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1 joint à éclisse
Dictionnaire d'ingénierie, d'architecture et de construction > joint à éclisse
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2 накладной стык
Русско-английский исловарь по машиностроению и автоматизации производства > накладной стык
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3 spoj šina
• fish-joint -
4 spoj šina
• fish-joint -
5 стык с накладкой
Russian-English dictionary of railway terminology > стык с накладкой
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6 релсово челно съединение с планка
fish jointfish jointsБългарски-Angleščina политехнически речник > релсово челно съединение с планка
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7 cuchillo para el pescado
• fish joint• fish-likeDiccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > cuchillo para el pescado
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8 pescar en río revuelto
• fish illegally• fish joint -
9 połączenie łubkowe
• fish joint• fished jointSłownik polsko-angielski dla inżynierów > połączenie łubkowe
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10 połączenie nakładkowe
• fish joint• strapped jointSłownik polsko-angielski dla inżynierów > połączenie nakładkowe
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11 перекрытый стык
1) Engineering: concealed joint2) Construction: secret joint3) Forestry: (накладкой) fish joint, (накладкой) fish-plate joint4) Mechanic engineering: fished joint (накладкой) -
12 giunto
"link;Lasche;union"* * *past part vedere giungere* * *giunto1 agg. joined // a mani giunte, with one's hands joined.giunto2 s.m. (mecc.) joint; (di accoppiamento) coupling; (costruzioni navali) seam: giunto a cerniera, hinged joint; giunto a ganasce, fish joint (o splice); giunto a ginocchiera, toggle joint; giunto a snodo, knuckle joint; giunto assiale, splice; giunto a viti, muff coupling; giunto ad incastro, (carpenteria) gain joint; giunto cardanico, universale, universal joint; giunto di dilatazione, expansion joint; giunto di testa, butt (joint); giunto idraulico, hydraulic (o hydro-drive) coupling (o fluid flywheel); (con tenuta ad acqua) hydraulic joint; giunto sferico, ball (o ball-and-socket) joint.* * *['dʒunto] giunto (-a)1. ppSee:2. smTecn coupling, joint* * *['dʒunto] 1.participio passato giungere2. 3.sostantivo maschile tecn. joint* * *giunto/'dʒunto/→ giungereII aggettivoa mani -e with one's hands joinedIII sostantivo m.tecn. jointgiunto cardanico cardan joint. -
13 стык
1) General subject: butt, commissure, fork (дорог), joint, junction, juncture, meeting2) Geology: abutment joint3) Naval: butt seam, end connection, end lap, landing4) Military: boundary, contact point, coordinating point (между частями и подразделениями), interior flank, junction point, junction point (между частями и подразделениями), seam (между подразделениями в обороне)5) Engineering: conjunction, joint group, jointing, jump joint, seam7) Mathematics: joining point8) Railway term: clinch10) Automobile industry: jointing edge, matting faces11) Mining: abutting joint12) Metallurgy: end13) Stylistics: anadiplosis14) Information technology: butting (разновидность сетевого интерфейса)15) Oil: buff, cut point (различных нефтепродуктов при последовательном перекачивании их по трубопроводу), splice16) Immunology: joining17) Communications: interface18) Astronautics: mechanical interface20) Advertising: edit (при видеомонтаже)21) Microelectronics: advice22) Network technologies: integrated digital interface23) Polymers: knit line24) Automation: interfacial joint25) Plastics: weld mark26) Makarov: butt (вид соединения или соединение; для элементов типа балок, колонн и т.п. - соединение в торец; для панелей, листов обшивки судна и т.п. - вертикальное соединение по боковым кромкам), butt joint (вид соединения или соединение; для элементов типа балок, колонн и т.п. - соединение в торец; для панелей, листов обшивки судна и т.п. - вертикальное соединение по боковым кромкам), fish, joint (в системе передачи данных), particulate, parting -
14 Oeynhausen, Karl von
SUBJECT AREA: Mining and extraction technology[br]b. 4 February 1795 Grevenburg, near Höxter, Germanyd. 1 February 1865 Grevenburg, near Höxter, Germany[br]German mining officer who introduced fish joints to deep-drilling.[br]The son of a mining officer, Oeynhausen started his career in the Prussian administration of the mining industry in 1816, immediately after he had finished his studies in natural sciences and mathematics at the University of Göttingen. From 1847 until his retirement he was a most effective head of state mines inspectorates, first in Silesia (Breslau; now Wroclaw, Poland), later in Westphalia (Dortmund). During his working life he served in all the important mining districts of Prussia, and travelled to mining areas in other parts of Germany, Belgium, France and Britain. In the 1820s, after visiting Glenck's well-known saltworks near Wimpfen, he was commissioned to search for salt deposits in Prussian territory, where he discovered the thermal springs south of Minden which later became the renowned spa carrying his name.With deeper drills, the increased weight of the rods made it difficult to disengage the drill on each stroke and made the apparatus self-destructive on impact of the drill. Oeynhausen, from 1834, used fish joints, flexible connections between the drill and the rods. Not only did they prevent destructive impact, but they also gave a jerk on the return stroke that facilitated disengagements. He never claimed to have invented the fish joints: in fact, they appeared almost simultaneously in Europe and in America at that time, and had been used since at least the seventeenth century in China, although they were unknown in the Western hemisphere.Using fish joints meant the start of a new era in deep-drilling, allowing much deeper wells to be sunk than before. Five weeks after Oeynhausen, K.G. Kind operated with a different kind of fish joint, and in 1845 another Prussian mining officer, Karl Leopold Fabian (1782–1855), Director of the salt inspectorate at Schönebeck, Elbe, improved the fish joints by developing a special device between the rod and the drill to enable the chisel, strengthened by a sinker bar, to fall onto the bottom of the hole without hindrance with a higher effect. The free-fall system became another factor in the outstanding results of deep-drilling in Prussia in the nineteenth century.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsHonorary PhD, University of Berlin 1860.Bibliography1824, "Über die geologische Ähnlichkeit des steinsalzführenden Gebirges in Lothringen und im südlichen Deutschland mit einigen Gegenden auf beiden Ufern der Weser", Karstens Archiv für Bergbau und Hüttenwesen 8: 52–84.1847, "Bemerkungen über die Anfertigung und den Effekt der aus Hohleisen zusammengesetzten Bohrgestänge", Archiv fur Mineralogie, Geognosie, Bergbau und Hüttenkunde 21:135–60.1832–3, with H.von Dechen, Über den Steinkohlenbergbau in England, 2 parts, Berlin.Further Readingvon Gümbel, "K.v.Oeynhausen", Allgemeine deutsche Biographie 25:31–3.W.Serlo, 1927, "Bergmannsfamilien. Die Familien Fabian und Erdmann", Glückauf.492–3.D.Hoffmann, 1959, 150 Jahre Tiefbohrungen in Deutschland, Vienna and Hamburg (a careful elaboration of the single steps and their context with relation to the development of deep-drilling).WK -
15 соединение с двумя накладками
косынка, накладка — joint plate
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > соединение с двумя накладками
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16 перекрытый (накладкой) стык
Forestry: fish joint, fish-plate jointУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > перекрытый (накладкой) стык
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17 перекрытый накладкой стык
Makarov: fish joint, fish-plate jointУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > перекрытый накладкой стык
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18 соединение накладками
Forestry: fish joint, fish-plate jointУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > соединение накладками
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19 соединение со стыковой накладкой
Engineering: fish joint, fished joint, fishplate joint, strap jointУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > соединение со стыковой накладкой
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20 стык с накладкой
1) Military: fish joint2) Engineering: covered butt joint3) Construction: bridge joint, strapped joint
См. также в других словарях:
Fish joint — Fish Fish, n.; pl. {Fishes} (f[i^]sh [e^]z), or collectively, {Fish}. [OE. fisch, fisc, fis, AS. fisc; akin to D. visch, OS. & OHG. fisk, G. fisch, Icel. fiskr, Sw. & Dan. fisk, Goth. fisks, L. piscis, Ir. iasg. Cf. {Piscatorial}. In some cases,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Fish joint — Joint Joint (joint), n. [F. joint, fr. joindre, p. p. joint. See {Join}.] [1913 Webster] 1. The place or part where two things or parts are joined or united; the union of two or more smooth or even surfaces admitting of a close fitting or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fish joint — n. a joint between two timbers, railroad rails, etc. that meet end to end and are fastened together by a fishplate or fishplates: also fished joint * * * … Universalium
fish joint — n. a joint between two timbers, railroad rails, etc. that meet end to end and are fastened together by a fishplate or fishplates: also fished joint … English World dictionary
fish joint — noun a butt joint formed by bolting fish plates to the sides of two rails or beams • Hypernyms: ↑butt joint, ↑butt * * * noun 1. : a joint for forming separate limbs into a bow or bowstave by fitting a wedge end into a V slot or a double wedge… … Useful english dictionary
fish-joint — ˈ ̷ ̷| ̷ ̷ transitive verb : to fasten with a fish joint * * * fishˈ joint noun A place where things are joined by fishplates • • • Main Entry: ↑fish … Useful english dictionary
fish joint — 1) a joint formed by fitting a wedge into a v slot or a w slot 2) a joint where two abutting units are held together by a fish plate, q.v … Dictionary of ichthyology
fish-joint — 1) a joint formed by fitting a wedge into a v slot or a w slot 2) a joint where two abutting units are held together by a fish plate, q.v … Dictionary of ichthyology
Fish — Fish, n.; pl. {Fishes} (f[i^]sh [e^]z), or collectively, {Fish}. [OE. fisch, fisc, fis, AS. fisc; akin to D. visch, OS. & OHG. fisk, G. fisch, Icel. fiskr, Sw. & Dan. fisk, Goth. fisks, L. piscis, Ir. iasg. Cf. {Piscatorial}. In some cases, such… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Fish — Fish, n.; pl. {Fishes} (f[i^]sh [e^]z), or collectively, {Fish}. [OE. fisch, fisc, fis, AS. fisc; akin to D. visch, OS. & OHG. fisk, G. fisch, Icel. fiskr, Sw. & Dan. fisk, Goth. fisks, L. piscis, Ir. iasg. Cf. {Piscatorial}. In some cases, such… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Fish ball — Fish Fish, n.; pl. {Fishes} (f[i^]sh [e^]z), or collectively, {Fish}. [OE. fisch, fisc, fis, AS. fisc; akin to D. visch, OS. & OHG. fisk, G. fisch, Icel. fiskr, Sw. & Dan. fisk, Goth. fisks, L. piscis, Ir. iasg. Cf. {Piscatorial}. In some cases,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English