Porcelain Insulator News
by Jack H. Tod
Reprinted from "INSULATORS - Crown Jewels of the Wire", August 1974, page 10
Preferably direct porcelain news item and questions directly to Jack H. Tod,
3427 N. 47th Place, Phoenix, Ariz. 85018. All mail will be answered if reply
stamp is enclosed, and the most newsworthy items and questions of general
interest will be published as space permits.
HOW MUCH DO YOU REALLY KNOW ABOUT PORCELAIN INSULATORS?
As a little diversion for the dog days, we've prepared the following quiz for
you. Really test yourself and try to answer all the questions before consulting
the answers following the quiz. If you get 20 of the 50 questions right, we know
you're a porcelain collector. Thirty right means you're a very studious
porcelain buff, and it you score 40 or more correct, maybe you should fill in as
editor of this column while I take a vacation.
PORCELAIN INSULATOR QUIZ
-
Rank the following companies first to last by when they started making
porcelain pin types:
__ Victor Insulators, Inc.
__ Hartford Faience Co.
__ Ohio
Brass Co.
__ Gladding Corp.
__ Pinco
__ Lapp
-
Ohio Brass Company's insulator plant is at Mansfield, Ohio.
__ True __
False
-
Guy strain insulators are designed for interlocking wire loops because
porcelain is approximately 16 times stronger in compression than it is in
tension.
__ True __ False
-
Which of the following companies still make pin types?
__ General Electric
Co. (Locke)
__ Lapp
__ Westinghouse
__ Thomas
__ Jerrery-Dewitt
__ Finlay
-
Line Post insulators are individually tested in each quadrant direction at
only 50% of the mechanical load rating.
__ True __ False
-
The industry standard for acceptance of any given production lot of pin
types is that 12-1/2% of the lot selected at random must all pass electrical
puncture test without exception.
__ True __ False
-
The only reason why one surface of the insulator is left unglazed is to
afford a firing surface which won't weld itself to the resting surface in the
kiln.
__ True __ False
-
Dry process pin types were popularly used in low voltage applications
because they were considerably cheaper to make than wet process insulators.
__
True __ False
-
Forestry insulators are usually made as split knobs because it is cheaper
to make them that way, and the crack between halves does no harm on phone lines.
__ True __ False
-
One reason why thru-hole "Mine Type" insulators were used in
mines on vertical pins was to allow moisture from above to run down through the
pin hole instead of onto the outer surface where it would short the wire.
__
True __ False
-
All porcelain pin types meant for use in power applications have a
conductor groove in the crown top.
__ True __ False
-
The firing temperature of electrical porcelain is:
__900 degrees F
__1480 degrees F
__1850 degrees F
__2200 degrees F
-
A well made glass insulator has approximately the same dielectric
strength as a well made porcelain.
__ True __ False
-
The tooling used to make porcelain insulators must allow for a firing
shrink of approximately 12%.
__ True __ False
-
Porcelain insulators are glazed to prevent the absorption of moisture by
the body of the insulator.
__ True __ False
-
Do porcelain pin types ever have drip points?
__ Yes __ No
-
Conventional suspension insulator disks with the cap cemented on top and
the pin cemented into the bottom place the porcelain in tension.
__ True __
False
-
Which of the following companies rarely marked their unipart pin type
insulators?
__ Pittsburg High Voltage
__ Hartford Faience Co.
__ General
Porcelain Co.
__ New Lexington High Voltage Porcelain Co.
-
Which of the following companies marked essentially every pin type they
made?
__ Locke
__ Thomas
__ Ohio Brass
-
Various porcelain insulator companies have collectively made less than
12,000 different types of insulators over the years.
__ True __ False
-
All porcelain pin types with two side grooves and without a top groove
are transposition insulators.
__ True __ False
-
Most current pin type power insulators are basically little different
from designs created over 50 years ago and indicate it's hard to improve on a
sound original design.
__ True __ False
-
Fogbowl and Fog Type insulators are used in areas of contamination even
though fog is never present there.
__ True __ False
-
Embossed (raised letters) markings are found on dry process porcelains
where the dies can be punched with the marking as with dies for making glass
insulators. There is one example of a true embossed marking on wet process pin
types. What marking in this?
____________________
-
Match up each of the following marking methods with the stage of
manufacturing process where the marking is applied to the insulator.
__ Embossed
(a) just before glazing dried insulator
__ Incuse (b) marking
incorporated in forming die
__ Underglaze (c) immediately after green trimming
__ Overglaze (d) after kiln firing & electrical test
__ Sandblast (e) last
step before kiln firing
-
Nail knobs and small solid knobs are occasionally found with black, brown
or blue glazes, and these were used to code special switching circuits.
__ True
__ False
-
The standard glaze during the early years of porcelain manufacture was
white; the Imperial and early Thomas insulator styles are rare to unknown in
brown.
__ True __ False
-
A closed-end guy strain insulator is one with a wire hole through each of
its ends.
__ True __ False
-
A "reversible" cleat or split knob is one where both the mating
halves are identical with each other.
__ True __ False
-
The term "ceramic" is an incorrect one for modern pin type
porcelain insulators.
__ True __ False
-
Fred Locke was the first one to make high-voltage porcelain insulators.
__ True __ False
-
Prior to the development of electrical porcelain wiring insulators in the
early 1890's, wooden insulators were used for surface wiring and led to many
fires.
__ True __ False
-
Several insulator manufactories burned to the ground, but which of the
following had the distinction of having burned to the ground twice?
__ Jeffery-Devitt,
Kenova, W. Va.
__ Lima Insulator Co., Lima, N.Y.
__ New Haven Porcelain Co., New
Haven, W. Va.
__ Imperial Porcelain Works, Trenton, N.J.
-
It is a slow and expensive process to make insulators by casting liquid
clay slip, and no company has ever based its main production on this method.
__
True __ False
-
Paraffin-resist methods of affording an unglazed
firing surface are
relatively modern, and any insulator with a firing surface made by carving,
sanding or fettling off the unwanted glaze can be assumed to have been made
before about the time of the first World War.
__ True __ False
-
Which of the following glaze colors is extremely hard to make on
porcelain and has never been used in any regular production of porcelain
insulators?
__ Blue
__ Green
__ Red
__ Yellow
-
White insulators are always much scarcer than brown ones and are
therefore worth more in all cases.
__ True __ False
-
There are many varieties of blue porcelain pin types, but all of these
have been made by only 3 companies.
__ True __ False
-
The modern "sky" glaze porcelains are made to a given
specification of the National Electrical Manufacturer's Assn. and are relatively
identical for each company.
__ True __ False
-
A number of porcelain insulator styles have been made to copy the various
amber glass insulator styles.
__ True __ False
-
Collectors do not want multi art pin types (two or more parts cemented
together), and they have little or no collector value.
__ True __ False
-
Low-voltage secondary distribution pin types are generally not
manufactured with "radio treated" tops because radio interference
problems usually don't occur on lines operating under about 6600 volts.
__ True
__ False
-
Collector value of porcelain pin types is determined mainly by the
insulator style (shape).
__ True __ False
-
Hewlett-type strain and suspension insulators lost their popularity
because they were less reliable than the modern styles of suspension insulators.
__ True __ False
-
Suspension insulators used in horizontal strings (the deadend position)
must be rated for higher voltage because the underside in completely wetted by
rain.
__ True __ False
-
Illinois Electric Porcelain sold insulators under "The Macomb
Line" throughout its life, and the M in the Triangle-M Illinois marking
stands for "Macomb".
__ True __ False
-
One U.S. pin type manufacturer was known for making many insulators to
customer specifications and sold a sizeable amount of its production to Canadian
companies and to various foreign countries. What manufacturer was this?
______________________
-
Johns-Manville made a number of different porcelain insulator styles,
some being marked "JOHNS-MANVILLE"
__ True __ False
-
Large insulators with flat metal base plates and top caps are used for
and referred to as "Switch & Bus" insulators.
__ True __ False
-
As compared with glass insulators, marking errors on porcelain pin types
are relatively few in number.
__ True __ False
PORCELAIN QUIZ ANSWERS
-
Ohio Brass (1907), Lapp (1916), Pinco (1920), Hartford (1925), Victor
Insulators Inc. (1935), Gladding (1963)
-
False, That's where the main company
is, but the insulator plant is at Barberton, a suburb of Akron, Ohio.
-
True.
-
None of them. The only companies still at it are I-T-E, Pinco, Chance,
McGraw-Edison, O-B and Gladding.
-
True, the theory being that any firing flaw which would break at full load
will break at 50% (so help me Hannah!).
-
False. Every single insulator is 100%
electrically tested and is rejected if it does not pass.
-
True.
-
True.
-
False. They are made that way so they can be installed on Lines already strung,
as in replacing broken insulators, and also so that new lines need not be
threaded through all insulators before tensioning.
-
True. Mine insulator pins were made fluted or in split form to assist in
the passage of water. Also when used an duplex insulators upside down under
crossarms. , they will not trap water which would freeze and break the
insulator.
-
False. Side-tie styles are commonly used for secondary
distribution circuits.
-
2200 degrees F.
-
True; the disadvantage of glass
insulators for many power applications is their relatively inferior mechanical
strength.
-
True.
-
False. Electrical porcelain is completely nonporous. The reason
for the glaze is to furnish a surface which is more readily cleaned by
rainwater, and also to provide a less objectionable color than the white body.
-
Yes, they all do. In porcelain nomenclature, any exposed edge or rim from
which water drips to a lover level is termed a drip point.
-
False. As shown in this sketch, proper design of the cap and pin pressure
surfaces places the porcelain in compression as it should be.
-
Pittsburg and
New Lexington.
-
Ohio Brass Co.
-
False. The number would exceed a million
different kinds. Just one company alone (Lapp) has issued over 300,000 drawings
for various porcelain insulator designs they have made to date.
-
False. Many power insulators have one or more grooves cut under the
tie-wire groove solely to create a longer electrical leakage path from tie wire
to pin.
-
True.
-
True. The name stemmed from the fact that flashovers on
contaminated insulators tended to be triggered when the fog rolled in, but
contamination is still a problem in areas which don't even have fog.
-
The
Ohio Dream Co. marking used up until 1940. Thereafter the marking is a pseudo
embossed marking made with a stamp after trimming, and this we term
"recess-embossed".
-
Embossed - b; Incuse - c; Underglaze - a; overglaze - e; Sandblast - d.
-
False. These were included in outdoor radio antenna kits sold by various
radio companies and mailorder houses, and which included a roll of antenna wire,
a couple of radio strain insulators, a lightning arrestor, etc. The dark glaze
colors made these items less conspicuous on the house.
-
True. On the other
hand, Fred Locke started out with a light brown glaze in 1898 and didn't develop
a white glaze until 1901. Most items with "Fred Locke" markings are
much scarcer in white than they are in brown.
-
True.
-
True.
-
False. It is technically correct, but the more
definitive term "porcelain" is used to differentiate from other
insulators made of steatite, alumina, etc.
-
False. He was preceded by
General Electric (Schenectady), Peru Elec. Mfg. Co., Imperial Porcelain Works
and Thomas. After only jobbing glass insulators for many years and porcelain
insulators for about three years, he built his own porcelain insulator plant in
1898. He was considered the father of the industry because his plant was built
exclusively for the manufacture of wet process high-voltage insulators.
-
True.
-
Lima Insulator Co. In 1908, rebuilt and bought out by Locke
Insulator Mfg. Co. in 1910, only to burn down again in 1919 (subsequently
rebuilt and owned by Pinco). The other plants listed only burned to the ground
one time each. The Kenova plant was never rebuilt.
-
False. Jeffery-Dewitt
built its plant for the production of suspension insulators by casting and made
nearly all its insulator types by casting, and this competitive disadvantage was
a factor in the company's demise in the 1930's.
-
True.
-
Red, which fires to black at normal firing temperature. Ohio Brass made a
small lot with "great difficulty" for a fire alarm company. They ended
up firing them in the lab kiln and said, "never, never, never again."
-
False. This is true for most relatively modern items, but many early items
were normally made in white, and brown ones of these are rare and desirably
varieties.
-
False. All companies since the early 1900's have made blue ones
at one time or another either as stock items or on special order.
-
True. The polar coordinates on the Munsell "gray" color chart
are specified for hue and intensity, and it is up to each manufacture to brew
his own glaze slip to match this color specification within a given tolerance.
-
False. It's the other way around.
-
False. The modern, large multiparts
have little collector appeal, but older and more unusual styles and colors are
desirable collector items, especially the smaller varieties.
-
True
-
False.
Value is based on a combination of insulator style, color and rarity of marking.
Each factor in itself can make an otherwise worthless item a good item, just as
is with glass insulators. The object is to find an unusual style in a good color
and with a rare marking, and then you have a "super goody".
-
False. They were possibly even more reliable, but, their complicated
assembly hardware did not lead itself to easy replacement of faulty units in
strings on activated transmission lines.
-
False. In fact, on some lines the
ones in the vertical strings can fail first due to underside contamination
deposits not being washed away by rainwater.
-
True.
-
Pittsburg High Voltage Insulator Co.
-
False. J-M never had a
porcelain plant. They cataloged and sold a very large line of porcelains, most
of which were Thomas insulators, but never made then. Pittsburg, New Lexington
and possible others made insulators for J-M and marked many of these with the
J-M name for the customer.
-
True.
-
True.
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