|
The
Industrial Age
n
the early years of the 20th century, electricity became the power
behind American industry. Electric utilities, appliance manufacturers,
and communications companies proliferated. This was also the era
of industrial development; Henry Ford organized the first U.S. assembly
line in 1913.
 |
| NIST
conducted life testing research on incandescent lamps as part
of an effort to develop standards and specifications. |
Most of the
values for electrical units available to science and industry were
imprecise and tentative, so NIST performed electrical research and
testing. Thanks in part to this work, absolute electrical measurements
became more accurate than was generally believed possible. The Institute
helped improve the accuracy of the values established for the primary
electrical units, thereby helping industry make better products
and supporting international redefinitions of the ampere, ohm, and
volt. NIST also studied underground corrosion of gas mains and water
pipes caused by the electric current flowing to city trolleys and
came up with almost 20 methods of mitigating this costly national
problem.
NIST set to
work saving money for the federal government, which bought 1 million
incandescent lamps per year and found them quickly burning out.
Tests on the lamps showed they did not conform to either the manufacturer's
standards or federal specifications. Similar problems were found
with a whole catalog of supplies. The Institute tested everything
from an elevator cable for the Washington Monument to inks for the
Government Printing Office.
NIST also performed
materials research. In the early years of the century, thousands
of train derailments were caused by broken rails, broken wheels,
flanges, and axles. From 1912 to 1923, NIST subjected failed parts
to chemical, microscopic, and mechanical tests and investigated
railroad iron and steel constituents and manufacturing. The Institute
reported that the steel industry had not established uniform practices
in the manufacture of rails and wheels. By 1930, as better steel
went into rails and trains-with NIST's help in standardizing materials
and processing-the rate of accidents from these causes fell by two-thirds.
Because the
analysis of materials could not be separated from their synthesis,
NIST began to acquire experimental factories to study the effects
of manufacturing conditions on product quality. These factories
became especially useful when World War I began in Europe in 1914.
NIST was asked to help address many military needs, from experiments
with concrete ships to the testing of various metals to the making
of high-precision gage blocks needed to manufacture interchangeable
parts. In some projects, the Institute introduced new fundamental
principles and concepts of quantitative measurements to industry.
By late 1917, shortly before the war ended in 1918, the military
services were requesting some sort of scientific work from the Institute
every 20 minutes.
Among its accomplishments,
NIST helped modernize U.S. aviation. In the decade after the Wright
brothers' first flight in 1903, U.S. military forces had only several
dozen aircraft, all obsolete by European standards. All sorts of
aviation instruments were sent to the Institute for testing, and
many were modified or overhauled entirely before being adopted by
the military. Institute studies yielded the first quantitative data
reported anywhere on the power- producing qualities of fuels. The
first serious U.S. studies of the aerodynamics of flight were performed
by NIST, which built a wind tunnel with a 2.7 meter (9 foot) propeller
that was used to study wind stresses, airspeed indicators, and other
instruments.
Both before
and after the war, NIST carried out considerable basic research,
much of it involving the determination and refinement of physical
constants-quantities believed to be the same for all observers and
for all time. Some of these were important in science, including
standards development, whereas others were needed by industry (the
refrigeration industry, for example, needed to know the specific
heat of ice) to improve products and processes. By the end of the
war, it was clear that scientific methods could contribute to industrial
technology, and that fundamental science could have far-reaching
consequences at some later time. Industries expanded their scientific
staffs; one legacy of World War I was new fields of industrial research.
In its first
two decades, NIST won an international reputation for its achievements
in physical measurements, standards development, and test methods.
Through its standards of measurement, instrumentation, and performance
it sought to raise the scientific level of industry. The techniques
of mass production introduced during the war gave an enormous impetus
to the standardization of methods and materials.
Next Section
(The Roaring Twenties)
Previous Section (The Founding)
Back to Table of Contents
Date created:
11/2/00
Last updated: 11/9/00
Contact: inquiries@nist.gov
|
 |
|