Life …show more content…
The flaw with his theory, the current could not produce high or low voltages.Tesla, another inventor believed he had discovered a solution. The alternate current, reversed the direction an approximate amount of time per second, sixty in the U.S. This could easily be transferred by a transformer. Just like any rivalry, the opponents twisted and changed information. Edison started saying that the AC current was more dangerous, to prove his point he electrocuted a stray animal with the AC current. Today our electricity is still powered by Tesla’s theory, however computers, solar cells, and much more are powerd by the direct current. “It would appear that the AC current had all obligated the Direct Current” ( War of currents ).
What if Thomas Edison had never invented his inventions? People attempted to create the successful incandescent bulb before Edison but failed. Without Edison the lightbulb could have been made 20 years later for all we know. Without Edison the motion picture camera, phonograph and the incandescent bulb would have never been present. Without the phonograph, we probably would not have record players, early stereos, and tape …show more content…
“If he hadn’t failed, Edison might not have been america’s most well known innovator” (learning from failure.) If he succeeded the first time he wouldn’t be well known. Edison, similar to other entrepreneurs was certain that there was a problem and it had a solution. Thomas learned not to get discouraged by his failures. Each failure taught him to look back and improve his process. The most successful people in life have failed more than one time in their lives.
Thomas Edison’s light bulb research began in 1878. In October 1878, Edison filed his first patent “ Improvement in electric lights”. His experiment involved the testing of many different metal filaments. Edison then resorting to a carbon cardboard based filament that burned for thirteen and a half hours. By November he filed for a U.S patent for an electric lamp. By new years he was demonstrating lamps using carbonized filaments to large crowds at the Menlo Park laboratory. Several months later he discovered a bamboo filament could last for 1200