1
St. Louis, Mo., June 26-30, 1944 CP.* VALUES OF COUNSELING TO HIGH-SCHOOL STU- DENTS. T. L. Jones, chairman, educational committee, St. Louis Section CP.* HIGH-SCHOOL-STUDENT COUNSELING IN METRO- POLITAN NEW YORK AREA. S. P. Shackelton, chairman, student guidance committee, New York Section CP.* WAYS AND MEANS OF SECTIONS CO-OPERATING WITH COLLEGE AIEE BRANCHES. R. C Gorham, Uni- versity of Pittsburgh Thursday, June 29 9:30 a.m. Symposium on Electronic Frequency Converters 44-143. HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ELEC- TRONIC POWER CONVERTERS. E. F. W. Alexanderson and E. L. Phillipi, General Electric Company 44-144. THE ELECTRONIC CONVERTER FOR EXCHANGE OF POWER. F. W. Cramer, Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation, and L. W. Morton and A. G. Darling, General Electric Company 44-145. DESIGN OF AN ELECTRONIC FREQUENCY CHANGER. C. H. Willis, Princeton University, and R. W. Kuenning, E. F. Christenien, and B. D. Bed- ford, General Electric Company 44-146. SWITCHGEAR AND CONTROL FOR AN ELECTRONIC POWER CONVERTER. W. N. Girting* and A. W. Bate- man, General Electric Company 44-147. PENTODE IGNITRONS FOR ELECTRONIC POWER CONVERTERS. H. C. Steiner, J. L. Zehner, and H. E. Zuvers, General Electric Company 9:30 a.m. Aircraft Instruments 44-152. A UNIQUE MOVING-MAGNET RATIO INSTRU- MENT. F. R. Sias and D. B. Fisk, General Electric Company 44-153. RECENT ADVANCES IN AIRCRAFT-TACHOMETER DESIGN. R. G. Ballard and C. P. Hall, General Electric Company 44-150. DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS IN AIRCRAFT INSTRU- MENTS TO MEET WAR SERVICE. C. F. Savage and J. M. Whittenton, General Electric Company 44-151. ELECTRICALLY OPERATED GYROSCOPIC INSTRU- MENTS. H. Konet, Bendix Aviation Corporation 44-148. TOTALIZING CONTENTS OF AIRCRAFT FUEL TANKS. J. R. Macintyre, General Electric Company 9:30 a.m. Heating Houses Electrically 44-154. LOAD-CALCULATION PROCEDURE FOR ELECTRIC- PANEL SPACE HEATING. B. F. Raber and F. W. Hutch- >ason, University of California •*4-155. ELECTROTHERMAL SPACE HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING. G. H. Krueger, Bonneville Power Administration 44-156. POSSIBILITIES OF HEAT PUMPS FOR HEATING HOMES. R. U. Berry* General Electric Company 9:30 a.m. Conference on Temperature Standards 1 he purpose of the conference sessions is to review nperature standards including hot-spot allowances ,r rotating machines in the fractional- and integral- rsepower sizes. These sessions represent a continua- [ -n of the activity started at the winter technical meet- l H in New York, N. Y., January 24-28, 1944. There '"•''l be a series of conference papers presented giving '••'-tual test results of temperature tests on various types ^nd sizes of motors. ihose expected to present conference papers are as i'Jilows: L - E. HUdebrand, General Electric Company L - H. Hirsch, Century Electric Company R. Hough, Reliance Electric and Engineering Company H. M.Joy, Master Electric Company C. Lloyd, Robbins and Meyers, Inc. *. Munier, Emerson Electric Manufacturing Company D. Phillip*, General Electric Company **• L. Schmidt, General Electric Company H. Trickey, Diehl Manufacturing Company <-• P. Potter, Wagner Electric Corporation 2:00 p.m. Conference on Temperature Standards (continued) 2:00 p.m. Switchgear 44-157. PROTECTION OF LARGE D-C MACHINES BY MEANS OF HIGH-SPEED CrRCurr BREAKERS. J. Elmer Housley, Aluminum Company of America and Otto Jensen, I-T-E Circuit Breaker Company 44-102. A PNEUMATIC MECHANISM FOR OUTDOOR OIL CIRCUIT BREAKERS. L. J. Linde and E. B. Rietz, General Electric Company 44-158. IMPROVED SELECTIVE TRIPPING OF LOW- VOLTAGE Am CIRCUIT BREAKERS. C. P. West, Westing- house Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-97. FUSING PRACTICES ON DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS—II. J. S. Parsons and J. M. Wallace, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-159. FAULT PROTECTION ON SHIPBOARD A-C POWER- DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS. Captain H. G. Rickover and P. N. Ross, Bureau of Ships, Navy Department 2:00 p.m. Electronics and Measure- ments 44-78. DEVELOPMENT OF EXCITRON-TYPE RECTIFDIR. H. Winograd, Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company 44-11. ANALYSIS OF RECTIFIER CIRCUITS. E. F. Christensen and C C Herskind, General Electric Company, and C. H. Willis, Princeton University 44-160. OPERATION OF RECTIFIERS UNDER UNBAL- ANCED CONDITIONS. E. F. Christensen and M. M. Morack, General Electric Company 44-161. A RESONANT-CAvrrY METHOD FOR MEASURING DrELECTRic PROPERTIES AT ULTRAHIOH FREQUENCIES. C. N. Works, T. W. Dakin, and F. C. Boggs, Westing- house Electric and Manufacturing Company C.P.* HIOH-FREQUENCY CABLE DESIGN AND TESTOJG. N. D. Kennedy, P. W. Ware, Simplex Wire and Cable Company 2:00 p.m. Conference on Experiences With Electric House Heating CP.* ELECTRIC HEATING OF SMALL HOMES IN THE TENNESSEE VALLEY. B. H. Martin, Tennessee Valley Authority CP.* REVERSE REFRIGERATION APPLIED TO A N E W HAVEN OFFICE BUILDING. E. H. Walton and C. A. Williams, United Illuminating Company 4:00 p.m. Open Meeting of Committee on Domestic and Commercial Applications CP.* REPORT OF SUBCOMMITTEE ON FARM APPLICA- TION. C. H. Leatham, Monongahela West Penn Public Service Company CP.* REPORT OF SUBCOMMITTEE ON HAZARDS TO FARM ANIMALS. W. B. Buchanan, Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario CP.* REPORT OF SUBCOMMITTEE ON WIRING MATTERS. Wesley Weinerth, Philadelphia Electric Company Friday, June 30 9:30 a.m. Electrochemistry and Elec- trometallurgy 44-163. THE COPPER-OXIDE RECTIFIER IN ELECTRO- CHEMICAL WORK. I. R. Smith, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-164. ELECTRONIC REGULATOR FOR A R C FURNACES. J. E. Reilly and C. E. Valentine, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-165. CHARACTERISTICS OF CHLORINATED IMPREG- NANTS IN D-C PAPER CAPACITORS. L. J. Berberich, C V. Fields, and R. E. Marbury, Westinghouse Elec- tric and Manufacturing Company 44-100. TREATMENT AND CASTING OF METALS BY ELECTROMAGNETIC FORCES. W. W. Hoke, Gaiden City, N. Y. 44-166. INDUCTION HEATING—SELECTION OF FRE- QUENCY. N. R. StanseL General Electric Company 44-167-ACO.t APPLICATION OF INDUSTRIAL GENERA- TORS TO INDUCTION HEATING. E. H. Browning, West- inghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-168. SURFACE HEATING BY INDUCTION. H. F, Storm, Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company 44-99. VOLTAGE TRANSTENTS IN ARC-FURNACE Cm- currs. Subcommittee on transient voltages in arc- furnace circuits 9:30 a.m. Transformers 44-169. PROGRESS IN IMPULSE TESTTNO OF TRANS- FORMERS. J. H. Hagenguth, General Electric Company 44-170. HIGH-VOLTAGE COMPRESSED-GAS POWER TRANSFORMERS. H. M. Hobart, consulting engineer 44-171. THE DESIGN AND OPERATING CHARACTERISTICS OF MODERN DRY-TYPE AIR-COOLED TRANSFORMERS. W. W. Satterlee, Westinghouse Electric and Manufac- turing Company 44-103. HOT-SPOT TEMPERATURES IN DRY-TYPE TRANSFORMER WINDINGS. H . C Stewart and L. C Whitman, General Electric Company CP.* STANDARD CURRENT TRANSFORMERS WITH ONE- AMPERE SECONDARY WINDING. L. F. Hunt and J. H. Vivian, Southern California Edison Company, Ltd. 9:30 a.m. Industrial Power Applica- tions 44-178. EXTENDING THE USE OF SHUNT CAPACITORS BY MEANS OF AUTOMATIC SWITCHING. W. H. Cnttiao, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-173. AUTOMATIC CONTROL AND SWITCHINO EQUIP- MENT FOR CAPACITOR BANKS AND ITS APPLICATION. T. W. Schroeder and W. C Bloomquist, General Electric Company CP.* ELECTRIC-POWER DISTRIBUTION FOR INDUSTRIAL PLANTS. Report of AIEE committee on industrial power applications CP.* DODGE CHICAGO PLANT'S ELECTRIC-POWER- DISTRIBUTION SCHEME WITH AIRPLANE-ENGINE TESTTNO POWER-RECOVERY CIRCUITS. E. L. Bailey, Chrysler Corporation 2:00 p.m. Relays 44-104. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF RELAY LITERATURE 1940-43. Working group on relay bibliography, AIEE relay subcommittee 44-172. A NEW FREQUENCY RELAY FOR POWER-SYSTEM APPLICATIONS. H. J. Carlin and J. L, Blackburn, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-94. THE EVOLUTION OF STANDARD LINES OF CURRENT TRANSFORMERS FOR HIGH OVERCURRENT CAPACITY. E. C Wentz, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-93. CURRENT-TRANSFORMER OUTPUT AND APPLICA- TION CHARTS. R. Koller, Pacific Electric Manufac- turing Corporation 44-135. A N E W CARRIER RELAYING SYSTEM. T. R. Halman and A. F. Drompp, Detroit Edison Com- pany and S. L. Goldsborough and H. W. Lensner, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 2:00 p.m. Land Transportation 44-92. MODERN MOTIVE POWER FOR THE SOROCABANA RAILWAY. R. L. Chapman and O. K. Kjelseth, General Electric Company 44-96. ECONOMICS OF TROLLEY-COACH OPERATION. G. M. Woods, Westinghouse Electric and Manufac- turing Company 2:00 p.m. Motors and Related Subjects 44-174. INTERLAMINATION RESISTANCE. J. P. Barton, Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation 44-175. TRANSIENT PERFORMANCE OF INDUCTION MO- TORS. F. J. Maginniss and N. R. Schultz, General Electric Company m 44-176. DIFFERENTIAL LEAKAGE WITH RESPECT TO THE FUNDAMENTAL WAVE AND TO THE HARMONICS. M. M. Liwschitz, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company 44-177. THE NATURE OF VD3RATION IN ELECTRIC MACHINERY. T. D. Graybeal, University of California *CP: Conference presentation; no advance copies of papers available; not intended for publication in Transactions. fACO: Advance copies only available; not intended for publication in Transactions.

St. Louis, Mo., June 26–30, 1944

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: St. Louis, Mo., June 26–30, 1944

St. Louis, Mo., June 26-30, 1944 CP.* VALUES OF COUNSELING TO HIGH-SCHOOL STU­DENTS. T. L. Jones, chairman, educational committee, St. Louis Section

CP.* HIGH-SCHOOL-STUDENT COUNSELING IN METRO­POLITAN N E W YORK AREA. S. P. Shackelton, chairman, student guidance committee, New York Section

CP.* WAYS AND MEANS OF SECTIONS CO-OPERATING WITH COLLEGE AIEE BRANCHES. R. C Gorham, Uni­versity of Pittsburgh

Thursday, June 29 9:30 a.m. Symposium on Electronic

Frequency Converters 44-143. HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ELEC­TRONIC POWER CONVERTERS. E. F. W. Alexanderson and E. L. Phillipi, General Electric Company

44-144. T H E ELECTRONIC CONVERTER FOR EXCHANGE OF POWER. F. W. Cramer, Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation, and L. W. Morton and A. G. Darling, General Electric Company

44-145. DESIGN OF AN ELECTRONIC FREQUENCY CHANGER. C. H. Willis, Princeton University, and R. W. Kuenning, E. F. Christenien, and B. D. Bed­ford, General Electric Company

44-146. SWITCHGEAR AND CONTROL FOR AN ELECTRONIC POWER CONVERTER. W. N. Girting* and A. W. Bate-man, General Electric Company

44-147. PENTODE IGNITRONS FOR ELECTRONIC POWER CONVERTERS. H. C. Steiner, J . L. Zehner, and H. E. Zuvers, General Electric Company

9:30 a.m. Aircraft Instruments 44-152. A UNIQUE MOVING-MAGNET RATIO INSTRU­MENT. F. R. Sias and D . B. Fisk, General Electric Company

44-153. RECENT ADVANCES IN AIRCRAFT-TACHOMETER DESIGN. R. G. Ballard and C. P. Hall, General Electric Company

44-150. DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS IN AIRCRAFT INSTRU­MENTS TO M E E T W A R SERVICE. C. F. Savage and J. M. Whittenton, General Electric Company

44-151. ELECTRICALLY OPERATED GYROSCOPIC INSTRU­MENTS. H. Konet, Bendix Aviation Corporation

44-148. TOTALIZING CONTENTS OF AIRCRAFT FUEL TANKS. J. R. Macintyre, General Electric Company

9:30 a.m. Heating Houses Electrically 44-154. LOAD-CALCULATION PROCEDURE FOR ELECTRIC-PANEL SPACE HEATING. B. F. Raber and F. W. Hutch->ason, University of California

•*4-155. ELECTROTHERMAL SPACE HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING. G. H. Krueger, Bonneville Power Administration

44-156. POSSIBILITIES OF H E A T PUMPS FOR HEATING HOMES. R. U. Berry* General Electric Company

9:30 a.m. Conference on Temperature Standards

1 he purpose of the conference sessions is to review nperature standards including hot-spot allowances

,r rotating machines in the fractional- and integral-rsepower sizes. These sessions represent a continua-

[ -n of the activity started at the winter technical meet-lH in New York, N . Y., January 24-28, 1944. There '"•''l be a series of conference papers presented giving '••'-tual test results of temperature tests on various types n̂d sizes of motors.

ihose expected to present conference papers are as i'Jilows:

L- E. HUdebrand, General Electric Company L- H. Hirsch, Century Electric Company

• R. Hough, Reliance Electric and Engineering Company

H. M.Joy, Master Electric Company • C. Lloyd, Robbins and Meyers, Inc.

*. Munier, Emerson Electric Manufacturing Company

• D. Phillip*, General Electric Company **• L. Schmidt, General Electric Company

□ H. Trickey, Diehl Manufacturing Company <-• P. Potter, Wagner Electric Corporation

2:00 p.m. Conference on Tempera ture Standards (continued)

2 :00 p.m. Switchgear 44-157. PROTECTION OF LARGE D-C MACHINES BY MEANS OF HIGH-SPEED CrRCurr BREAKERS. J . Elmer Housley, Aluminum Company of America and Otto Jensen , I-T-E Circuit Breaker Company

44-102. A PNEUMATIC MECHANISM FOR OUTDOOR O I L CIRCUIT BREAKERS. L. J. Linde and E. B. Rietz, General Electric Company

44-158. IMPROVED SELECTIVE TRIPPING OF L O W -VOLTAGE Am CIRCUIT BREAKERS. C. P. West, Westing-house Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-97. FUSING PRACTICES ON DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS—II. J . S. Parsons and J. M. Wallace, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-159. FAULT PROTECTION ON SHIPBOARD A-C POWER-DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS. Captain H. G. Rickover and P. N. Ross, Bureau of Ships, Navy Department

2 :00 p.m. Electronics and Measure­ments

44-78. DEVELOPMENT OF EXCITRON-TYPE RECTIFDIR. H. Winograd, Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company

44-11. ANALYSIS OF RECTIFIER CIRCUITS. E. F. Christensen and C C Herskind, General Electric Company, and C. H. Willis, Princeton University

44-160. OPERATION OF RECTIFIERS UNDER U N B A L ­ANCED CONDITIONS. E. F. Christensen and M. M. Morack, General Electric Company

44-161. A RESONANT-CAvrrY METHOD FOR MEASURING DrELECTRic PROPERTIES AT ULTRAHIOH FREQUENCIES. C. N . Works, T. W. Dakin, and F. C. Boggs, Westing-house Electric and Manufacturing Company

C.P.* HIOH-FREQUENCY CABLE DESIGN AND TESTOJG. N. D . Kennedy , P. W. Ware, Simplex Wire and Cable Company

2:00 p.m. Conference on Experiences With Electric House Heating

CP.* ELECTRIC HEATING OF SMALL HOMES IN THE TENNESSEE VALLEY. B. H. Martin, Tennessee Valley Authority

CP.* REVERSE REFRIGERATION APPLIED TO A N E W HAVEN OFFICE BUILDING. E. H. Walton and C. A. Williams, United Illuminating Company

4 :00 p.m. Open Meeting of Committee on Domestic and Commercial Applications

CP.* REPORT OF SUBCOMMITTEE ON FARM APPLICA­TION. C. H. Leatham, Monongahela West Penn Public Service Company

CP.* REPORT OF SUBCOMMITTEE ON HAZARDS TO FARM ANIMALS. W. B. Buchanan, Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario

CP.* REPORT OF SUBCOMMITTEE ON WIRING MATTERS. Wesley Weinerth, Philadelphia Electric Company

Friday, June 30 9:30 a.m. Electrochemistry and Elec­

trometallurgy 44-163. T H E COPPER-OXIDE RECTIFIER IN ELECTRO­CHEMICAL WORK. I. R. Smith, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-164. ELECTRONIC REGULATOR FOR A R C FURNACES. J. E. Reilly and C. E. Valentine, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-165. CHARACTERISTICS OF CHLORINATED IMPREG-NANTS IN D-C PAPER CAPACITORS. L. J . Berberich, C V. Fields, and R. E. Marbury, Westinghouse Elec­tric and Manufacturing Company

44-100. TREATMENT AND CASTING OF METALS BY ELECTROMAGNETIC FORCES. W. W. Hoke, Gaiden City, N. Y.

44-166. INDUCTION HEATING—SELECTION OF FRE­QUENCY. N. R. StanseL General Electric Company

44-167-ACO.t APPLICATION OF INDUSTRIAL GENERA­TORS TO INDUCTION HEATING. E. H. Browning, West­inghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-168. SURFACE HEATING BY INDUCTION. H . F, Storm, Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company

44-99. VOLTAGE TRANSTENTS IN ARC-FURNACE Cm-currs. Subcommittee on transient voltages in arc-furnace circuits

9:30 a.m. Transformers 44-169. PROGRESS IN IMPULSE TESTTNO OF TRANS­FORMERS. J . H . Hagenguth , General Electric Company

44-170. HIGH-VOLTAGE COMPRESSED-GAS POWER TRANSFORMERS. H . M . Hobart, consulting engineer

44-171. T H E DESIGN AND OPERATING CHARACTERISTICS OF MODERN D R Y - T Y P E AIR-COOLED TRANSFORMERS. W. W. Satterlee, Westinghouse Electric and Manufac­turing Company

44-103. H O T - S P O T TEMPERATURES IN D R Y - T Y P E TRANSFORMER WINDINGS. H . C Stewart and L. C Whitman, General Electric Company

CP.* STANDARD CURRENT TRANSFORMERS W I T H O N E -AMPERE SECONDARY WINDING. L. F. Hunt and J . H. Vivian, Southern California Edison Company, Ltd.

9:30 a.m. Industr ial Power Applica­tions

44-178. EXTENDING THE U S E OF SHUNT CAPACITORS BY MEANS OF AUTOMATIC SWITCHING. W. H . Cnttiao, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-173. AUTOMATIC CONTROL AND SWITCHINO EQUIP­MENT FOR CAPACITOR BANKS AND ITS APPLICATION. T. W. Schroeder and W. C Bloomquist, General Electric Company

CP.* ELECTRIC-POWER DISTRIBUTION FOR INDUSTRIAL PLANTS. Report of AIEE committee on industrial power applications

CP.* DODGE CHICAGO PLANT'S ELECTRIC-POWER-DISTRIBUTION SCHEME W I T H AIRPLANE-ENGINE TESTTNO POWER-RECOVERY CIRCUITS. E. L. Bailey, Chrysler Corporation

2:00 p.m. Relays 44-104. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF RELAY LITERATURE 1940-43. Working group on relay bibliography, AIEE relay subcommittee

44-172. A N E W FREQUENCY RELAY FOR POWER-SYSTEM APPLICATIONS. H. J . Carlin and J . L, Blackburn, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-94. T H E EVOLUTION OF STANDARD LINES OF CURRENT TRANSFORMERS FOR H I G H OVERCURRENT CAPACITY. E. C Wentz, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-93. CURRENT-TRANSFORMER OUTPUT AND APPLICA­TION CHARTS. R. Koller, Pacific Electric Manufac­turing Corporation

44-135. A N E W CARRIER RELAYING SYSTEM. T. R. Halman and A. F. Drompp, Detroit Edison Com­pany and S. L. Goldsborough and H. W. Lensner, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

2:00 p .m. Land Transportat ion 44-92. MODERN MOTIVE POWER FOR THE SOROCABANA RAILWAY. R. L. Chapman and O. K. Kjelseth, General Electric Company

44-96. ECONOMICS OF TROLLEY-COACH OPERATION. G. M. Woods, Westinghouse Electric and Manufac­turing Company

2:00 p .m. Motors a n d Related Subjects 44-174. INTERLAMINATION RESISTANCE. J . P . Barton, Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation

44-175. TRANSIENT PERFORMANCE OF INDUCTION M O ­TORS. F. J . Maginniss and N. R. Schultz, General Electric Company m

44-176. DIFFERENTIAL LEAKAGE W I T H RESPECT TO THE FUNDAMENTAL W A V E AND TO THE HARMONICS. M. M. Liwschitz, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

44-177. T H E NATURE OF VD3RATION IN ELECTRIC MACHINERY. T. D . Graybeal, University of California

*CP: Conference presentation; no advance copies of papers available; not intended for publication in Transactions.

fACO: Advance copies only available; not intended for publication in Transactions.