SPECIAI, METHODS OF DISTRIBUTION. 93
The three-wire system was tried as far back as 1889
in Milwaukee and more recently has been successfully em-
ployed in Portland, Ore.; Bangor, Me.; St. Louis, and
elsewhere.
Practically, balancing with all needful accuracy is
not a difficult matter and, as has already been mnoted, an
approximate balance is quite sufficient on account of the
great capacity of the neutral, particularly on double track
roads.
On the whole the three-wire distribution is a very use-
ful one. 'The saving in copper is very material and en-
tails no sacrifice of efficiency and but little added expense
if the station is large enough to make the use of two dyna-
mos instead of one, of little moment. Above a certain size
the price of dynamos increases almost directly as their out-
put, so thata pair of machines for three-wire work would
be little if any more expensive than one large one of equal
capacity.
A curiously modified three-wire system has been sug-
gested for heavy interurban work, although it has not yet
come into use. ‘This is connected like Fig. 53, except that
both - and — sides of the system are connected to trolley
wires over the same track. Two trolleys are used on each
car so that the car is a unit balanced in itself, the two
motors taking current from the - and — wires respectively.
Fig. 57 shows this arrangement in diagram.
Here A and B are the generators connected respect-
ively to—+and— trolley wires, and the track forms the
geutral. ‘Themotors C and D upon the same car take cur-
rent from the trolleys F and F and are grounded upon the
track neutral in the ordinary way. The neutral only
comes into service in the case of need for cutting out one