88 POWER DISTRIBUTION FOR ELECTRIC RAILROADS.
conveniently overcome by ordinary compounding, boosting
is eminently useful.
If the line A B (Fig. 50), when designed for a certain
drop at average load, say, five per cent, gives no more
than fifteen per cent or so at maximum load ordinary over-
compounding will answer admirably. If, however, the
maximum load rises to five or six times the average
for which the line was designed boosting is by far the
simplest way out of the difficulty.
Suppose now A B to be fifteen or twenty miles long
and to have a heavy and fast interurban traffic. Could it
be worked to advantage by supplying current directly to
that part of the line comfortably near the power station
and feeding the rest of the line by boosting, in sections
using boosters of different voltage if necessary? At first
thought one might be tempted to say ‘‘ Yes’’, for in such
case each section would be in full action for but a short
part of the day. On the other hand it should be noted
that a// the energy supplied to the distant sections, be it
little or much, is supplied under very wasteful conditions,
and while such an arrangement would allow a very long
line to be served there is generally no excuse in the pres-
ent state of the art for a device so clumsy and wasteful.
It must not be understood from this that there are no
cases in which direct transmission at more than usual line
loss is to be preferred to indirect transmission with recon-
version. Such certainly exist, but since at the present
time it is possible to transmit power at high voltage and
reconvert to direct current with a loss not exceeding fif-
teen to twenty per cent, the field for direct ‘ransmission at
much greater lossis very limited.
Boosting is preferable to heavy overcompounding,
when unusually long feeders are exposed to great changes
of load, for the reasons already suggested, and it must not
be forgotten that when the only loss is that in the line
which varies inversely as the load, the all-day efficiency
of the system may be fairly high. ‘This matter will
be taken up again in connection with the application of the