Drawing of coil apparatus by Russell J Reynolds

Made:
1896-1897 in London
maker:
Russell John Reynolds

Drawing of coil apparatus, marked 'Experiment 2' by Russell J Reynolds, c.1896

Russell John Reynolds (1880-1964) was an internationally renowned radiographer and specialist in the field of cineradiography or moving image X-ray films. While still at school, he – with the assistance of his GP father John Reynolds – constructed a fully functioning X-ray machine just months after German scientist Wilhelm Röntgen first described the ‘new type of ray’ in late 1895.

Keen amateurs in Britain were quick to replicate Röntgen’s spectacular experiments using a combination of shop bought and home-made equipment. Fifteen-year-old Russell was particularly well-placed, being the son of a medical doctor and family friend of physicist William Crookes, inventor of the Crookes tube (the early electrical discharge tube used to produce the first X-rays).

John and Russell constructed one of the core components of their machine – the spark induction coil – themselves, documenting their experiments in notebooks and diagrams, including this ink drawing of the set-up.

Details

Category:
Archive
Object Number:
2023-567
Materials:
paper (fibre product)
Measurements:
overall: 156 mm x 260 mm
type:
drawing (image-making)
credit:
R. J. Reynolds