SPECIAT, METHODS OF DISTRIBUTION. 103
way of obtaining the lower voltage desired. The three-
wire system may often be used to advantage in doing the
terminal work connected with a high voltage interurtan
line. In conjunction with boosters it may also be decid-
edly useful in working a long and heavily loaded double
track line. Fig. 60 shows this arrangement, which it will
be readily seen is really a modified five-wire system. The
main generators would then operate directly an ordinary
three-wire railway system, while with the assistance of the
boosting dynamos they would furnish current for working
a heavy suburban or interurban line in the manner just
described.
Such are the principal devices for operating extended
railway lines from a single power station without any trans-
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Fi1c6. 60.
formation of voltage. They are easy of application and
fairly economical, although the voltages dealt with are not
really high enough for the purposes to which they are
sometimes applied. There is a steady growth of long lines
which cannot be economically operated by any of these
simpler methods, which at best partake something of the
nature of makeshifts. ‘The time comes when a road be-
comes too long to be successfully worked from a single
‘power station even with the assistance of auxiliary dyna-
mos. A choice has then to be made between operating inde-
pendent power stations at points along the line, and sub-
stations similarly located supplied with power from a
single generating plant by the means usual to the long
distance transmission of power. The principles involved
in these important cases it is now our purpose to discuss.