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 15
... effect on the men fighting in the stronger ship - a very important matter . All those things could not be disregarded , and they pointed to the conclusion that the power should be concentrated in big ships . It had been said that the 74 ...
... effect on the men fighting in the stronger ship - a very important matter . All those things could not be disregarded , and they pointed to the conclusion that the power should be concentrated in big ships . It had been said that the 74 ...
Seite 28
... effect which had been attributed to them . Only the Japanese could know what number of torpedoes they had fired , and what proportion had been effective , and they were not likely to make any statement on that subject - at any rate not ...
... effect which had been attributed to them . Only the Japanese could know what number of torpedoes they had fired , and what proportion had been effective , and they were not likely to make any statement on that subject - at any rate not ...
Seite 38
... effect of mines had been so recently demonstrated , England should be giving up the mine in favour of torpedoes to be discharged from submarines . He did not believe that , because the naval actions in the present war had been fought at ...
... effect of mines had been so recently demonstrated , England should be giving up the mine in favour of torpedoes to be discharged from submarines . He did not believe that , because the naval actions in the present war had been fought at ...
Seite 42
... effect . Why should not a ' compromise " be arrived at in 16,000- or 18,000 - ton battleships similar to what in a 12,000 - ton battleship was not only possible but thoroughly successful ? The draught did not consequently increase ...
... effect . Why should not a ' compromise " be arrived at in 16,000- or 18,000 - ton battleships similar to what in a 12,000 - ton battleship was not only possible but thoroughly successful ? The draught did not consequently increase ...
Seite 43
... effect the object where the big ship failed . In war opportunities always arose for adapting means to the ends to be achieved , or for improvising them on the spot . It was not necessary to have a supply of " Condors " ; a supply of ...
... effect the object where the big ship failed . In war opportunities always arose for adapting means to the ends to be achieved , or for improvising them on the spot . It was not necessary to have a supply of " Condors " ; a supply of ...
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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