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undertakes his experiments on this adhesive affinity in the case of different metals.
At the beginning of Section VII., page 91, he says:
This supposed effect of contact was confirmed by the following experiments, in which the doubler and electrometer were deprived of electricity, and used with the precautions and improvements mentioned in the last section.
Experiment I
Experiment II
These experiments were repeated very often, and the electricity changed each time, being always positive in the plate touched by the knife.
To distinguish so minute a difference of adhesive electricity, as that which might be supposed between two metals so nearly alike as hardened steel and soft iron, wou'd appear incredible had not the frequent repetition of experiments confirmed it.
Being now well convinced of this fact I tried many other substances with various success, sometimes the charge wou'd change regularly for a long time together, by applying the opposed substances to A and B alternately, as in the above experiments; and sometimes with other substances the charge wou'd be quite uncertain.
Bennett gives his experiments with six pairs of substances, each pair being tried about ten times. The charges given by contact to the plate A of the doubler were as follows: steel, iron wire ; lead ore, lead ; lead, iron wire ; lead ore , ironwire ; tinfoil , iron wire ; zinc , iron wire .
He then tried charging the plate of his doubler by a single substance while was earthed. He found to take a positive charge from