I10 POWER DISTRIBUITION FOR EI,ECTRIC RATLR(’)AI)S.'
generation is raised and that of distribution lowered. In
substations of the third class, the original cost of genera-
tion is low, but the transmission of power to, and the
maintenance of, the substations has to be balanced against
the cost of distribution from the main station direct, and
the cost of generating at separate stations.
This balancing of costs involves very nice discrimina-
tions and deals with somewhat uncertain factors. The
true cost of electric power itself is not easy to estimate,
and actual data from existing stations are often rendered
valueless by disingenuous bookkeeping. ‘There is a great
difference between the cost of power computed from fuel
and labor alone, as is often done by those who like to de-
ceive themselves, and the cost with all the items of inter-
est, repairs and depreciation relentlessly footed up. It is
not unusual to find the item of depreciation deliberately
neglected in computing the cost of power and in other
estimates. Street railways have been particularly prone
to this sort of financial juggling—it is so convenient to in-
crease the capital account for ‘‘ improvements’’ instead of
withholding dividends really unearned or shouldering a
genuine deficit. Without discussing this question of
financial morality, we cannot too forcibly remind the en-
gineer not to deceive himself and the manager that if the
present trend of legislation and ‘‘labor reform’’ continues
there is likely to come a dreadful day of reckoning in which
a sinking fund will be sorely needed.
To determine the conditions of economy that govern
the establishment of substations, it is first necessary to
know the probable cost of electric power in stations of dif-
ferent sizes and kinds. This is not easy to estimate in
general, but can be gotten at with fair accuracy for any
given set of conditions as to cost of plant, coal, labor and
so forth. In small plants the labor item is disproportion-
ately large and the general eficiency less than in large
ones. On the other hand in plants of 1000 k.w. output
and over the labor item remains proportionately nearly the
same as the plant increases in size, and the efficiency rises