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Fred Upton, Thomas Edison and Whirlpool
Fred Upton, Thomas Edison and Whirlpool ^ | 11/13/10 | Jen Kuznicki

Posted on 11/13/2010 11:13:23 AM PST by jenk

Congressman Fred Upton is the grandson of the co-founder of Whirlpool.

I find that interesting.

Thomas Edison has been credited with bringing light to a world of darkness, but he also has been credited with coming up with the FIRST MODEL OF A COMPLETE CENTRAL POWER STATION.

Power generation to the masses gave rise to many more inventions, like the electric clothes washer.

So, basically if not for Edison, Whirlpool may never have been founded, because at the time, Edison was competing with other scientists in both America and Europe. If Edison had not exhibited electric generation to the masses in New York and Massachusetts, the Uptons of Michigan may not have started a multi-billion dollar industry, benefiting nearly every household in the modern world and families who worked for and are still working for Whirlpool.

Fred Upton went to college, received a Bachelor's degree, and immediately began work as a staffer for David Stockman, an economist who would eventually become part of the Reagan Administration.

Would he have been able to do that if there was no Thomas Edison?

Upton wants to become the chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, yet he introduced a bill to ban the incandescent light bulb by 2012. That bill became law, and it needs to be repealed.

It seems to me that Upton should have been shouting against banning the work of the man who buttered his bread.

(Excerpt) Read more at jennerationx.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Politics; Science
KEYWORDS: congress; edison; fredupton; michigan; thomasedison; upton; whirlpool
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1 posted on 11/13/2010 11:13:31 AM PST by jenk
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To: jenk

http://heatball.de/en/


2 posted on 11/13/2010 11:19:22 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: jenk

We should also not forget that it was Nikola Tesla that discovered/invented AC (alternating current)which made it possible to send electricity over long distances.

Without the use of AC, power stations would not work. Edison was against the idea of AC and even threw Tesla out of his lab since he thought AC was too dangerous.


3 posted on 11/13/2010 11:20:02 AM PST by PDGearhead (Obama's lack of citizenship)
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To: jenk
"During its use as a heater, HEATBALLS have an unavoidable emission of light in the visible spectrum. This light is harmless and cannot be used as a reason for reclamation.

http://eurlex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2009:076:0003:0016:EN:PDF "

4 posted on 11/13/2010 11:21:11 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: PDGearhead

Does that have anything to do with the mandate to ban the incandescent light bulb? No.


5 posted on 11/13/2010 11:22:38 AM PST by jenk (Thomas Edison was a genius.)
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To: PDGearhead
3,000 V DC seemed to work well for the Milwaukee Road over long distances in MT and WA.


6 posted on 11/13/2010 11:25:47 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: PDGearhead
Also Westinghouse War of Currents
7 posted on 11/13/2010 11:28:04 AM PST by smokingfrog (Because you don't live near a bakery doesn't mean you have to go without cheesecake.)
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To: Paladin2

8 posted on 11/13/2010 11:35:05 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: Paladin2

9 posted on 11/13/2010 11:36:16 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: jenk

How many times will you be posting this today?


10 posted on 11/13/2010 11:46:03 AM PST by End Times Sentinel (In Memory of my Dear Friend Henry Lee II)
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To: Paladin2

3 KV DC for the catenary and the locomotives.

However, this was delivered to the catenary by about 22 substations, which were fed from (typically) 100 KV AC from generating stations, and then transformed down and rectified for the catenary.


11 posted on 11/13/2010 12:41:14 PM PST by Erasmus (Personal goal: Have a bigger carbon footprint than Tony Robbins.)
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To: Owl_Eagle

How many times will I be posting what? I’ve posted three articles, is that too many to read for you? If so, don’t.


12 posted on 11/13/2010 12:45:53 PM PST by jenk (Thomas Edison was a genius.)
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To: PDGearhead

A couple of amplifications.

Tesla didn’t actually discover AC. He had a vision (literally!) of a synchronous motor being driven from a polyphase AC distribution system.

George Westinghouse invested heavily from his train airbrake fortune into AC generation/transmission/distribution, having received a report from a lieutenant about a pioneering system in Hungary.

He employed Tesla to engineer this into a polyphase system. Westinghouse’s biggest boost came when he secured the prime lighting contract for the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago.

Tesla was there, demonstrating his first-gen 2-phase system (soon to be increased to 3 phases, as it has been ever since). He gave a talk attended by perhaps half of the world’s great scientific minds at the time.

Now, the reason Edison thought (and shouted from the rooftops) that AC was dangerous because of the high voltages that AC employed. Not in the household, of course; there, the AC promoters would provide 110 VAC (RMS), to give DC equivalent performance to lights, heaters, and the soon-to-be-invented induction motor. So the danger lay in the high voltages outside, in the distribution system.

Many of us here have read of the grisly electrocutions that Edison staged in his battle against the AC interests; demonstrations that had no technical or scientific merit whatsoever.

And the irony of it is that this supposed defect of dangerously high voltages was the very aspect of AC to win, inexorably, over DC: the enablement of economical transmission of large amounts of power, allowing economy of both scale and location in the building of power plants.

And Edison knew it. He knew that all the copper available in the world would not allow to him build a single DC power plant that could serve all of New York City. In his late years, he privately admitted that AC was the only possible way for the electric age to develop.


13 posted on 11/13/2010 1:05:36 PM PST by Erasmus (Personal goal: Have a bigger carbon footprint than Tony Robbins.)
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To: jenk

Ironically a man named Francis Upton was one of Edison’s right-hand men, in the generation immediately prior to Fred Upton’s grandfather.

I have not uncovered any genealogical links between them, however.

Years ago, I did some work for an appliance manufacturer on Upton Drive. Until now, I had wondered if it was named after Edison’s guy. Apparently not.


14 posted on 11/13/2010 1:10:06 PM PST by Erasmus (Personal goal: Have a bigger carbon footprint than Tony Robbins.)
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To: PDGearhead

Not only that, Edison demonstrated the “lack of safety” of alternating current by electrocuting a large circus elephant named Topsy, at Coney Island’s Luna Park, and filming all this to distribute to municipalities to show how much safer DC electricity was. Poor Topsy had killed some trainers, the last one of whom fed him a lit cigarette. So banning incandescent bulbs would be right in line with major company’s interests, just like frying a poor damned elephant.
This law should be repealed and Upton has NO business being head of that committee.


15 posted on 11/13/2010 1:12:57 PM PST by John S Mosby (Sic Semper Tyrannis)
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To: Erasmus

Yes, I know, I found that interesting while digging around, Francis was a mathematician, who, in one account, was scolded by Edison for going through long processes to find out the volume of a certain bulb instead of filling it with mercury and weighing it.

Edison’s mind constantly jumped, and when he was wealthy enough to have a surgical procedure to fix his hearing, denied himself, saying that he would find extra noise impossible to deal with. It would have messed up the way he thought.


16 posted on 11/13/2010 2:16:30 PM PST by jenk (Thomas Edison was a genius.)
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To: John S Mosby

I would have fried the elephant if it killed people, what is your point exactly?

Bunch of ninnys on these threads...what about tesla? what about ac? blah blah blah

FOCUS!


17 posted on 11/13/2010 2:20:05 PM PST by jenk (Thomas Edison was a genius.)
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To: Erasmus

Just agreeing that a DC incandescent light bulb would work fine.


18 posted on 11/13/2010 2:32:53 PM PST by Paladin2
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To: jenk
How many times will I be posting what? I’ve posted three articles, is that too many to read for you? If so, don’t.

Huh? Don't what? Double post your boring blog dribble?

Look, it's one thing to pimp your blog in the hopeless dream that someone might possibly find the vomit you spout from the quagmire you call a brain interesting, at the expense of JimRob and those who financially support this site.

It's quite another to serially post the same boring article and attack well established FReepers for pointing out the stupidity of your writing. How about letting your "blog" go down in flaming failure on its own lack of relevancy, without polluting this site.

19 posted on 11/13/2010 8:04:03 PM PST by End Times Sentinel (In Memory of my Dear Friend Henry Lee II)
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To: Owl_Eagle

Look, you are thick. I did not ever post the same article. You need to learn to read.

Pimping my blog? I’m trying to inform you. I see that is an insurmountable task in this case.

I have supported this site as well, and I’ve been here a while, so back off.

Are you in love with Upton or something?


20 posted on 11/14/2010 9:27:14 AM PST by jenk (Thomas Edison was a genius.)
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