Minutes of Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Band 162The Institution, 1905 Vols. 39-204 (1874/75-1916/17) have a section 3 containing "Abstracts of papers in foreign transactions and periodicals" (title varies); issued separately, 1919-37, as the institution's Engineering abstracts from the current periodical literature of engineering and applied science, published outside the United Kingdom. |
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Seite 9
... Author submits that the answer should be in the affirmative . Looking to the maritime powers of Europe as those which England must be prepared to meet , it does not appear necessary that all fighting ships of the British Navy should be ...
... Author submits that the answer should be in the affirmative . Looking to the maritime powers of Europe as those which England must be prepared to meet , it does not appear necessary that all fighting ships of the British Navy should be ...
Seite 12
... Author for his Paper . The AUTHOR hoped that , as one of the oldest Associates of the Institution , yet speaking within its walls for the first , and not improbably for the last time , he might be permitted in a few words to recall the ...
... Author for his Paper . The AUTHOR hoped that , as one of the oldest Associates of the Institution , yet speaking within its walls for the first , and not improbably for the last time , he might be permitted in a few words to recall the ...
Seite 13
... Author . mitted that the experience which had been gained recently should make the nation pause and consider well how far it was politic to go in for increasing dimensions . Below the belt the largest ships were not less vulnerable than ...
... Author . mitted that the experience which had been gained recently should make the nation pause and consider well how far it was politic to go in for increasing dimensions . Below the belt the largest ships were not less vulnerable than ...
Seite 14
... Author would like to see the guns distributed in a larger number of vessels , and argued that if the armament of the " Lord Nelson " were put into two ships of the " Vittorio Emanuele III . " type , there would be the same number of ...
... Author would like to see the guns distributed in a larger number of vessels , and argued that if the armament of the " Lord Nelson " were put into two ships of the " Vittorio Emanuele III . " type , there would be the same number of ...
Seite 16
... Author's description of the vessels he proposed , without going too much into technicalities , " heavily armoured " he presumed would mean having at least 9 - inch or 10 - inch armour : " high speed " must mean something higher than the ...
... Author's description of the vessels he proposed , without going too much into technicalities , " heavily armoured " he presumed would mean having at least 9 - inch or 10 - inch armour : " high speed " must mean something higher than the ...
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armoured armoured cruisers Australia Author average battleships bridge C.E. VOL carried cast-iron pipe catchment catchment-area caulking cement cent CLXII coating concrete considerable construction Coolgardie cost cruisers cubic Cunderdin cycle cylinder depth diameter discharge efficiency electrical engine equation experience feet flow foot girders heat Helena River increase Inst Institution internal-combustion engines iron joints Kalgoorlie length less load locking-bar pipe longitudinal machinery masonry maximum metres miles million gallons moment of inertia mortar Mundaring naval obtained Paper pipe-line placed plates portion practice pressure pumping-station pumps Railway rainfall ratio reservoir revolutions per minute River riveted pipes sand scheme shaft ships Sir William White span speed square inch square miles stations steel pipes Storage-period stresses supply surface temperature tests thickness tion tons per square valves vertical vessels vibration Vittorio Emanuele III watershed weir Western Australia yield