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61 Huygens, Christiaan
SUBJECT AREA: Horology[br]b. 14 April 1629 The Hague, the Netherlandsd. 8 June 1695 The Hague, the Netherlands[br]Dutch scientist who was responsible for two of the greatest advances in horology: the successful application of both the pendulum to the clock and the balance spring to the watch.[br]Huygens was born into a cultured and privileged class. His father, Constantijn, was a poet and statesman who had wide interests. Constantijn exerted a strong influence on his son, who was educated at home until he reached the age of 16. Christiaan studied law and mathematics at Ley den University from 1645 to 1647, and continued his studies at the Collegium Arausiacum in Breda until 1649. He then lived at The Hague, where he had the means to devote his time entirely to study. In 1666 he became a Member of the Académie des Sciences in Paris and settled there until his return to The Hague in 1681. He also had a close relationship with the Royal Society and visited London on three occasions, meeting Newton on his last visit in 1689. Huygens had a wide range of interests and made significant contributions in mathematics, astronomy, optics and mechanics. He also made technical advances in optical instruments and horology.Despite the efforts of Burgi there had been no significant improvement in the performance of ordinary clocks and watches from their inception to Huygens's time, as they were controlled by foliots or balances which had no natural period of oscillation. The pendulum appeared to offer a means of improvement as it had a natural period of oscillation that was almost independent of amplitude. Galileo Galilei had already pioneered the use of a freely suspended pendulum for timing events, but it was by no means obvious how it could be kept swinging and used to control a clock. Towards the end of his life Galileo described such a. mechanism to his son Vincenzio, who constructed a model after his father's death, although it was not completed when he himself died in 1642. This model appears to have been copied in Italy, but it had little influence on horology, partly because of the circumstances in which it was produced and possibly also because it differed radically from clocks of that period. The crucial event occurred on Christmas Day 1656 when Huygens, quite independently, succeeded in adapting an existing spring-driven table clock so that it was not only controlled by a pendulum but also kept it swinging. In the following year he was granted a privilege or patent for this clock, and several were made by the clockmaker Salomon Coster of The Hague. The use of the pendulum produced a dramatic improvement in timekeeping, reducing the daily error from minutes to seconds, but Huygens was aware that the pendulum was not truly isochronous. This error was magnified by the use of the existing verge escapement, which made the pendulum swing through a large arc. He overcame this defect very elegantly by fitting cheeks at the pendulum suspension point, progressively reducing the effective length of the pendulum as the amplitude increased. Initially the cheeks were shaped empirically, but he was later able to show that they should have a cycloidal shape. The cheeks were not adopted universally because they introduced other defects, and the problem was eventually solved more prosaically by way of new escapements which reduced the swing of the pendulum. Huygens's clocks had another innovatory feature: maintaining power, which kept the clock going while it was being wound.Pendulums could not be used for portable timepieces, which continued to use balances despite their deficiencies. Robert Hooke was probably the first to apply a spring to the balance, but his efforts were not successful. From his work on the pendulum Huygens was well aware of the conditions necessary for isochronism in a vibrating system, and in January 1675, with a flash of inspiration, he realized that this could be achieved by controlling the oscillations of the balance with a spiral spring, an arrangement that is still used in mechanical watches. The first model was made for Huygens in Paris by the clockmaker Isaac Thuret, who attempted to appropriate the invention and patent it himself. Huygens had for many years been trying unsuccessfully to adapt the pendulum clock for use at sea (in order to determine longitude), and he hoped that a balance-spring timekeeper might be better suited for this purpose. However, he was disillusioned as its timekeeping proved to be much more susceptible to changes in temperature than that of the pendulum clock.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1663. Member of the Académie Royale des Sciences 1666.BibliographyFor his complete works, see Oeuvres complètes de Christian Huygens, 1888–1950, 22 vols, The Hague.1658, Horologium, The Hague; repub., 1970, trans. E.L.Edwardes, AntiquarianHorology 7:35–55 (describes the pendulum clock).1673, Horologium Oscillatorium, Paris; repub., 1986, The Pendulum Clock or Demonstrations Concerning the Motion ofPendula as Applied to Clocks, trans.R.J.Blackwell, Ames.The balance spring watch was first described in Journal des Sçavans 25 February 1675, and translated in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (1675) 4:272–3.Further ReadingH.J.M.Bos, 1972, Dictionary of Scientific Biography, ed. C.C.Gillispie, Vol. 6, New York, pp. 597–613 (for a fuller account of his life and scientific work, but note the incorrect date of his death).R.Plomp, 1979, Spring-Driven Dutch Pendulum Clocks, 1657–1710, Schiedam (describes Huygens's application of the pendulum to the clock).S.A.Bedini, 1991, The Pulse of Time, Florence (describes Galileo's contribution of the pendulum to the clock).J.H.Leopold, 1982, "L"Invention par Christiaan Huygens du ressort spiral réglant pour les montres', Huygens et la France, Paris, pp. 154–7 (describes the application of the balance spring to the watch).A.R.Hall, 1978, "Horology and criticism", Studia Copernica 16:261–81 (discusses Hooke's contribution).DV -
62 Todd, Leonard Jennett
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]fl. 1885 London, England[br]English (?) patentee of steam engines incorporating the uniflow principle.[br]In a uniflow system, the steam enters a steam engine cylinder at one end, pushes the pistons along, and exhausts through a ring of ports at the centre of the cylinder that are uncovered by movement of the piston. The piston is returned by steam then entering the other end of the cylinder, moving the piston arrangement back, and again making its exit through the central ports. This gave the thermodynamic advantage of the cylinder ends remaining hot and the centre colder with reheating the ends of the cylinder through compression of the residual steam. The principle was first patented by Jacob Perkins in England in 1827 and was tried in America in 1856.Little is known about Todd. The addresses given in his patent specifications show that he was living first at South Hornsey and then Stoke Newington, both in Middlesex (now in London). No obituary notices have been traced. He took out a patent in 1885 for a "terminal exhaust engine" and followed this with two more in 1886 and 1887. His aim was to "produce a double acting steam engine which shall work more efficiently, which shall produce and maintain within itself an improved gradation of temperature extending from each of its two Hot Inlets to its common central Cold Outlet". His later patents show the problems he faced with finding suitable valve gears and the compression developing during the return stroke of the piston. It was this last problem, particularly when starting a condensing engine, that probably defeated him through excessive compression pressures. There is some evidence that he hoped to apply his engines to railway locomotives.[br]Bibliography1885, British patent no. 7,301 (terminal exhaust engine). 1886, British patent no. 2,132.1887, British patent no. 6,666.Further ReadingR.L.Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (provides the fullest discussion of his patents). H.W.Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press.J.Stumpf, 1912, The Una-Flow Steam Engine, Munich: R.Oldenbourg.RLH -
63 obligar
v.to oblige, to bind, to coerce, to compel.La policía forzó a Ricardo The police coerced Richard.* * *1 to force, oblige, make1 to undertake, promise\obligar a alguien a hacer algo to force somebody to do something, make somebody do something* * *verbto force, compel, oblige* * *1. VT1) (=forzar) to force2) [ley, norma]la disposición obliga a todos los contribuyentes — all taxpayers are bound to observe this requirement, this requirement is binding on all taxpayers
3) (=empujar) to force2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) circunstancia/personael mal tiempo nos obligó a... — bad weather forced o (frml) obliged us to...
obligar A alguien A QUE + SUBJ — to make somebody + inf
b) ley/disposición to bind2.las normas obligan a los maestros a... — the rules oblige teachers to...
obligarse v pron (refl)obligarse A + INF — ( forzarse) to make oneself + inf, force oneself to + inf; ( comprometerse) to undertake to + inf
* * *= bind, compel, constrain, dictate, force, impel, mandate, obligate, oblige, enjoin, enforce.Ex. Rules and conditions concerning book lending are the most important items in a library's statute book, binding the reader by specific obligations in the process of borrowing books.Ex. It was apparent that the majority of respondents did not feel the need to react as if they were confronting forces compelling the adoption of totally new role.Ex. Model II sees the process in terms of the system forcing or constraining the user to deviate from the 'real' problem.Ex. Also, economy dictates that every possible entry cannot be printed.Ex. If the library wants all users to have passwords, an authorization level of 1 can be assigned in the search function to force the system to require a password.Ex. We have already been impelled toward a definition of the future catalog by forces not especially conducive to its development into a more effective instrument.Ex. Adequate security for expensive equipment must also be provided for in this decision, and a secluded back room, a remote phone cut-off switch, or a removable keyboard may be mandated.Ex. As a result they were obligated to remain generally uninvolved in the patron's efforts to make a decision.Ex. The user interested in children's sports, therefore, is obliged, when looking under the general heading, to differentiate between those works which are general and those which are on men's sports.Ex. Heightened interest in the nation's founding and in the intentions of the founders enjoins law librarians to provide reference service for research in the history of the constitutional period.Ex. Economic necessity will enforce an improvement in the provision of patent information in Hungary.----* obligar a = make + it + incumbent upon.* obligar a cerrar el negocio = force out of + business, force out of + the marketplace.* obligar a Hacer Algo = push into.* obligar a + Infinitivo = push towards + Gerundio.* obligar a pagar = enforce + payment.* obligar a salir = drive out + with a pitchfork, push out.* obligar a salir de = force from.* obligar a subir el precio = force up + prices.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) circunstancia/personael mal tiempo nos obligó a... — bad weather forced o (frml) obliged us to...
obligar A alguien A QUE + SUBJ — to make somebody + inf
b) ley/disposición to bind2.las normas obligan a los maestros a... — the rules oblige teachers to...
obligarse v pron (refl)obligarse A + INF — ( forzarse) to make oneself + inf, force oneself to + inf; ( comprometerse) to undertake to + inf
* * *= bind, compel, constrain, dictate, force, impel, mandate, obligate, oblige, enjoin, enforce.Ex: Rules and conditions concerning book lending are the most important items in a library's statute book, binding the reader by specific obligations in the process of borrowing books.
Ex: It was apparent that the majority of respondents did not feel the need to react as if they were confronting forces compelling the adoption of totally new role.Ex: Model II sees the process in terms of the system forcing or constraining the user to deviate from the 'real' problem.Ex: Also, economy dictates that every possible entry cannot be printed.Ex: If the library wants all users to have passwords, an authorization level of 1 can be assigned in the search function to force the system to require a password.Ex: We have already been impelled toward a definition of the future catalog by forces not especially conducive to its development into a more effective instrument.Ex: Adequate security for expensive equipment must also be provided for in this decision, and a secluded back room, a remote phone cut-off switch, or a removable keyboard may be mandated.Ex: As a result they were obligated to remain generally uninvolved in the patron's efforts to make a decision.Ex: The user interested in children's sports, therefore, is obliged, when looking under the general heading, to differentiate between those works which are general and those which are on men's sports.Ex: Heightened interest in the nation's founding and in the intentions of the founders enjoins law librarians to provide reference service for research in the history of the constitutional period.Ex: Economic necessity will enforce an improvement in the provision of patent information in Hungary.* obligar a = make + it + incumbent upon.* obligar a cerrar el negocio = force out of + business, force out of + the marketplace.* obligar a Hacer Algo = push into.* obligar a + Infinitivo = push towards + Gerundio.* obligar a pagar = enforce + payment.* obligar a salir = drive out + with a pitchfork, push out.* obligar a salir de = force from.* obligar a subir el precio = force up + prices.* * *obligar [A3 ]vt1«circunstancia/persona»: obligar a algn A + INF: el mal tiempo nos obligó a retrasar la partida bad weather obliged o forced o compelled us to postpone our departurenos obligan a llevar uniforme we are required to o we have to wear uniformno lo obligues a comer don't force him to eat, don't make him eatlo obligué a pedirle perdón a la abuela I made him apologize to his grandmotherobligar a algn A QUE + SUBJ to make sb + INFoblígalos a que recojan los juguetes make them pick up their toys2 «ley/disposición» to bindesta ley sólo obliga a los mayores de edad this law only applies to adults, only adults are legally bound by this law( refl)1 (forzarse) obligarse A + INF to make oneself + INF, force oneself to + INFme obligo a escribir una página todos los días I force myself to write o I make myself write a page every day2 (comprometerse) to undertake obligarse A + INF to undertake to + INF* * *
obligar ( conjugate obligar) verbo transitivo
nos obligan a llevar uniforme we are required to wear uniform;
obligar a algn A QUE haga algo to make sb do sth
obligar verbo transitivo to force, oblige: nada te obliga a vivir con él, no-one's forcing you to live with him ➣ Ver nota en make
' obligar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
comprometer
- constreñir
- desalojar
- echar
- forzar
- hacer
- empujar
- orillar
English:
bind
- bully
- compel
- constrained
- drive
- force
- force down
- hand
- make
- oblige
- constrain
- obligate
* * *♦ vtyo no quería hacerlo, me obligaron I didn't want to do it, they forced me to o they made me;no lo compres, nadie te obliga don't buy it, nobody is forcing you;la obligué a descansar I made her have a rest;a los jefes de departamento se les obliga a presentar un informe al mes the heads of department are required to hand in a monthly report;obligar a alguien a que haga algo to force sb to do sth, to make sb do sth;la obligué a que me contestase I forced her to answer me, I made her answer me2. [sujeto: ley, norma]la ley obliga a todos los ciudadanos a declarar sus ingresos all citizens are required by law to declare their income;esta norma obliga a los mayores de dieciocho años this rule applies to people over eighteen* * *v/t1:* * *obligar {52} vt: to force, to require, to oblige* * *obligar vb to force / to makeme obligaron a marcharme they forced me to leave / they made me leave -
64 Kelly, William
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 1790s Lanark, Scotland[br]Scottish pioneer in attempts to make Crompton 's spinning mule work automatically.[br]William Kelly, a Larnack clockmaker, was Manager of David Dale's New Lanark cotton-spinning mills. He was writing to Boulton \& Watt in 1796 about the different ways in which he heated the mills and the New Institution. He must also have been responsible for supervising the millwrights' and mechanics' shops where much of the spinning machinery for the mills was constructed. At one time there were eighty-seven men employed in these shops alone. He devised a better method of connecting the water wheel to the line shafting which he reckoned would save a quarter of the water power required. Kelly may have been the first to apply power to the mule, for in 1790 he drove the spinning sequence from the line shafting, which operated the gear mechanism to turn the rollers and spindles as well as draw out the carriage. The winding on of the newly spun yarn still had to be done by hand. Then in 1792 he applied for a patent for a self-acting mule in which all the operations would be carried out by power. However, winding the yarn on in a conical form was a problem; he tried various ways of doing this, but abandoned his attempts because the mechanism was cumbersome and brought no economic advantage as only a comparatively small number of spindles could be operated. Even so, his semi-automatic mule became quite popular and was exported to America in 1803. Kelly was replaced as Manager at New Lanark by Robert Owen in 1800.[br]Bibliography1792, British patent no. 1,879 (semi-automatic mule).Further ReadingR.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (includes Kelly's own account of his development of the self-acting mule).H.Catling, 1970, The Spinning Mule, Newton Abbot (describes some of Kelly's mule mechanisms).J.Butt (ed.), 1971, Robert Owen, Prince of Cotton Spinners, Newton Abbot (provides more details about the New Lanark mills).RLH -
65 лицо
сущ.( человек) individual;person;(сторона в договоре по делу и т.п.) party (to);participant (in)- лицо без гражданства
- лицо иностранного происхождения
- арестованное лицо
- важное лицо
- высокопоставленное лицо
- государственное должностное лицо
- гражданское лицо
- дееспособное лицо
- действующее лицо
- доверенное лицо
- должностное лицо
- заинтересованное лицо
- зарегистрированное лицо
- интернированное лицо
- нежелательное лицо
- опрашиваемое лицо
- определённое лицо
- ответственное лицо
- официальное лицо
- перемещённое лицо
- подозреваемое лицо
- подследственное лицо
- политически неблагонадёжное лицо
- представляемое лицо
- приглашённое лицо
- самостоятельное юридическое лицо
- субсидируемое лицо
- третье лицо
- уполномоченное лицо
- физическое лицо
- частное лицо
- через третье лицо
- юридическое лицо\лицоа, не состоящие в кровном родстве — not of kin; strangers of the blood
\лицоа, состоящие в кровном родстве — next of kin
\лицоа, страдающие физическими недостатками — persons with physical disabilities
лицо, бежавшее от суда — fugitive from a trial
лицо, берущее вещь напрокат — hirer; renter
лицо, берущее взятку — (взяткополучатель, взяточник) bribe-taker; exactor; taker of a bribe; амер. grafter
лицо, берущее заём — (денежную ссуду) — ( заёмщик) borrower (of money); loan debtor
лицо, в интересах которого осуществляется доверительная собственность — ( бенефициарий) beneficiary
лицо, в пользу которого даётся обязательство — ( в суде) recognizee
лицо, в пользу которого осуществляется отказ от права — surrenderee
лицо, в пользу которого существует обременение — ( залогодержатель) encumbrancer
лицо, ведущее допрос — interrogator; ( по уголовному делу) criminal interrogator
лицо, ведущее переговоры — negotiator
лицо, виновное в неуважении к суду ( -- или к другому органу власти) — contemner
лицо, виновное в совершении преступления — criminal; offender; person guilty of a crime
лицо, вносящее предложение — mover; proponent
лицо, внёсшее законопроект — originator
лицо, внёсшее предложение — proposer
лицо, воздерживающееся от вступления в брак — celibate
лицо, воздерживающееся при голосовании — abstainer; abstaining person
лицо, впервые отбывающее уголовное наказание — first-timer
лицо, впервые совершившее преступление — first (time) offender
лицо, временно пребывающее в стране — sojourner
лицо, вступающее ( -- или вступившее) во владение — occupant; occupier
лицо, вступившее в конфликт с законом — ( нарушитель общественного порядка) trouble-maker
лицо, вступившее в преступный сговор ( -- или заговор) — conspirator
лицо, выдающее лицензию — ( лицензиар) grantor (of a licence); licenser; licensor
лицо, вызванное в качестве свидетеля ( -- или поручителя) — vouchee
лицо, вызывающее свидетеля ( -- или поручителя) — voucher
лицо, выплачивающее страховые взносы — insurant
лицо, высланное из страны — expellee
лицо, выступающее защитником в суде — ( защитник) counsel for the defence; defence counsel
лицо, выступающее обвинителем в суде — ( обвинитель) prosecutor
лицо, дающее аффидевит — affiant
лицо, дающее взятку — ( взяткодатель) briber; giver of a bribe; suborner
лицо, дающее гарантию — ( гарант) guarantor; warrantor
лицо, дающее разрешение — grantor
лицо, дающее ссуду — (заимодатель, ссудодатель) lender
лицо, действующее в интересах другого лица — actor
лицо, действующее в обход закона — evader
лицо, действующее самостоятельно (от своего имени) — actor in rem suam
лицо, действующее — ( в суде) по доверенности — attorney-in-fact
лицо, делающее долевой взнос — contributor
лицо, делающее предложение — ( оферент) offerer; offeror; ( на торгах тж) tenderer
лицо, дело которого назначено к слушанию — termer
лицо, допустившее небрежность — negligent person
лицо, досаждающее кому-л — molester
лицо, завладевшее движимостью по праву удержания — eloigner
лицо, заключённое под стражу судом — court-committed inmate
лицо, занимающее должность (должностное лицо) — office holder
лицо, занимающееся выяснением обстоятельств (установлением фактов) — fact-finder
лицо, занимающееся незаконным сбытом наркотиков — illicit (drug) trafficker
лицо, занимающееся перепродажей — ( субпокупатель) subpurchaser
лицо, занимающееся подрывной деятельностью — subvert
лицо, занимающееся проституцией — person engaged in prostitution
лицо, заслуживающее доверия — person worthy of trust
лицо, заявляющее претензию (требование) — claimant; complainant; plaintiff
лицо, злоупотребляющее доверием — ( мошенник) cheat; con (confidence) man; (con)trickster
лицо, злоупотребляющее служебным положением — malfeasant in office; official malfeasant
лицо, изъявшее имущество из юрисдикции суда — eloigner
лицо, имеющее двойное гражданство — dual citizen
лицо, имеющее задолженность — (дебитор, должник) debtor
лицо, имеющее постоянную работу — jobholder
лицо, имеющее право голоса — ( на выборах) eligible (legal) voter; qualified elector (voter)
лицо, имеющее право на подачу заявки — person entitled to apply
лицо, имеющее умственный недостаток — mental defective; mentally defective (deficient, retarded) person
лицо, имеющее физический недостаток — (инвалид, калека) cripple; crippled (handicapped) person; invalid
лицо, испрашивающее патент — ( заявитель) applicant for a patent; patent applicant
лицо, к которому переходит право собственности — grantee
лицо, которое делает предложение — ( оферент) offerer
лицо, которому вменяется в вину преступление — ( обвиняемый) person charged with a crime
лицо, которому выдана расписка в получении — receiptee
лицо, которому даётся гарантия — guarantee; warrantee
лицо, которому делается предложение — ( адресат оферты) offeree
лицо, которому оказана юридическая помощь — legally aided person
лицо, которому производится отчуждение — ( цессионарий) alienee
лицо, наблюдающее за правильностью голосования — poll-watcher
лицо, наделённое (облечённое) полномочиями — ( уполномоченный) authorized person
лицо, назначенное на должность — official-designate
лицо, назначенное судом для снятия свидетельских показаний — examiner
лицо, налагающее арест — ( на имущество) seizor
лицо, налагающее штраф — amercer
лицо, нанёсшее увечье — maimer
лицо, нарушившее закон — ( правонарушитель) offender; offending person
лицо, находящееся в состоянии наркотической интоксикации — drugged (intoxicated) person; under the influence of drugs
лицо, находящееся за рулём в нетрезвом состоянии (в состоянии опьянения) — person driving under the influence of alcohol (of a drink); drunken (intoxicated) while driving
лицо, находящееся на грани совершения преступления — marginal offender
лицо, находящееся на пробации — person on probation
лицо, находящееся под защитой — protected person
лицо, находящееся под опекой ( -- или на попечении) — ward
лицо, не имеющее постоянного места жительства — person of no fixed abode
лицо, не имеющее права голоса — ( на выборах) unqualified elector (voter)
лицо, не являющееся постоянным жителем — non-resident
лицо, не являющееся стороной по делу — non-party
лицо, неправоспособное выступать свидетелем — ( в суде) incompetent witness
лицо, обвиняемое в совершении преступления — person accused of (charged with) a crime (an offence)
лицо, обвиняющее кого-л в совершении преступления — appellor
лицо, обладающее правом исключительного пользования — exclusive user
лицо, облечённое (наделённое) полномочиями — ( уполномоченный) authorized person
лицо, обратившееся с требованием о кредите — credit claimant
лицо, объявленное в розыске — wanted person
лицо, объявленное вне закона — outlaw
лицо, объявленное — ( по суду) банкротом — adjudged (certified) bankrupt
лицо, ожидающее судебного процесса — person awaiting a trial
лицо, оплачивающее опротестованный вексель по поручению векселедателя — (гонорат, нотадресат) referee in case of need
лицо, освобождённое из-под стражи ( -- или от ответственности) — released person
лицо, осуществляющее зависимое держание — ( зависимый держатель) bailee
лицо, от которого унаследовано имущество — ( наследодатель) ancestor; antecessor
лицо, отбывающее наказание — (срок наказания --) convict
лицо, отбывающее пробацию — probationer
лицо, отдающее вещь в зависимое держание — ( депонент) bailor; depositor
лицо, отказывающееся от права — relinquisher; surrenderor
лицо, отмывающее грязные деньги — money-launderer
лицо, отпущенное — ( до суда) на свободу — person on release
лицо, официально признанное алкоголиком — confirmed drunkard
лицо, оформляющее ордер — person executing a warrant
лицо, передаваемое в другую юрисдикцию — referral
лицо, передающее (предоставляющее) право (имущество — и т.п.) другому лицу — (лицензиар, цедент) assignor; grantor; licensor; transferor; ( право собственности на недвижимость тж) conveyer
лицо, повторно совершившее преступление — ( рецидивист) repeater; repeated criminal; second offender
лицо, подающее заявление о регистрации — registrant
лицо, подающее иск (претензию, требование) — ( истец) claimant; complainant; plaintiff
лицо, подвергнувшееся аресту — arrested person; person under arrest
лицо, подвергнутое исправительному обучению — corrective trainee
лицо, подлежащее выдаче — extra-ditable person
лицо, подозреваемое в осведомительстве — suspected informant
лицо, подозреваемое в первую очередь — prime suspect
лицо, подозреваемое в совершении преступления — crime (criminal) suspect; suspected criminal (offender); person suspected of a crime
лицо, подстрекаемое к совершению преступления — incited person
лицо, получающее денежный перевод ( -- или переводной вексель) — remittee
лицо, получающее дотацию (субсидию) — grantee
лицо, получающее доходы с недвижимости — pernor of profits
лицо, получающее разрешение — permittee
лицо, посягнувшее на целомудрие — offender against chastity
лицо, предлагающее кандидата (кандидатуру) — nominator; proposer
лицо, предлагающее цену — bidder; ( самую высокую цену) highest bidder
лицо, представляющее принципала — (агент, представитель) agent
лицо, представляющее чьи-л интересы — ( представитель) spokesman
лицо, приговорённое к наказанию — person under a sentence
лицо, признанное виновным в совершении мисдиминора — misdemeanant
лицо, признанное по суду делинквентным — adjudged (adjudicated) delinquent
лицо, признанное по суду преступником — adjudged (adjudicated) criminal
лицо, примкнувшее к преступному заговору — coconspirator
лицо, принимающее (принявшее) на себя долг другого лица — expromissor
лицо, принимающее (принявшее) на себя обязательство — committed person; contractant; covenantor; engager; obligator; obligor
лицо, принимающее вещь на хранение — ( депозитарий) depositary
лицо, принимающее поручительство — guarantee
лицо, принудительно осуществляющее право — ( в судебном порядке) enforcer
лицо, принявшее на себя обязательство по оплате ценной бумаги — ( акцептант) acceptor
лицо, присвоившее (растратившее) имущество — ( растратчик) embezzler; ( деньги) peculator
лицо, присутствующее при выемке и обыске — person present during a search and seizure
лицо, провоцирующее совершение преступного действия — provoker
лицо, проживающее вне пределов юрисдикции — non-resident
лицо, производящее дознание — investigator; person conducting an investigation
лицо, производящее допрос (опрос) свидетеля — examiner
лицо, производящее досмотр (обыск, осмотр) — searcher
лицо, производящее идентификацию (опознание) — identifier
лицо, производящее продажу на аукционе — ( аукционист) auctioneer
лицо, пропавшее без вести — missing person
лицо, против которого возбуждено ходатайство — petitionee
лицо, распоряжающееся имуществом на началах доверительной собственности — ( доверительный собственник) trustee
лицо, распределяющее наследственное имущество по договорённости — appointor; donee
лицо, решающее вопрос права — ( судья) trier of law
лицо, сдающее квартиру внаём — (lodging) letter
лицо, сделавшее передаточную надпись — (индоссант, жирант) endorser
лицо, сделавшее признание — confessor
лицо, систематически совершающее преступления — systematic criminal (offender); ( рецидивист) habitual (old, persistent, relapsed, repeated) criminal (offender); hard core (hardened) criminal (offender); jailbird; recidivist; reconvicted (person); repeater
лицо, скрывающееся от правосудия — absconder; fugitive from justice
лицо, совершающее (совершившее) насильственное преступление — violent criminal (offender)
лицо, совершающее действие — actor; doer; feasor
лицо, совершающее регулярные поездки — ( из пригорода в город и обратно) commuter
лицо, совершившее грабёж — robber; ( с применением насилия) pillager
лицо, совершившее должностное преступление — malfeasant in office; official malfeasant
лицо, совершившее имущественное преступление — property offender
лицо, совершившее малозначительное (мелкое) преступление — minor (petty) offender
лицо, совершившее ненасильственное преступление — nonviolent offender
лицо, совершившее несколько преступлений — multiple offender
лицо, совершившее преступление в состоянии невменяемости — criminal lunatic
лицо, совершившее преступление — ( преступник) criminal; felon; offender; perpetrator (of a crime); ( правонарушитель тж) delinquent; malefactor; malfeasant
лицо, совершившее серьёзное преступление — felon; major offender
лицо, совершившее террористический акт — ( террорист) terrorist
лицо, совершившее убийство — ( убийца) assassin; killer; murderer
лицо, содействующее совершению преступления — ( соучастник) accessory; accomplice; criminal promoter
лицо, содержащееся в тюрьме — jail (prison) inmate
лицо, содержащееся под стражей — detainee; person held in custody
лицо, способное совершить преступление — would-be criminal (offender)
лицо, терпящее бедствие — person in distress
лицо, требующее ордер — person requesting a warrant
лицо, удостоверяющее подпись — (и т.п.) attestor
лицо, уклоняющееся (отказывающееся) от воинской повинности — ( по политическим или иным соображениям) draft-dodger; draft-evader; (conscientious) objector
лицо, уклоняющееся от уплаты налогов — tax-dodger; tax-evader
лицо, учинившее беспорядки — rioter
лицо, учитывающее вексель — discounter
в \лицое кого-л — in the person (of)
вымышленное (подставное, фиктивное) лицо — dummy; fictitious person; figure-head; man of a straw
высланное из страны лицо — deportee; expellee
действовать (выступать) в качестве физического \лицоа — to act (speak) in one’s individual capacity
действовать (выступать) в качестве частного \лицоа — to act (speak) in one’s private capacity
назначаемое (назначенное) лицо — appointee; designated person; nominee
назначение доверенного \лицоа — appointment of a proxy
невзирая на \лицоа — without respect of persons
обладающий правами юридического \лицоа — corporate; incorporated
от \лицоа ( -- от имени) кого-л — on behalf (of); in the name (of)
перед \лицоом чего-л — in the face (of)
подлинность \лицоа — personal identity
подотчётное — ( перед кем-л) лицо — (за) person accountable (to - for)
подставное (вымышленное, фиктивное) лицо — dummy; fictitious person; figure-head; man of a straw
предоставлять права юридического \лицоа — to incorporate
принадлежащий юридическому \лицоу — corporate; incorporated
связанные лицоa — related entities (parties, persons)
скрывающееся от правосудия лицо — absconder; fugitive from justice
сопровождающие \лицоа — accompanying persons; party
фиктивное (вымышленное, подставное) лицо — dummy; fictitious person; figure-head; man of a straw
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66 Pretsch, Paul
[br]b. 1808 Vienna, Austriad. 1873 Vienna, Austria[br]Austrian printer and inventor of photogalvanography, one of the earliest commercial photomechanical printing processes.[br]The son of a goldsmith, Pretsch learned the printing trade in Vienna, where he worked until 1831. He then took up a series of posts in Germany, Belgium and Holland before returning to Vienna, where in 1842 he joined the Imperial State Printing Office. The office was equipped with a photographic studio, and Pretsch was encouraged to explore applications of photography to printing and the graphic arts. In 1851 he was sent to London to take responsibility for the Austrian printing exhibits of the Great Exhibition. This event proved to be a significant international show case for photography and Pretsch saw a great number of recent innovations and made many useful contacts. On returning to Vienna, he began to develop a process for producing printing plates from photographs. Using Talbot's discovery that bichromated gelatine swells in water after exposure to light, he electrotyped the relief image obtained. In 1854 Pretsch resigned from his post in Vienna and travelled back to London, where he patented his process, calling it photogalvanography. He went on to form a business, the Photo-Galvano-Graphic Company, to print and market his pictures.The Photographic Manager of the company was the celebrated photographer Roger Fenton, recently returned from his exploits on the battlefields of the Crimea. In 1856 the company issued a large serial work, Photographic Art Treasures, illustrated with Pretsch's pictures, which created considerable interest. The venture did not prove a commercial success, however, and although further plates were made and issued, Fenton found other interests to pursue and Pretsch was left to try to apply some of his ideas to lithography. This too had no successful outcome, and in 1863 Pretsch returned to Vienna. He was reappointed to a post at the Imperial State Printing Office, but his health failed and he made no further progress with his processes.[br]Bibliography9 November 1854, British patent no. 2,373. 11 August 1855, British patent no. 1,824.Further ReadingJ.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans. E. Epstean, New York.H.Gernsheim and A.Gernsheim, 1969, The History of Photography, rev. edn, London. H.J.P.Arnold, 1977, William Henry Fox Talbot, London (an account of the relationship with Talbot's process).JW -
67 подавать заявку на изобретение в патентное ведомство
Подавать заявку на изобретение в патентное ведомство - apply to the Patent Office for a patentРусско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > подавать заявку на изобретение в патентное ведомство
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68 Radcliffe, William
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 1761 Mellor, Cheshire, Englandd. 1842 Mellor, Cheshire, England[br]English inventor of the sizing machine.[br]Radcliffe was brought up in the textile industry and learned carding and spinning as a child. When he was old enough, he became a weaver. It was a time when there were not enough weavers to work up all the yarn being spun on the recently invented spinning machines, so some yarn was exported. Radcliffe regarded this as a sin; meetings were held to prohibit the export, and Radcliffe promised to use his best endeavours to discover means to work up the yarn in England. He owned a mill at Mellor and by 1801 was employing over 1,000 hand-loom weavers. He wanted to improve their efficiency so they could compete against power looms, which were beginning to be introduced at that time.His first step was to divide up as much as possible the different weaving processes, not unlike the plan adopted by Arkwright in spinning. In order to strengthen the warp yarns made of cotton and to reduce their tendency to fray during weaving, it was customary to apply an adhesive substance such as starch paste. This was brushed on as the warp was unwound from the back beam during weaving, so only short lengths could be treated before being dried. Instead of dressing the warp in the loom as was hitherto done, Radcliffe had it dressed in a separate machine, relieving the weaver of the trouble and saving the time wasted by the method previously used. Radcliffe employed a young man names Thomas Johnson, who proved to be a clever mechanic. Radcliffe patented his inventions in Johnson's name to avoid other people, especially foreigners, finding out his ideas. He took out his first patent, for a dressing machine, in March 1803 and a second the following year. The combined result of the two patents was the introduction of a beaming machine and a dressing machine which, in addition to applying the paste to the yarns and then drying them, wound them onto a beam ready for the loom. These machines enabled the weaver to work a loom with fewer stoppages; however, Radcliffe did not anticipate that his method of sizing would soon be applied to power looms as well and lead to the commercial success of powered weaving. Other manufacturers quickly adopted Radcliffe's system, and Radcliffe himself soon had to introduce power looms in his own business.Radcliffe improved the hand looms themselves when, with the help of Johnson, he devised a cloth taking-up motion that wound the woven cloth onto a roller automatically as the weaver operated the loom. Radcliffe and Johnson also developed the "dandy loom", which was a more compact form of hand loom and was also later adapted for weaving by power. Radcliffe was among the witnesses before the Parliamentary Committee which in 1808 awarded Edmund Cartwright a grant for his invention of the power loom. Later Radcliffe was unsuccessfully to petition Parliament for a similar reward for his contributions to the introduction of power weaving. His business affairs ultimately failed partly through his own obstinacy and his continued opposition to the export of cotton yarn. He lived to be 81 years old and was buried in Mellor churchyard.[br]Bibliography1811, Exportation of Cotton Yarn and Real Cause of the Distress that has Fallen upon the Cotton Trade for a Series of Years Past, Stockport.1828, Origin of the New System of Manufacture, Commonly Called "Power-Loom Weaving", Stockport (this should be read, even though it is mostly covers Radcliffe's political aims).Further ReadingA.Barlow, 1870, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London (provides an outline of Radcliffe's life and work).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a general background of his inventions). R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (a general background).D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution. The Diffusion of Textile Technologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (discusses the spread of the sizing machine in America).RLH -
69 Tompion, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Horology[br]baptized 25 July 1639 Ickwell Green, Englandd. 20 November 1713 London, England[br]English clock-and watchmaker of great skill and ingenuity who laid the foundations of his country's pre-eminence in that field.[br]Little is known about Tompion's early life except that he was born into a family of blacksmiths. When he was admitted into the Clockmakers' Company in 1671 he was described as a "Great Clockmaker", which meant a maker of turret clocks, and as these clocks were made of wrought iron they would have required blacksmithing skills. Despite this background, he also rapidly established his reputation as a watchmaker. In 1674 he moved to premises in Water Lane at the sign of "The Dial and Three Crowns", where his business prospered and he remained for the rest of his life. Assisted by journeymen and up to eleven apprentices at any one time, the output from his workshop was prodigious, amounting to over 5,000 watches and 600 clocks. In his lifetime he was famous for his watches, as these figures suggest, but although they are of high quality they do not differ markedly from those produced by other London watchmakers of that period. He is now known more for the limited number of elaborate clocks that he produced, such as the equation clock and the spring-driven clock of a year's duration, which he made for William III. Around 1711 he took into partnership his nephew by marriage, George Graham, who carried on the business after his death.Although Tompion does not seem to have been particularly innovative, he lived at a time when great advances were being made in horology, which his consummate skill as a craftsman enabled him to exploit. In this he was greatly assisted by his association with Robert Hooke, for whom Tompion constructed a watch with a balance spring in 1675; at that time Hooke was trying to establish his priority over Huygens for this invention. Although this particular watch was not successful, it made Tompion aware of the potential of the balance spring and he became the first person in England to apply Huygens's spiral spring to the balance of a watch. Although Thuret had constructed such a watch somewhat earlier in France, the superior quality of Tompion's wheel work, assisted by Hooke's wheel-cutting engine, enabled him to dominate the market. The anchor escapement (which reduced the amplitude of the pendulum's swing) was first applied to clocks around this time and produced further improvements in accuracy which Tompion and other makers were able to utilize. However, the anchor escapement, like the verge escapement, produced recoil (the clock was momentarily driven in reverse). Tompion was involved in attempts to overcome this defect with the introduction of the dead-beat escapement for clocks and the horizontal escapement for watches. Neither was successful, but they were both perfected later by George Graham.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsMaster of the Clockmakers' Company 1703.Bibliography1695, with William Houghton and Edward Barlow, British patent no. 344 (for a horizontal escapement).Further ReadingR.W.Symonds, 1951, Thomas Tompion, His Life and Work, London (a comprehensive but now slightly dated account).H.W.Robinson and W.Adams (eds), 1935, The Diary of Robert Hooke (contains many references to Tompion).D.Howse, 1970, The Tompion clocks at Greenwich and the dead-beat escapement', Antiquarian Horology 7:18–34, 114–33.DV -
70 Elkington, George Richard
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 17 October 1801 Birmingham Englandd. 22 September 1865 Pool Park, Denbighshire, England[br]English pioneer in electroplating.[br]He was apprenticed to his uncles, makers of metalware, in 1815 and showed such aptitude for business that he was taken into partnership. On their deaths, Elkington assumed sole ownership of the business. In conjunction with his cousin Henry (1810–52), by unrelenting enterprise, he established an industry for electroplating and electrogilding. Up until c.1840, silver-plated goods were produced by rolling or soldering thin sheets of silver to a base metal, such as copper. Back in 1801, the English chemist William Wollaston had deposited one metal upon another by means of an electric current generated from a voltaic pile or battery. In the 1830s, certain inventors, such as Bessemer used this result to produce plated articles and these efforts in turn induced the Elkingtons to apply the method in their trade. In 1836 and 1837 they took out patents for "mercurial gilding", and one patent of 1838 refers to a separate electric current. In 1840 they bought from John Wright, a Birmingham surgeon, his discovery of what proved to be the best electroplating solution: namely, solutions of cyanides of gold and silver in potassium cyanide. They also purchased rights to use the electric machine invented by J.S. Woolrich. Armed with these techniques, the Elkingtons produced in their large new works in Newhall Street a wide range of gold-and silver-plated decorative and artistic ware. Henry was particularly active on the artistic side of the business, as was their employee Alexander Parkes. For some twenty-five years, Britain enjoyed a virtual monopoly of this kind of ware, due largely to the enterprise of the Elkingtons, although by the end of the century rising tariffs had closed many foreign markets and the lead had passed to Germany. George spent all his working life in Birmingham, taking some part in the public life of the city. He was a governor of King Edward's Grammar School and a borough magistrate. He was also a caring employer, setting up houses and schools for his workers.[br]Bibliography1864, Journal of the Royal Society for Arts (29 January).LRDBiographical history of technology > Elkington, George Richard
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71 Anwalt
Anwalt m 1. GEN advocate; 2. RECHT (AE) attorney, (BE) barrister, legal counsel, (AE) practicing lawyer, (BE) practising lawyer, (BE) solicitor (Bevollmächtigter) • jmdn. als Anwalt zulassen RECHT (AE) admit sb to the bar, (BE) call sb to the bar* * *m 1. < Geschäft> advocate; 2. < Recht> Bevollmächtigter attorney (AE), barrister (BE), legal counsel, practicing lawyer (AE), practising lawyer (BE), solicitor (BE) ■ jmdn. als Anwalt zulassen < Recht> admit sb to the bar (AE), call sb to the bar (BE)* * *Anwalt
lawyer, solicitor (Br.), attorney at law (US), law agent (Scot.), (im Prozess) pleader, barrister-at-law (Br.), counsel (Br.), counsellor [at-law] (US);
• mit der ständigen Vertretung beauftragter Anwalt standing counsel (Br.);
• beratender Anwalt special pleader, counsel in chambers (Br.), chamber counsel (Br.), consulting barrister (Br.), office lawyer (US);
• bewährter Anwalt experienced lawyer;
• erfolgreicher Anwalt budding lawyer;
• als Treuhänder fungierender Anwalt solicitor-trustee (Br.);
• gegnerischer Anwalt opposing counsel (Br.);
• klägerischer Anwalt counsel for the plaintiff (Br.), plaintiff’s solicitor;
• plädierender Anwalt barrister (Br.);
• auf Arbeitsrecht spezialisierter Anwalt labo(u)r-relations attorney;
• auf Gesellschaftsrecht spezialisierter Anwalt corporation lawyer (US);
• auf Immobilienrecht spezialisierter Anwalt property (real-estate) lawyer;
• versierter Anwalt full-blown (-fledged) lawyer (barrister);
• zugelassener Anwalt authorized counsellor (US);
• Anwalt des Klägers plaintiff’s counsel (Br.);
• Anwalt für Steuersachen tax lawyer (attorney, US);
• Anwalt beim Verfahren zur Strafzumessung (in der Straffestlegungsphase) Keenan counsel (US);
• Anwalt beauftragen to instruct an attorney (US);
• sich mit seinem Anwalt beraten to confer with one’s counsel (Br.);
• laufend einen Anwalt beschäftigen to employ a solicitor (Br.), to retain a lawyer;
• Anwalt zur laufenden Beratung engagieren to retain a counsel (Br.) (lawyer);
• seinem Anwalt Weisungen erteilen to brief (instruct) one’s lawyer;
• sich als Anwalt einen Namen machen to establish one’s reputation as a lawyer;
• sich einen Anwalt nehmen to retain (brief) a barrister (counsel) (Br.), to engage the services of a lawyer, to hire an attorney (US);
• vollbeschäftigter Anwalt sein to have plenty of briefs;
• durch einen Anwalt vertreten sein to be represented by counsel (Br.);
• als Anwalt beim Patentamt zugelassen sein to be recognized to practise before the Patent Office (US);
• jem. einen Anwalt stellen to provide s. o. with an attorney (US);
• Angelegenheit einem Anwalt übergeben (übertragen) to put a matter in the hands of a lawyer;
• Anwalt zurate ziehen to call in the aid of an attorney (US);
• als Anwalt zulassen to admit a solicitor (Br.);
• Anwalt zuziehen to consult a solicitor (Br.) (an attorney, US), to employ a counsel (Br.).
bemühen, Anwalt
to consult a lawyer;
• sich um Aufträge bemühen to canvass orders;
• sich um Auslandshilfe bemühen to scramble for aid;
• sich intensiv um Kunden bemühen to rub shoulders with clients;
• sich um seine Kundschaft bemühen to solicit one’s custom;
• sich persönlich bemühen to apply in person;
• sich ernsthaft um eine Stellung bemühen to try hard for a job;
• sich um einen Submissionsvertrag bemühen to tender for a supply of goods. -
72 Levers (Leavers), John
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]fl. 1812–21 Englandd. after 1821 Rouen, France[br]English improver of lace-making machines that formed the basis for many later developments.[br]John Heathcote had shown that it was possible to make lace by machine with his patents of 1808 and 1809. His machines were developed and improved by John Levers. Levers was originally a hosiery frame-smith and setter-up at Sutton-in-Ashfield but moved to Nottingham, where he extended his operations to the construction of point-net and warp-lace machinery. In the years 1812 and 1813 he more or less isolated himself in the garret of a house in Derby Road, where he assembled his lacemaking machine by himself. He was helped by two brothers and a nephew who made parts, but they saw it only when it was completed. Financial help for making production machines came from the firm of John Stevenson \& Skipwith, lace manufacturers in Nottingham. Levers never sought a patent, as he was under the mistaken impression that additions or improvements to an existing patented machine could not be protected. An early example of the machine survives at the Castle Museum in Nottingham. Although his prospects must have seemed good, for some reason Levers dissolved his partnership with Stevenson \& Co. and continued to work on improving his machine. In 1817 he altered it from the horizontal to the upright position, building many of the machines each year. He was a friendly, kind-hearted man, but he seems to have been unable to apply himself to his business, preferring the company of musicians—he was a bandmaster of the local militia—and was soon frequently without money, even to buy food for his family. He emigrated in 1821 to Rouen, France, where he set up his lace machines and where he subsequently died; when or in what circumstances is unknown. His machine continued to be improved and was adapted to work with the Jacquard mechanism to select the pattern.[br]Further ReadingW.Felkin, 1967, History of the Machine-wrought Hosiery and Lace Manufactures, reprint, Newton Abbot (orig. pub. 1867) (the main account of the Levers machine).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a brief account of the Levers lace machine).D.M.Smith, 1965, Industrial Archaeology of the East Midlands, Dawlish (includes an illustration of Levers's machine).RLH -
73 Monier, Joseph
[br]b. 1823 Franced. 1906 Paris, France[br]French gardener and one of the principal inventors of reinforced concrete.[br]Monier was a commercial gardener who in the course of his work was struck with the idea of inserting iron reinforcement in concrete tubs such as were used for growing orange trees. He patented this idea in 1867 and exhibited his invention the same year at the Paris Exposition. It soon occurred to him to apply the same principles to other engineering structures such as railway sleepers, pipes, floors, arches and bridges. In 1878 he took out a French patent for reinforced concrete beams and held numerous other patents for the material. Although he was not the only one to realize the benefits of combining a concrete girder or slab to resist compressive forces with iron or steel wires or rods to resist tensile stresses, "Das System Monier" was known as such by 1887 throughout Europe.[br]Further ReadingJ.W.De Courcy, 1987, "The emergence of reinforced concrete", Structural Engineer 65A: 316.IMcN -
74 Roebuck, John
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 1718 Sheffield, Englandd. 17 July 1794[br]English chemist and manufacturer, inventor of the lead-chamber process for sulphuric acid.[br]The son of a prosperous Sheffield manufacturer, Roebuck forsook the family business to pursue studies in medicine at Edinburgh University. There he met Dr Joseph Black (1727–99), celebrated Professor of Chemistry, who aroused in Roebuck a lasting interest in chemistry. Roebuck continued his studies at Leyden, where he took his medical degree in 1742. He set up in practice in Birmingham, but in his spare time he continued chemical experiments that might help local industries.Among his early achievements was his new method of refining gold and silver. Success led to the setting up of a large laboratory and a reputation as a chemical consultant. It was at this time that Roebuck devised an improved way of making sulphuric acid. This vital substance was then made by burning sulphur and nitre (potassium nitrate) over water in a glass globe. The scale of the process was limited by the fragility of the glass. Roebuck substituted "lead chambers", or vessels consisting of sheets of lead, a metal both cheap and resistant to acids, set in wooden frames. After the first plant was set up in 1746, productivity rose and the price of sulphuric acid fell sharply. Success encouraged Roebuck to establish a second, larger plant at Prestonpans, near Edinburgh. He preferred to rely on secrecy rather than patents to preserve his monopoly, but a departing employee took the secret with him and the process spread rapidly in England and on the European continent. It remained the standard process until it was superseded by the contact process towards the end of the nineteenth century. Roebuck next turned his attention to ironmaking and finally selected a site on the Carron river, near Falkirk in Scotland, where the raw materials and water power and transport lay close at hand. The Carron ironworks began producing iron in 1760 and became one of the great names in the history of ironmaking. Roebuck was an early proponent of the smelting of iron with coke, pioneered by Abraham Darby at Coalbrookdale. To supply the stronger blast required, Roebuck consulted John Smeaton, who c. 1760 installed the first blowing cylinders of any size.All had so far gone well for Roebuck, but he now leased coal-mines and salt-works from the Duke of Hamilton's lands at Borrowstonness in Linlithgow. The coal workings were plagued with flooding which the existing Newcomen engines were unable to overcome. Through his friendship with Joseph Black, patron of James Watt, Roebuck persuaded Watt to join him to apply his improved steam-engine to the flooded mine. He took over Black's loan to Watt of £1,200, helped him to obtain the first steam-engine patent of 1769 and took a two-thirds interest in the project. However, the new engine was not yet equal to the task and the debts mounted. To satisfy his creditors, Roebuck had to dispose of his capital in his various ventures. One creditor was Matthew Boulton, who accepted Roebuck's two-thirds share in Watt's steam-engine, rather than claim payment from his depleted estate, thus initiating a famous partnership. Roebuck was retained to manage Borrowstonness and allowed an annuity for his continued support until his death in 1794.[br]Further ReadingMemoir of John Roebuck in J.Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. 4 (1798), pp. 65–87.S.Gregory, 1987, "John Roebuck, 18th century entrepreneur", Chem. Engr. 443:28–31.LRD -
75 Small, James
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. c. 1742 Scotlandd. 1793 Scotland[br]Scottish engineer who was first to apply scientific experiment and calculation to the design of ploughs.[br]James Small served his apprenticeship as a wright and blacksmith at Hutton in Berwickshire, and then travelled for a time in England. It is possible that he learned his trade from the ploughwright Pashley, who ran the "Manufactory" in Rotherham. On his return to Scotland he settled at Blackadder Mount, Berwickshire, and there began to make his ploughs. He used a spring balance to determine the draft of the plough and fashioned the mouldboard from a soft wood so that the wear would show quickly on its surface. Repeated trials indicated the best shape to be adopted, and he had his mouldboards cast at the Carron Ironworks. At trials held at Dalkeith, Small's plough, pulled by two horses, outperformed the old Scotch plough hauled by as many as eight oxen, and his ploughs were soon to be found in all areas of the country. He established workshops in Leith Walk, where he made ploughs and other implements. It was in Edinburgh in 1784 that he published Treatise on Ploughs, in which he set out his methods and calculations. He made no attempt to patent his ideas, feeling that they should be available to all, and the book provided sufficient information for it to be used by his rivals. As a result he died a poor man at the age of 52. His family were supported with a £1,500 subscription raised on their behalf by Sir John Sinclair, President of the Board of Agriculture.[br]Bibliography1784, A Treatise on Ploughs and Wheel Carriages.Further ReadingJ.B.Passmore, 1930, The English Plough, Reading: University of Reading (provides a history of plough development from the eighth century, and deals in detail with Small's work).AP
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