Miksa Déri (27 October 1854 in Bács, Austrian Empire – 3 March 1938) was a Hungarian electrical engineer, inventor, power plant builder. He contributed with his partners Károly Zipernowsky and Ottó Bláthy, in the development of the closed iron core transformer and the ZBD model. His other important invention was the constant voltage AC electrical generator in the Ganz Works in 1883. The missing link of a full Voltage sensitive - voltage intensive (VSVI) system was the reliable AC Constant Voltage generator. Therefore, the invention of the constant voltage generator at the Ganz Works[1] had crucial role in the beginnings of the industrial scale AC power generating, because only these type of generators can produce a stated output voltage, regardless of the value of the actual load.[2]

Miksa Déri
Déri Miksa
Born
Miksa Deri

(1854-10-24)24 October 1854
Died(1938-03-03)3 March 1938
NationalityHungarian
EducationTechnical University of Budapest
Technical University of Vienna
OccupationEngineer
Engineering career
InstitutionsGanz Works
Prototypes of the world's first high-efficiency transformers. (Széchenyi István Memorial Exhibition Nagycenk)
Dynamo Electric Machine [End View, Partly Section] (U.S. patent 284,110)
Magnetizing Current Shunt Circuit (U.S. patent 284,110)

ZBD was an abbreviation of the three men's names: Zipernowsky, Bláthy and Déri.

Déri is also noted for inventing the single phase type of repulsion motor[3]

Education

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References

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  1. ^ American Society for Engineering Education (1995). Proceedings, Part 2. p. 1848.
  2. ^ Robert L. Libbey (1991). A Handbook of Circuit Math for Technical Engineers. CRC Press. p. 22. ISBN 9780849374005.
  3. ^ Palgrave Macmillan Ltd (2016). Dictionary of Physics. Springer. p. 569. ISBN 9781349660223.
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