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combustion+tube

  • 121 Branca, Giovanni de

    [br]
    b. 1571 Italy
    d. 1640 Italy
    [br]
    Italian architect who proposed what has been suggested as an early turbine, using a jet of steam to turn a wheel.
    [br]
    Branca practised architecture at Loretto. In 1629 he published Le Machine: volume nuovo et di molto artificio, in which he described various mechanisms. One was the application of rolls for working copper, lead or the precious metals gold and silver. The rolls were powered by a form of smokejack with the gases from the fire passing up a long tube forming a chimney which, through gearing, turned the rolls. Another device used a jet of steam from a boiler issuing from a mouthpiece shaped like the head of a person to impinge upon blades around the circumference of a horizontal wheel, connected through triple reduction gearing to drop stamps, for pounding drugs. This was a form of impulse turbine and has been claimed as the first machine worked by steam to do a particular operation since Heron's temple doors.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    H.W.Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (includes a description and picture of the turbine).
    C.Singer (ed.), 1957, A History of Technology, Vols III and IV, Oxford University Press (provides notes on Branca).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Branca, Giovanni de

  • 122 Daimler, Gottlieb

    [br]
    b. 17 March 1834 Schorndorff, near Stuttgart, Germany
    d. 6 March 1900 Cannstatt, near Stuttgart, Germany
    [br]
    German engineer, pioneer automobile maker.
    [br]
    The son of a baker, his youthful interest in technical affairs led to his being apprenticed to a gunsmith with whom he produced his apprenticeship piece: a double-barrelled pistol with a rifled barrel and "nicely chased scrollwork", for which he received high praise. He remained there until 1852 before going to technical school in Stuttgart from 1853 to 1857. He then went to a steam-engineering company in Strasbourg to gain practical experience. He completed his formal education at Stuttgart Polytechnik, and in 1861 he left to tour France and England. There he worked in the engine-shop of Smith, Peacock \& Tanner and then with Roberts \& Co., textile machinery manufacturers of Manchester. He later moved to Coventry to work at Whitworths, and it was in that city that he was later involved with the Daimler Motor Company, who had been granted a licence by his company in Germany. In 1867 he was working at Bruderhaus Engineering Works at Reutlingen and in 1869 went to Maschinenbau Gesellschaft Karlsruhe where he became Manager and later a director. Early in the 1870s, N.A. Otto had reorganized his company into Gasmotorenfabrik Deutz and he appointed Gottlieb Daimler as Factory Manager and Wilhelm Maybach as Chief Designer. Together they developed the Otto engine to its limit, with Otto's co-operation. Daimler and Maybach had met previously when both were working at Bruderhaus. In 1875 Daimler left Deutz, taking Maybach with him to set up a factory in Stuttgart to manufacture light, high-speed internal-combustion engines. Their first patent was granted in 1883. This was for an engine fuelled by petrol and with hot tube ignition which continued to be used until Robert Bosch's low-voltage ignition became available in 1897. Two years later he produced his first vehicle, a motor cycle with outriggers. They showed a motor car at the Paris exhibition in 1889, but French manufacturers were slow to come forward and no French company could be found to undertake manufacture. Eventually Panhard and Levassor established the Daimler engine in France. Daimler Motoren GmbH was started in 1895, but soon after Daimler and Maybach parted, having provided an engine for a boat on the River Neckar in 1887 and that for the Wolfert airship in 1888. Daimler was in sole charge of the company from 1895, but his health began to decline in 1899 and he died in 1900.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    E.Johnson, 1986, The Dawn of Motoring. P.Siebetz, 1942, Gottlieb Daimler.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Daimler, Gottlieb

  • 123 Trevithick, Richard

    [br]
    b. 13 April 1771 Illogan, Cornwall, England
    d. 22 April 1833 Dartford, Kent, England
    [br]
    English engineer, pioneer of non-condensing steam-engines; designed and built the first locomotives.
    [br]
    Trevithick's father was a tin-mine manager, and Trevithick himself, after limited formal education, developed his immense engineering talent among local mining machinery and steam-engines and found employment as a mining engineer. Tall, strong and high-spirited, he was the eternal optimist.
    About 1797 it occurred to him that the separate condenser patent of James Watt could be avoided by employing "strong steam", that is steam at pressures substantially greater than atmospheric, to drive steam-engines: after use, steam could be exhausted to the atmosphere and the condenser eliminated. His first winding engine on this principle came into use in 1799, and subsequently such engines were widely used. To produce high-pressure steam, a stronger boiler was needed than the boilers then in use, in which the pressure vessel was mounted upon masonry above the fire: Trevithick designed the cylindrical boiler, with furnace tube within, from which the Cornish and later the Lancashire boilers evolved.
    Simultaneously he realized that high-pressure steam enabled a compact steam-engine/boiler unit to be built: typically, the Trevithick engine comprised a cylindrical boiler with return firetube, and a cylinder recessed into the boiler. No beam intervened between connecting rod and crank. A master patent was taken out.
    Such an engine was well suited to driving vehicles. Trevithick built his first steam-carriage in 1801, but after a few days' use it overturned on a rough Cornish road and was damaged beyond repair by fire. Nevertheless, it had been the first self-propelled vehicle successfully to carry passengers. His second steam-carriage was driven about the streets of London in 1803, even more successfully; however, it aroused no commercial interest. Meanwhile the Coalbrookdale Company had started to build a locomotive incorporating a Trevithick engine for its tramroads, though little is known of the outcome; however, Samuel Homfray's ironworks at Penydarren, South Wales, was already building engines to Trevithick's design, and in 1804 Trevithick built one there as a locomotive for the Penydarren Tramroad. In this, and in the London steam-carriage, exhaust steam was turned up the chimney to draw the fire. On 21 February the locomotive hauled five wagons with 10 tons of iron and seventy men for 9 miles (14 km): it was the first successful railway locomotive.
    Again, there was no commercial interest, although Trevithick now had nearly fifty stationary engines completed or being built to his design under licence. He experimented with one to power a barge on the Severn and used one to power a dredger on the Thames. He became Engineer to a project to drive a tunnel beneath the Thames at Rotherhithe and was only narrowly defeated, by quicksands. Trevithick then set up, in 1808, a circular tramroad track in London and upon it demonstrated to the admission-fee-paying public the locomotive Catch me who can, built to his design by John Hazledine and J.U. Rastrick.
    In 1809, by which date Trevithick had sold all his interest in the steam-engine patent, he and Robert Dickinson, in partnership, obtained a patent for iron tanks to hold liquid cargo in ships, replacing the wooden casks then used, and started to manufacture them. In 1810, however, he was taken seriously ill with typhus for six months and had to return to Cornwall, and early in 1811 the partners were bankrupt; Trevithick was discharged from bankruptcy only in 1814.
    In the meantime he continued as a steam engineer and produced a single-acting steam engine in which the cut-off could be varied to work the engine expansively by way of a three-way cock actuated by a cam. Then, in 1813, Trevithick was approached by a representative of a company set up to drain the rich but flooded silver-mines at Cerro de Pasco, Peru, at an altitude of 14,000 ft (4,300 m). Low-pressure steam engines, dependent largely upon atmospheric pressure, would not work at such an altitude, but Trevithick's high-pressure engines would. Nine engines and much other mining plant were built by Hazledine and Rastrick and despatched to Peru in 1814, and Trevithick himself followed two years later. However, the war of independence was taking place in Peru, then a Spanish colony, and no sooner had Trevithick, after immense difficulties, put everything in order at the mines then rebels arrived and broke up the machinery, for they saw the mines as a source of supply for the Spanish forces. It was only after innumerable further adventures, during which he encountered and was assisted financially by Robert Stephenson, that Trevithick eventually arrived home in Cornwall in 1827, penniless.
    He petitioned Parliament for a grant in recognition of his improvements to steam-engines and boilers, without success. He was as inventive as ever though: he proposed a hydraulic power transmission system; he was consulted over steam engines for land drainage in Holland; and he suggested a 1,000 ft (305 m) high tower of gilded cast iron to commemorate the Reform Act of 1832. While working on steam propulsion of ships in 1833, he caught pneumonia, from which he died.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Trevithick took out fourteen patents, solely or in partnership, of which the most important are: 1802, Construction of Steam Engines, British patent no. 2,599. 1808, Stowing Ships' Cargoes, British patent no. 3,172.
    Further Reading
    H.W.Dickinson and A.Titley, 1934, Richard Trevithick. The Engineer and the Man, Cambridge; F.Trevithick, 1872, Life of Richard Trevithick, London (these two are the principal biographies).
    E.A.Forward, 1952, "Links in the history of the locomotive", The Engineer (22 February), 226 (considers the case for the Coalbrookdale locomotive of 1802).
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Trevithick, Richard

  • 124 process

    3. способ, метод

    ablation process процесс абляции [уноса массы]

    absorption process процесс поглощения

    aging process процесс старения

    automated filament-winding process автоматический процесс намотки нити

    batch process 1) циклический [периодический] процесс 2) многостадийный процесс получения материала

    brazing process 1) процесс пайки 2) пайка твёрдым [тугоплавким] припоем

    burning process процесс горения [сгорания]

    cementing process 1) процесс науглероживания [цементации] ( стали) 2) клеевой способ

    chemical process химический процесс

    combustion process процесс горения [сгорания]

    consolidation process процесс уплотнения

    curing process процесс отверждения [вулканизации, полимеризации]

    dipping process процесс нанесения покрытия погружением ( в ванну)

    dry-winding process метод сухой намотки

    electrolytic-deposition process процесс электролитического осаждения

    electron-beam refining process электронно-лучевой метод рафинирования

    electrophoretic coating process электрофорезный метод нанесения покрытия

    explosive bonding process способ соединения взрывом

    filament-winding process способ намотки нити

    fluid compression process литьевое прессование ( пластмасс)

    injection-molding process способ литья под давлением

    laminating process процесс изготовления слоистого материала

    lapwinding process метод спиральной намотки ленты

    material-forming process процесс формования материала

    metallizing process металлизация

    molding process способ формования [формовки]

    multicircuit winding process метод многозаходной намотки

    orientation process процесс ориентации (например, кристаллов или волокон)

    plating process 1) процесс электролитического осаждения 2) процесс гальванопокрытия 3) металлизация

    polymerization process 1) процесс полимеризации 2) способ полимеризации

    prepregged-yarn filament-winding process процесс намотки нити из предварительно пропитанной пряжи

    schoop process шоопирование, металлизация ( поверхностей) распылением

    sherardizing process шерардизация, оцинковывание

    spray-gun process металлизация ( поверхностным) распылением, шоопирование

    tape-winding process процесс намотки ленты

    tube-winding process процесс намотки [навивки] труб

    vacuum-coating process нанесение покрытия в вакууме

    vapor-deposition process процесс осаждения в паровой [газовой] фазе

    vulcanization process 1) процесс вулканизации 2) способ вулканизации

    wet-winding process метод мокрой намотки

    winding process процесс намотки

    English-Russian dictionary of aviation and space materials > process

  • 125 semiconductor assembly

    The English-Russian dictionary general scientific > semiconductor assembly

См. также в других словарях:

  • combustion tube — n. a tube of heat resistant glass, silica, or ceramic, in which a substance can be reduced, as in a combustion furnace …   English World dictionary

  • combustion tube — a tube of hard glass used esp. in a furnace for burning a substance in a current of air or oxygen. [1860 65] * * * …   Universalium

  • combustion tube — /kəmˈbʌstʃən tjub/ (say kuhm buschuhn tyoohb) noun a tube of hard glass in which a substance may be burnt in a current of air or oxygen (usually used in a furnace) …  

  • combustion tube — a tube of hard glass used esp. in a furnace for burning a substance in a current of air or oxygen. [1860 65] …   Useful english dictionary

  • COMBUSTION — La combustion recouvre des phénomènes très variés. La définition même du terme répond à deux tendances différentes. La première lui donne un sens très général. Elle englobe «combustion vive» et «combustion lente». La combustion de l’air dans les… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • tube — [ tyb ] n. m. • 1611; « voûte » mot région. (Nord) 1453; lat. tubus 1 ♦ Appareil de forme cylindrique, ou conduit à section circulaire, généralement rigide (verre, quartz, plastique, métal), ouvert à une extrémité ou aux deux. Calibre d un tube.… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Tube luminescent — Tube fluorescent Tubes fluorescents: vert, rouge (néon), violet. Un tube fluorescent est un type particulier de lampe électrique, qui produit de la lumière, grâce à une décharge électrique dans un tube. Leur lumière peut être blanche (pour l… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Tube de fumée — ● Tube de fumée tube parcouru par les produits gazeux de combustion d un foyer, notamment dans une chaudière …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Tube roquette — Le Tube roquette 58/80 ou en abrégé Troq est une appellation militaire pour un modèle de tube lance roquette de calibre 8,3 cm de fabrication suisse et de type anti char mais pouvant être engagé également contre des bâtiments. L appellation… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Combustion — This article is about the process of burning. For combustion without external ignition, see spontaneous combustion. For the engine used in mobile propulsion, see internal combustion engine. For the visible part of a fire, see flame. Burning… …   Wikipedia

  • Combustion chamber — A combustion chamber is the part of an engine in which fuel is burned. Contents 1 Internal combustion engine 1.1 Petrol or gasoline engine 1.2 Diesel engine 1.3 Gas …   Wikipedia

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