NEW YORK — The city that Thomas Edison electrified 125 years ago has completed the transition from direct to alternating current, helping to erase the vestiges of a feud between giants of invention.
The Consolidated Edison utility on Wednesday pulled the plug on direct current service with the electric operations manager cutting a ceremonial cable on a Manhattan street.
The change means that Con Ed now exclusively uses the alternating current system invented by Nikola Tesla. The utility is named for Edison, whose Pearl Street Station in Manhattan was the nation’s first central electrical power plant, serving 59 customers with direct current beginning in 1882.
In the so-called “war of currents,” Edison feuded with Tesla and George Westinghouse over which transmission method to adopt — even going so far as to publicly electrocute animals in the hopes of showing AC was too dangerous.
Alternating current proved superior as transformers allowed electricity to travel over long-distance wires. As AC gained prevalence over DC worldwide, Con Ed froze the development of the DC system in 1928 but continued to supply New York’s major DC customers with the existing system.
A Con Ed spokesman said some of the city’s elevators still operate with DC using rectifiers that convert the utility’s AC service.
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