The Mechanics' Magazine, Museum, Register, Journal, and Gazette, Band 30M. Salmon, 1839 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 100
Seite 8
... equal- ly , if not more , efficient in generating steam in abundance , and rapidly , and is easier made , and kept in repair ; locomo- tive steam - engines with his improve- ments , would be much less likely to need repairs so often ...
... equal- ly , if not more , efficient in generating steam in abundance , and rapidly , and is easier made , and kept in repair ; locomo- tive steam - engines with his improve- ments , would be much less likely to need repairs so often ...
Seite 12
... equal to about 3007. sterling ; and so much confi- dence did the owner of the house place in the success and safety of the operation , that he did not take the trouble of removing his fragile property . I understood from Mr. Brown ...
... equal to about 3007. sterling ; and so much confi- dence did the owner of the house place in the success and safety of the operation , that he did not take the trouble of removing his fragile property . I understood from Mr. Brown ...
Seite 14
... equal weight per foot with the suspending chain , and this elongates un- der the ascending , and is shortened under the descending cradle ; thus the disparity in the weights due to the suspending chain is obviated . It is so arranged ...
... equal weight per foot with the suspending chain , and this elongates un- der the ascending , and is shortened under the descending cradle ; thus the disparity in the weights due to the suspending chain is obviated . It is so arranged ...
Seite 15
... equal to its length , namely , 60 feet long , and 50 feet wide , divided in the direction of its length into three divisions , the middle being ap- propriated to the machinery , and each of the side divisions to carriages and traffic of ...
... equal to its length , namely , 60 feet long , and 50 feet wide , divided in the direction of its length into three divisions , the middle being ap- propriated to the machinery , and each of the side divisions to carriages and traffic of ...
Seite 20
... equal to 24954 lbs . To obviate this , and to prevent the weight of the lever from adding anything to the friction , it is accurately counter- poised by means of weights C and C , ' cor- responding to the parts of its mass which they ...
... equal to 24954 lbs . To obviate this , and to prevent the weight of the lever from adding anything to the friction , it is accurately counter- poised by means of weights C and C , ' cor- responding to the parts of its mass which they ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acid apparatus appears applied atmosphere bitumen boat boiler camera obscura carbonic acid carriage cause centre charcoal coal colour common consequence construction crucible cylinder diameter effect employed engine equal experiments feet fire fixed fluid force friction fuel furnace Galignani Grand Western Canal hour improvements inches invention iron latent heat length lever light Liverpool London machine machinery Magazine manufacture matrass matter means Mechanics ment Messrs metal method Metropolitan Railway minute mode motion object observed obtained paddle-wheel paddles paper pass patent PHOTOGENIC DRAWING piece pipe plate portion pounds present pressure produced Prussian blue purpose quantity rails Railway ratus render resistance road screw side six months specific gravity specific heat steam-engine stove strength sufficient surface tained temperature tenacity thermometer thick tion trials tube vapour vessel W. A. Robertson weight wheel zinc
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 7 - I will set before your eyes a type of a ' squirt' which hath been devised to cast much water upon a burning house, wishing a like squirt and plenty of water to be alwaies in a readinesse where fire may do harme ; for this kind of squirt may be made to holde an hoggeshed of water, or if you will, a greater quantity thereof, and may be so placed on his frame, that with ease and a smal strength, it sahl be mounted, imbased or turned to any one side, right against any fired marke, and made to squirt...
Seite 84 - As the three angles of a plane triangle are equal to two right angles, that is, to 180° (Euc, 32. 1.) the' sum of any two of them is the supplement of the other.
Seite 59 - Europe, navigated by persons possessed of a knowledge of seamanship. In this country steam navigation produces hardy seamen, and British steamers being exposed to the open sea in all weathers, are furnished with masts and sails, and must be worked by persons, who, in the event of any accident happening to the machinery, are capable of sailing the vessel, and who must therefore be experienced seamen. The case is very different in America, where, with the exception of the vessels navigating the Lakes,...
Seite 406 - We shall find (especially if the paper has been kept some weeks before the trial is made) that its sensibility is greatly diminished, and, in some cases, seems quite extinct. But if it is again washed with a liberal quantity of the solution of silver, it becomes again sensible to light, and even more so than it was at first. In this way, by alternately washing the paper with salt and silver, and drying it between times, I have succeeded in increasing its sensibility to the degree that is requisite...
Seite 236 - Nor when cold Winter keens the brightening flood, Would I weak-shivering linger on the brink.
Seite 406 - This paper, if properly made, is very useful for all ordinary photogenic purposes. For example, nothing can be more perfect than the images it gives of leaves and flowers, especially with a summer sun : the light passing through the leaves delineates every ramification of their nerves.
Seite 343 - But if the picture so obtained is first preserved so as to bear sunshine, it may be afterwards itself employed as an object to be copied ¡and by means of this second process the lights and shadows are brought back to their original disposition.
Seite 338 - The copy of a painting or the profile, immediately after being taken, must be kept in an obscure place ; it may, indeed, be examined in the shade> but in this case the exposure should be only for a few minutes ; by the Light of candles or lamps, as commonly employed, it is not sensibly affected.
Seite 339 - But in truth the difficulty is in both cases the same. The one of these takes no more time to execute than the other ; for the object which would take the most skilful artist days or weeks of labour to trace or to copy, is effected by the boundless powers of natural chemistry in the space of a few seconds.
Seite 313 - And now about the cauldron sing, Like elves and fairies in a ring, Enchanting all that you put in. SONG. Black spirits and white, Red spirits and grey ; Mingle, mingle, mingle, You that mingle may.