which of the following is generated by a pantograph
A pantograph does not generate electricity; instead, it collects electrical power from overhead lines for electric trains and trams. In the context of trains, the device that “generates” electricity is the power station or substation, while the pantograph simply transfers that power to the train.
What a pantograph actually does
On an electric locomotive or tram, the pantograph is a folding, spring‑ or air‑powered frame mounted on the roof that presses upward against an overhead contact wire (catenary). As the train moves, the pantograph slides along the wire, maintaining continuous electrical contact so that high‑voltage current can flow into the train’s transformer and traction motors.
So, in a multiple‑choice question like:
Which of the following is generated by a pantograph?
a) Electricity
b) Heat
c) Motion
d) Light
The correct answer is: none of the above — a pantograph does not generate any of these; it only collects electricity from the overhead line.
Pantograph vs. generator
- Pantograph : Acts like a sliding “collector shoe” for AC or DC power from the overhead line; it transfers existing electricity to the train.
- Generator / alternator : Actually produces electricity (e.g., in a power plant or on a diesel‑electric locomotive) by converting mechanical energy into electrical energy.
In games or quizzes (like Persona 3 Reload), questions may say “a pantograph generates electricity,” but that’s technically incorrect; in real engineering, we say it “collects” or “transmits” electricity, not generates it.
Other types of pantographs
There’s also a mechanical drafting pantograph (used in workshops and engraving), which is a linkage device that copies and scales drawings or cuts shapes in wood, metal, or plastic. In that context, it “generates” a scaled copy of a drawing or a cut‑out shape, but it still doesn’t generate electricity.
Bottom line
If the question is about a train pantograph, the correct idea is:
- A pantograph collects electricity from overhead lines; it does not generate electricity, heat, motion, or light by itself.
- So, in a standard multiple‑choice format, the answer “electricity” would be misleading; the accurate description is that it transfers or supplies power to the train.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.