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William Stanley (inventor) - Wikipedia
William Ford Robinson Stanley (2 February 1829 – 14 August 1909) was an English inventor with 78 patents filed in both the United Kingdom and the United States of America.
William Stanley - Engineering Hall of Fame - Edison Tech Center
William Stanley (1858-1916) was an inventor and engineer. He developed the first practical transformer (which spurred the development of AC power) as well as other developments; like an improved electric meter and the first metal thermos bottle (vacuum flask).
William Stanley, Jr. - National Inventors Hall of Fame® Inductee
William Stanley Jr. invented an array of electrical devices and is best known for designing the induction coil, the first practical transformer that created alternating current (AC) electricity.
William Stanley, Jr | Encyclopedia.com
William Stanley, Jr. 1858-1916 American inventor who designed the induction coil, or transformer, that revolutionized the transmission of electricity. This device allowed the transmission of electricity over long distances via alternating current (AC), rather than the impractical direct current (DC) in use at that time.
William Stanley Jr. Collection | Union College Schaffer Library
William Stanley Jr. (1858-1916) was an inventor and engineer who held 129 patents. He is responsible for pioneering the development and use of alternating current for electric light and power.
William Stanley Jr. - Lamp Tech
He is remembered as one who was responsible for the development of a transformer that increased the distance over which power could be sent over small wires from a half-mile to several hundred miles. He also contributed to the development of an alternating current induction motor.
William Stanley’s Search For Immortality
In the late nineteenth century in the electrical industry—as in other industries and other times—there was a troubled symbiosis between even such powerful corporations as Westinghouse and GE and so fiercely independent an inventor as William Stanley.
William Stanley, Jr. - Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias
He was the first person to make an electrical transformer. In 1890 Stanley founded the Stanley Electric Manufacturing Company in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. In 1903 the General Electric Corporation purchased a controlling interest in the firm.
History: Rediscovering William Stanley, Jr.—Part 1 - IEEE Xplore
William Stanley, Jr. pioneered the development and use of ac for electric light and power applications. He conceived solutions before others recognized the problems. He contributed in a major way to a major invention: the transformer, the key to large-scale exploitation of ac electricity.
William Stanley Jr. - Wikipedia
William Stanley Jr. (November 28, 1858 – May 14, 1916) was an American physicist born in Brooklyn, New York. During his career, he obtained 129 patents covering a variety of electric devices. [1]
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