SPECIAIL, METHODS OF DISTRIBUTION. 89
methods of alternating current transmission to cases like
that of Fig. 5o.
Better than any method of increasing the loss in the
line are various methods of increasing the working voltage.
These effect the same or greater economy in copper with
less loss of energy and are in very many cases preferable
to any boosting scheme. Some of them are simply ap-
plicable without any changes in the arrangement of the
motors, while others require special motors or special
arrangements of them.
The application of the Edison three-wire system is the
most generally known of these. Its principles are by this
time very familiar to the public, consisting virtually of
F16. 5I.
employing two working devices in series as regards the
voltage of transmission, while each separate device, con-
nected between one of the transmission wires and the
neutral wire, receives only the voltage for which it is de-
signed. ‘T'he application of this device to railway work is
well shown in Fig. 51. 'The outside terminals of the two
generators are connected to two trolley wires while the
neutral is connected to the track system. Hence each
motor works on about 500 volts, while the transmission of
the total energy is at 1000 volts.
In this case the neutral wire is the track, which ordi-
narily, as we have seen, has a rather good conductivity so
that the saving in copper is very material. If the loads on
the two sides of the system were perfectly balanced so that
there would be no steady flow through the mneutral wire,