wire. This is practically the whole of the inventions. W. W. Smith, Esq., Vice-President of the Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railroad, has an insulator in use similarly formed. Its merit is in the retention of ordinary forms, and their strength, with the paraffine barrier, which is preserved in place even when melted by heat. We will refer to it again.

Journal of the Telegraph,
July 15, 1869

and a second article...

The Simonds’ Insulator

In a few hurried words respecting Mr. Simonds insulators which we found very handsomely illustrated in the Scientific American, we gave the idea that it was the fruit of a suggestion of our own. As the date of the patent appears to be as early as our own suggestion, and the thought of the device must have preceded the patent, we desire to give Mr. Simonds proper credit for his invention, and to recall any word of ours which might seem to detract from the merit of its invention. Our suggestion was crude and unstudied, but written under an impression that an advantage lay in that direction. We hoped that some one, perhaps Mr. Brooks himself, or Mr. Farmer, or some other electrician would give it what thought it merited. A cheap, durable, perfect insulator, even admitting the excellence of those in use, is still by many a demand. At least there must exist desire for all possible improvements in an article so radically connected with telegraphic success.

One feature of the Simonds’ insulator we overlooked in our notice of it. The glass bell is not a simple arc as in the ordinary insulator, but is made to arch down in the center and thus enters and is immersed in the paraffine cup which is supported on the pin. This gives continuity to the insulator until it reaches the outer edges of the paraffine cup. The merit of the insulator, therefore, would appear to be in retaining all the strength and economy of ordinary forms with the intercepting qualities of paraffine in such condition as to be retained.

Journal of the Telegraph,
August 15, 1869

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You probably recognize the cover from the October 1996 issue of Crown Jewels of the Wire. Beginning on page 4 of the same issue, Dick Bowman tells the story of this fascinating insulator and its patent model. In response to the article, Ron Souza and Jim Sanders, members of Western Telegraph Research Group, forwarded copies of two Journal of the Telegraph articles relating to the Simonds’ insulator. Same old story of “who had the idea first.”

Thank you for sharing some of the vast amount of research with CJ readers that you have in your files.

Carol



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