The size of dynamos or electrical generators grew rapidly. Faraday's original apparatus involved only about 71/4 lb of copper but the armature of a machine built by H. Wilde in 1866 required 576 lb of copper strip and wire (Fig. 41). This machine, which was belt-driven, was described at the time as 'a machine of enormous and unprecedented power', with an output so enormous as to melt 15 inches of No. II copper wire'. By comparison, a modern 500 MW turbo-generator operates at several hundred times the voltage of Wilde's machine and requires about 14 tons of copper for various components in the machine.

The brothers Siemens exhibited an electric tramcar in Paris in 1881. By using transformers, L. Gaulard in 1883 proposed to employ high pressure alternating currents for the distribution of electricity over wider areas. Polyphase alternators and the long-distance transmission of electrical power by polyphase electrical currents were both first exhibited at the Frankfurt Exhibition in 1891.
In addition to those scientists already named, outstanding men in the 'heroic age' of electrical engineering included J. Hopkinson, Crompton, S. P. Thompson, Mordey and Ferranti, with the combined theoretical and practical genius of Kelvin behind them all.
These developments led to a tremendous increase in the supply of electric power; but demand, as today, soon threatened to outstrip supply. The introduction of power distribution systems for electricity supply, the installation of land and submarine telegraph cables, and the use of electric traction for trains were among the major consequences of the rapid progress in electrical engineering during the latter half of the 19th Century.