Westinghouse Round Type Wattmeter, 1902

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Artifact Overview

In the late 1800s, companies that supplied electricity to consumers needed a way to measure how much customers used -- and then charge them accordingly. Inventive electrical engineers developed various methods to measure electric power. Induction meters that employed magnetic fields to rotate a disc or cylinder to register energy usage would become the standard. Continued improvements made these wattmeters more compact and reliable.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Wattmeter

Date Made

1902

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

58.95.55

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford. Gift of Edwin M. Parre.

Material

Metal
Glass (Material)

Color

Gray (Color)
White (Color)
Black (Color)

Dimensions

Height: 8 in
Width: 7 in
Length: 6 in

Inscriptions

on face: WESTINGHOUSE ELEC. MFG. CO./ PITTSBURG [sic], PA, U.S.A./ SINGLE PHASE WATTMETER on plate: PATENTED/ MAY 1. 1888/ [...]/ AUG. 9. 1898 on plate at bottom: STYLE NO. 6911/ SERIAL NO. 161345
Westinghouse Round Type Wattmeter, 1902