<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
<h3>SUBMARINE CABLES.</h3>
<p>The first attempts at transmitting messages
through wires laid in water were made about
1839. These early experiments were not very
successful, because the art of wire-insulation
had not attained any degree of perfection at
that time. It was not until gutta-percha began
to be used as an insulator for submarine
lines that any substantial progress was made.</p>
<p>The first line, so history states, that was successfully
laid and operated was across the
Hudson River in 1848. This line was constructed
for the use of the Magnetic Telegraph
Company.</p>
<p>In the following year experiments with
gutta-percha insulation were successfully
made, and about 1850 a cable was laid across
the English Channel between Dover and Calais
(twenty-seven miles), consisting of a single
strand of wire having a covering of gutta-percha.
The insulation was destroyed in a
day or two, which demonstrated the fact that
all submarine cables must be protected by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></SPAN></span>
some kind of armor. In 1851 another cable
was laid between these two points, containing
four conductors insulated with gutta-percha,
and over all was an armor of iron wire.
Twenty-one years later this cable was still
working, and for all we know is working now.
After this successful demonstration other
cables were laid for longer distances.</p>
<p>These short-line cables served to demonstrate
the relative value of different material
for insulating purposes under water, and it
has been found that gutta-percha possesses
qualities superior to almost every other material
as an insulator for submarine cables, although
there are many better materials for
air-line insulation. Gutta-percha when exposed
to air becomes hardened and will crack,
but under water it seems to be practically indestructible.</p>
<p>Ocean telegraphy really dates from the laying
of the first successful Atlantic cable.
There were many problems that had to be
solved, which could be done only by the very
expensive experiment of laying a cable across
the Atlantic Ocean. In the first place a survey
had to be made of the bottom of the ocean
between the shores of America and Great
Britain. The most available route was discovered
by Lieutenant Maury of the United
States Navy, who made a series of deep-sea
soundings, and discovered that, from New<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></SPAN></span>foundland
to the west coast of Ireland the bottom
of the ocean was comparatively even, but
gradually deepening toward the coast of Ireland
until it reached a depth of 2000 fathoms.
It was not so deep but that the cable could be
laid on the bottom, nor so shallow as to be in
danger of the waves, icebergs or large sea-animals.</p>
<p>The water below a certain depth is always
still and not affected by winds or ocean currents.
At many other points in crossing the
ocean, high mountains and deep valleys are
encountered, possessing all the topographical
features of dry land—as the ocean bed is only
a great submerged continent.</p>
<p>The beginning of the laying of the first Atlantic
cable was on Aug. 7, 1857. On the
morning of Aug. 7, 1858, a year later, after a
series of mishaps and adverse circumstances
that would have discouraged most men, the
country was electrified by a dispatch from
Cyrus W. Field of New York (to whom the
final success of the Atlantic cable is mainly
due), that the cable had been successfully
laid and worked. But this cable worked only
from the 10th of August to the 1st of September,
having sent in that time 271 messages.
The insulation became impaired at some point,
when an attempt to force the current through
by means of a large battery only increased the
difficulty.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The failure of this first cable served to teach
manufacturers and engineers how to construct
cables with reference to the conditions under
which they are to be used. It was found that
in the deep sea a much smaller and less expensive
cable could be used than would answer
at the shore ends, where the water is shallow.
The shore ends of an ocean cable are made
very large, as compared to the deep-sea portions,
so as to resist the effect of the waves and
other interfering obstacles. It was further
learned that the most successful mode of transmitting
signals through the cable was with a
small battery of low voltage, and by the use of
very delicate instruments for receiving the
messages. It is not possible to employ such
instruments on cables as are used on land-lines,
while it would not be a difficult feat to
transmit even twice the distance over land-lines
strung on poles, using the ordinary Morse
telegraph.</p>
<p>The water of the ocean is a conductor, as
well as the heavy armor that surrounds the
insulation of the cable. When a current is
transmitted through the conducting wires, in
the center of the cable, they set up a countercharge
in the armor and the water above it,
somewhat as an electrified cloud will induce a
charge in the earth under it, of an opposite
nature. This countercharge, being so close to
the conducting wire, has a retarding effect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></SPAN></span>
upon the current transmitted through it. An
ordinary land-line that is strung on poles that
are high up from the ground has this effect reduced
to a minimum, but the greater the number
of wires clustered together on the same
poles the more difficult it becomes to send
rapid signals through any one of them.</p>
<p>The instrument used for receiving cable
messages was devised by Sir William Thompson,
now Lord Kelvin. One form consists of
a very short and delicate galvanometer-needle
carrying a tiny mirror. This mirror is so related
to a beam of light thrown upon it that it
reflects it upon a graduated screen at some distance
away, so that its motions are magnified
many hundred times as it appears upon the
screen. An operator sits in a dark room with
his eye on the screen and his hand upon the
key of an ordinary Morse instrument. He
reads the signal at sight, and with his key
transmits it to a sounder, which may be in
another room, where it is read and copied by
another operator. Another form of receiving-instrument
carries, instead of the mirror, a
delicate capillary glass tube that feeds ink
from a reservoir, and by this means the movements
of the needle are recorded on a moving
strip of paper. The symbols (representing
letters) are formed by combinations of zigzag
lines. This instrument is the syphon-recorder.</p>
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