ALTERNATING MOTORS FOR RAILWAY WORK. 169
ten or fifteen horse power should give somewhere be-
tween eighty and eighty-five per cent efficiency, which is
not materially different from that of continuous current
motors of similar size.
There are divers other means of starting an alternat-
ing motor by means of a commutator. A commutated
FIZ. 92.
field in shunt to the armature can be made to give a power
of starting sufficient to bring an unloaded motor up to syn-
chronous speed, and in fact, an ordinary compound wound
alternator can be made self starting by means of its com-
pounding commutator. These devices do not permit of
starting under anything much exceeding friction load and,
hence, are inferior for severe work to the series starting
device just described and various modifications of the same
idea.