106 POWER DISTRIBUTION FOR ELECTRIC RAILROADS.
nected that in case of accident to one the others can carry
on its load with a fair degree of efficiency. This mutual
relation is important in that it permits a smaller reserve
capacity than would be necessary were the stations inde-
pendent. For example, the present plant in the Charlestown
station consists of two 800 k. w. generators each coupled
direct to a compound condensing Corliss engine. It is an
ideal plant for the purpose, but as a separate station it
would have too few units for safety unless one of the pair
should be virtually held as a partial reserve. It is never
safe to have an independent station contain so few power
units that the crippling of one can interfere seriously with
the operation of the system.
The second class is composed in the main of inter-
urban roads too long to be conveniently supplied from a
single station. In such cases the use of two or more power
stations is the simplest way out of the difficulty, and these
stations, having similar functions, are naturally of similar
size and character, and so distributed as to supply similar
lengths of track as far as practicable. As long interurban
roads are only just developing, instances of these distributed
stations are not yet at all numerous. ‘The interurban sys-
tem centering in Cleveland, O., furnishes the best example
of such practice. This is shown in a sketch map in Fig. 62.
It consists substantially of three roads, the Akron, Bedford
& Cleveland, the Cleveland & Elyria, and the Cleveland,
Painesville & Eastern. ‘The first mentioned is about thirty
miles long with two power stations, A and B, of the figure.
The former furnishes current for six miles north and nine
miles south, the latter nine miles north and five and a half
miles south. The two stations are each of 500 k. w. capacity
and are substantially duplicates. The second road is sev-
enteen miles long and has also two power stations, C and
D. Here C, of about the same size as A and B, sends cur-
rents in both directions while D, considerably smaller,
handles the section of line nearest the Elyria terminus.
The third road is not quite completed, but will be about
thirty miles long. It is now supplied with power from the