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Scientific American Supplement, No. 821, September 26, 1891 by Various
page 53 of 161 (32%)
pipe, but makes the most perfect cable conduit, as it affords a
perfectly smooth surface to draw the cable over and give a good duct
edge.

It is not necessary, however, in small installations of cable,
especially where additional connections will not be of frequent
occurrence, to go to the expense of subways, for cable may be safely
laid in the ground in trenches filled in with earth, or can be inclosed
in a plain wooden box or a wooden box filled with pitch.

There are, of course, many localities where, if the cable is laid in
contact with the earth, a chemical action would take place which might
result in the destruction of the cable.

Underground cables are of the following classes: 1. Rubber insulated
cables, insulated with rubber or other homogeneous material. 2. Fibrous
cables, so called from the conductors being covered with some fibrous
material, as cotton or paper, which is saturated with the insulating
material, paraffine, resin oil, or some special compound. Under this
latter head is also included the dry core paper cables.

The first thing to do is to get the cable drawn into the ducts, and on
the proper accomplishment of this depends to a great extent the success
or failure of the whole installation. Probably the ducts have been wired
when the subway was constructed, but if not a wire must be run through
as a means of pulling in the draw rope. There are several kinds of
apparatus for getting a wire through a duct--rods, flexible tapes,
mechanical "creepers," etc.; but probably the best is the sectional rod.
This simply consists of three or four foot lengths of hard wood rods,
having metal tips that screw into each other. A rod is placed in a duct
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