Why is it said that the earlier power transmissions used direct current?

          Direct current, as we know, is the flow of electric charge in just one direction. The history of electric power records that the first commercial transmission was made possible using direct current.

           This was perhaps because DC was the only option then. But as time passed, it proved to be insufficient. Because with direct current, voltage couldn’t be changed easily. What made it worse was that, different classes of loads, for instance, lighting, motors, and railway systems etc, required different voltages. So for this, there had to be different generators and circuits.

           However, in the course of time, alternating current took over and electric transmission became easier than before. We have seen that this type of current can reverse its direction, and serve better than DC. In 1884, the first long distance AC line was built in Italy, proving that AC was better for long distance transmission.

           As years passed, newer technologies were introduced. By the mid 1950s, an advanced type of direct current transmission was developed, and was named the high voltage direct current transmission. Today, it is the alternate and the most acceptable option for long distance, bulk transmission of electric power, especially between countries.