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1 джутовый канат
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2 пеньковый канат
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3 пеньковый канат
hemp cable, ( для работы на шпилевой катушке станка роторного бурения) jerk line, hemp rope, jerk rope, manila rope -
4 пеньковый канат
Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > пеньковый канат
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5 пеньковый канат
1) Engineering: hemp rope, manilla rope2) Forestry: hemp rootwood, manila rootwood3) Oil: hemp cable, jerk line (для работы на шпилевой катушке станка роторного бурения), jerk rope (для работы на шпилевой катушке станка роторного бурения), manila rope -
6 джутовый канат
1) Construction: jute rope2) Oil: hemp cable -
7 кабель с пеньковой сердцевиной
кабель с пеньковой сердцевиной
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[Я.Н.Лугинский, М.С.Фези-Жилинская, Ю.С.Кабиров. Англо-русский словарь по электротехнике и электроэнергетике, Москва, 1999 г.]Тематики
- электротехника, основные понятия
EN
Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > кабель с пеньковой сердцевиной
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8 кабель с пеньковой сердцевиной
Русско-английский словарь по электроэнергетике > кабель с пеньковой сердцевиной
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9 Ropes
NAUTICS - Ropes are made of hemp, flax, jute, cotton and numerous other fibres in different countries. The strands are twisted in a different direction from that of the original yarns. See following list. They are often measured by their circumference in inches and length in fathoms (6 feet). Bandura-wel. Pliable cord. Stem Pitcher plant, Ceylon. Cable. Heaviest ropes: over 10-in. circumference. Cable-laid ropes. Three ropes, three strands, twisted into one. Cablet. Ropes less than 10-in. circumference. Cant. The strand of the rope. Dori. Indian-made ropes used for tents. Dumb waiter rope. Untarred ropes of hemp. Fag end. Untwisted end of a rope. Fake. A single coil of rope. Fancy line. Braided cord used for sash windows on ships. Fathom. Standard length of rope measure - one F. is 6 feet. Hawser. Small cable twisted from three small ropes each of 20 strands. Heart. The core strand of a rope. Heart yarn. The centre of a core yarn. Kickling. Old rope round cables to keep them from chafing. Kink. To twist a rope. Knittles. The strands of two ropes twisted together. Lacs. Strong thin cords. Lay. The strand of a rope. Laying. The doubling process in rope making. Lizard. A rope with several rings spliced into it. Marling. Small tarred rope used to tie ropes. Mat. Made of old ropes, interwoven and beaten flat. Netting. Network made of cord. Parcelling. Wrapping of old canvas round ropes for protection. Patent cordage. Ropes or cords spun by natives. Paunch mat. Ships mat made from rope. Plain laid rope. Hemp or manila rope, made of three strands RH twist. Rattine. Small rope, measured by the fathom. Rombowline. Condemned canvas or rope. Rope yarn. Yarn made of RH twist, manila or hemp. Russia rope. Untarred cables and cords of hemp. Seizing. Binding two ropes together with marling. Seizing stuff. Rope of 4 to 12 strands used for seizing. Sel. Strong rope made of hemp fibres in India. Selvagee. Skein of rope with another rope wound around it. Sennit. Braid formed by plaiting strands of rope together. Shroud laid. Rope with core and four strands twisted around it. Shroud rope. Finer quality of rope of three plies; used for rigging. Spun yarn. Rope of long tow hemp, tarred and rubbed. Strap. Rope spliced to form a ring. Suti. Twisted cotton rope in India. Swab. Bunch or mop of soft rope. Tapered rope. Rope with strain bearing part thicker. Water laid. Heavy rope, three strands each with three plies, used for hawsers. White rope. Untarred cordage on ships. Worming. Filling divisions in rope between the lays with spun yarn. Wrack. Sea grass used for coarse ropes. -
10 трос
2) Naval: hemp3) Sports: brace, ring-cord, suspension cord4) Engineering: starter rope (пила), wire, wire rope cable5) Construction: cable-laid rope (кабельной свивки), steel wire rope6) Mathematics: rope (tether - в спутниковых тросовых системах)7) Railway term: catenary (для подвески кабеля)8) Automobile industry: (проволочный) cable wire, flexible cable, guy, pull rope, pulling rope, wire cable9) Mining: cable wire10) Forestry: steel cable, steel-wire cable, steel-wire rootwood, wire rootwood11) Textile: rigging12) Electronics: suspension strand13) Oil: cable line, cable rope, cord14) Astronautics: lifting sling15) Drilling: line17) Polymers: warp18) Automation: string19) Makarov: stranded wire, tug, wire cable (проволочный)20) oil&gas: (в канатных операциях line21) Scuba diving: tow-line22) General subject: wire ropak (для опускания приборов) -
11 кабель с пеньковой сердцевиной
Engineering: hemp-centre cable, hemp-cored cableУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > кабель с пеньковой сердцевиной
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12 канат
( тали или подъемного блока) fall, cable мор., line, rope* * *кана́т м.
ropeкана́т бьёт о борта́ — rope flails against the hull sideволочи́ть кана́т по земле́ — drag a rope on the groundзапу́тывать кана́т — foul a ropeкана́т изгота́вливают с направле́нием сви́вки, противополо́жным сви́вке пря́дей — a rope is laid with a twist opposite to that of the strandsкана́т «моча́лится» — the rope fraysнайто́вить кана́т — frap a ropeослабля́ть кана́т — slack (off) a ropeпереки́дывать кана́т вокру́г бло́ка — pass a rope over a blockпропуска́ть кана́т че́рез блок — rove a rope through a blockрасплета́ть пови́в кана́та — unlay a ropeраспусти́ть [распуши́ть] коне́ц кана́та — feaze a ropeсвё́ртывать кана́т в бу́хту — coil a ropeсвё́ртывать кана́т в пло́скую бу́хту — flemish down a ropeтащи́ть кана́т по земле́ — drag a rope on the groundтрави́ть кана́т — ease away [pay out] a ropeкана́т трёт о блок или шкив — a rope chafes against a pulley block or sheaveбесконе́чный кана́т — endless ropeбукси́рный кана́т — towing rope, tow-ropeбурово́й кана́т — drilling cableвито́й кана́т — twisted ropeкана́т гре́йфера, замыва́ющий — closing rope of a grab bucketкана́т гре́йфера, подде́рживающий — holding rope of a grab bucketкана́т гре́йфера, подъё́мный — holding rope of a grab bucketгрузоподъё́мный кана́т — hoisting ropeджу́товый кана́т — jute ropeкана́т драгла́йна, подъё́мный — hoist cableкана́т драгла́йна, тя́говый — drag cableкана́т закры́той констру́кции — locked-coil ropeкана́т ка́бельтовой сви́вки — came-laid [water-laid] ropeка́бельтовый кана́т — cable-laid [water-laid] ropeкана́т кана́тной доро́ги, несу́щий — track cableкана́т кана́тной доро́ги, тя́говый — traction cableкручё́ный кана́т — twisted ropeкана́т ле́вой сви́вки — left lay ropeмногопря́дный кана́т — stranded ropeнаправля́ющий кана́т — guide ropeнераскру́чивающийся кана́т — non-spinning [non-rotating] ropeотбо́йный кана́т — balance ropeпенько́вый кана́т — hemp ropeплетё́ный кана́т — plaited ropeпло́ский кана́т — flat ropeподъё́мный кана́т — hoist ropeкана́т полиспа́ста — runnerкана́т пра́вой сви́вки — right lay ropeприводно́й кана́т — driving [transmission] ropeпро́волочный кана́т — wire ropeраскру́чивающийся кана́т — spinning ropeрудни́чный кана́т — mining ropeкана́т с секторообра́зным сече́нием пря́дей — sector-shaped ropeстально́й кана́т — wire ropeтрёхпря́дный кана́т — tree-stranded ropeтрёхстре́нговый кана́т — three-stranded ropeкана́т тро́совой сви́вки — plain-laid ropeтро́совый кана́т — plain-laid ropeтя́говый кана́т — haulage ropeуравнове́шивающий кана́т — balancing ropeхвостово́й кана́т — tail ropeча́лочный кана́т — pull(ing) ropeя́корный кана́т — anchor cable, anchor chain -
13 Seil
n; -(e)s, -e rope; MOT. (Schleppseil) towrope; (Tau) cable; (Hochseil) tightrope; am Seil gehen Bergsteiger: be roped together; auf dem Seil gehen / balancieren walk / balance on the tightrope; auf dem Seil tanzen fig. be walking a tightrope; in den Seilen hängen Boxer, auch fig.: be on the ropes* * *das Seilcord; tightrope; rope* * *[zail]nt -(e)s, -erope; (= Kabel) cable; (= Hochseil) tightrope, high wireauf dem Séíl tanzen (fig) — to be walking a tightrope
* * *((a) thick cord, made by twisting together lengths of hemp, nylon etc: He tied it with a (piece of) rope; a skipping rope.) rope* * *<-[e]s, -e>[zail]nt1. (dünnes Tau) rope2. (Drahtseil) cableauf dem \Seil tanzen to dance on the high wire* * *das; Seils, Seile rope; (DrahtSeil) cable* * *am Seil gehen Bergsteiger: be roped together;auf dem Seil gehen/balancieren walk/balance on the tightrope;auf dem Seil tanzen fig be walking a tightrope;* * *das; Seils, Seile rope; (DrahtSeil) cable* * *-e n.rope n.steel cable n.tightrope (for high wire artists) n. -
14 проволочный канат с пеньковым сердечником
1) Engineering: hemp center wire line, hemp-center wire line2) Construction: hemp-core cableУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > проволочный канат с пеньковым сердечником
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15 Crampton, Thomas Russell
[br]b. 6 August 1816 Broadstairs, Kent, Englandd. 19 April 1888 London, England[br]English engineer, pioneer of submarine electric telegraphy and inventor of the Crampton locomotive.[br]After private education and an engineering apprenticeship, Crampton worked under Marc Brunel, Daniel Gooch and the Rennie brothers before setting up as a civil engineer in 1848. His developing ideas on locomotive design were expressed through a series of five patents taken out between 1842 and 1849, each making a multiplicity of claims. The most typical feature of the Crampton locomotive, however, was a single pair of driving wheels set to the rear of the firebox. This meant they could be of large diameter, while the centre of gravity of the locomotive remained low, for the boiler barrel, though large, had only small carrying-wheels beneath it. The cylinders were approximately midway along the boiler and were outside the frames, as was the valve gear. The result was a steady-riding locomotive which neither pitched about a central driving axle nor hunted from side to side, as did other contemporary locomotives, and its working parts were unusually accessible for maintenance. However, adhesive weight was limited and the long wheelbase tended to damage track. Locomotives of this type were soon superseded on British railways, although they lasted much longer in Germany and France. Locomotives built to the later patents incorporated a long, coupled wheelbase with drive through an intermediate crankshaft, but they mostly had only short lives. In 1851 Crampton, with associates, laid the first successful submarine electric telegraph cable. The previous year the brothers Jacob and John Brett had laid a cable, comprising a copper wire insulated with gutta-percha, beneath the English Channel from Dover to Cap Gris Nez: signals were passed but within a few hours the cable failed. Crampton joined the Bretts' company, put up half the capital needed for another attempt, and designed a much stronger cable. Four gutta-percha-insulated copper wires were twisted together, surrounded by tarred hemp and armoured by galvanized iron wires; this cable was successful.Crampton was also active in railway civil engineering and in water and gas engineering, and c. 1882 he invented a hydraulic tunnel-boring machine intended for a Channel tunnel.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsVice-President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Officier de la Légion d'Honneur (France).Bibliography1842, British patent no. 9,261.1845. British patent no. 10,854.1846. British patent no. 11,349.1847. British patent no. 11,760.1849, British patent no. 12,627.1885, British patent no. 14,021.Further ReadingM.Sharman, 1933, The Crampton Locomotive, Swindon: M.Sharman; P.C.Dewhurst, 1956–7, "The Crampton locomotive", Parts I and II, Transactions of the Newcomen Society 30:99 (the most important recent publications on Crampton's locomotives).C.Hamilton Ellis, 1958, Twenty Locomotive Men, Shepperton: Ian Allen. J.Kieve, 1973, The Electric Telegraph, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles, 102–4.R.B.Matkin, 1979, "Thomas Crampton: Man of Kent", Industrial Past 6 (2).PJGRBiographical history of technology > Crampton, Thomas Russell
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16 каболка
1) Naval: cable yarn, caburn, rope yarn2) Construction: hemp yarn3) Textile: cable yarns, cable-laid yarns, rope yarns, yarn, yarns (канатная или верёвочная пряжа) -
17 lin|a
f rope, line; (gruba, mocna) cable- lina konopna/sizalowa a hemp/sisal rope- lina stalowa a steel cable- lina holownicza a tow rope, a towline- lina okrętowa a hawser- lina wspinaczkowa a (climbing) rope- ciągnąć/nawinąć/zwinąć linę to pull/wind/coil up a rope- spuścić się po linie to slide down a rope- wspinać się po linie to climb a rope- chodzić po linie to walk the tightrope- □ lina startowa Lotn. shock cord- druciana lina Techn. wire ropeThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > lin|a
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18 канат
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19 Roebling, John Augustus
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering[br]b. 12 July 1806 Muhlhausen, Prussiad. 22 July 1869 Brooklyn, New York, USA[br]German/American bridge engineer and builder.[br]The son of Polycarp Roebling, a tobacconist, he studied mathematics at Dr Unger's Pedagogium in Erfurt and went on to the Royal Polytechnic Institute in Berlin, from which he graduated in 1826 with honours in civil engineering. He spent the next three years working for the Prussian government on the construction of roads and bridges. With his brother and a group of friends, he emigrated to the United States, sailing from Bremen on 23 May 1831 and docking in Philadelphia eleven weeks later. They bought 7,000 acres (2,800 hectares) in Butler County, western Pennsylvania, and established a village, at first called Germania but later known as Saxonburg. Roebling gave up trying to establish himself as a farmer and found work for the state of Pennsylvania as Assistant Engineer on the Beaver River canal and others, then surveying a railroad route across the Allegheny Mountains. During his canal work, he noted the failings of the hemp ropes that were in use at that time, and recalled having read of wire ropes in a German journal; he built a rope-walk at his Saxonburg farm, bought a supply of iron wire and trained local labour in the method of wire twisting.At this time, many canals crossed rivers by means of aqueducts. In 1844, the Pennsylvania Canal aqueduct across the Allegheny River was due to be renewed, having become unsafe. Roebling made proposals which were accepted by the canal company: seven wooden spans of 162 ft (49 m) each were supported on either side by a 7 in. (18 cm) diameter cable, Roebling himself having to devise all the machinery required for the erection. He subsequently built four more suspension aqueducts, one of which was converted to a toll bridge and was still in use a century later.In 1849 he moved to Trenton, New Jersey, where he set up a new wire rope plant. In 1851 he started the construction (completed in 1855) of an 821 ft (250 m) long suspension railroad bridge across the Niagara River, 245 ft (75 m) above the rapids; each cable consisted of 3,640 wrought iron wires. A lower deck carried road traffic. He also constructed a bridge across the Ohio River between Cincinnati and Covington, a task which was much protracted due to the Civil War; this bridge was finally completed in 1866.Roebling's crowning achievement was to have been the design and construction of the bridge over the Hudson River between Brooklyn and Staten Island, New York, but he did not live to see its completion. It had a span of 1,595 ft (486 m), designed to bear a load of 18,700 tons (19,000 tonnes) with a headroom of 135 ft (41 m). The work of building had barely started when, at the Brooklyn wharf, a boat crushed Roebling's foot against the timbering and he died of tetanus three weeks later. His son, Washington Augustus Roebling, then took charge of this great work.[br]Further ReadingD.B.Steinman and S.R.Watson, 1941, Bridges and their Builders, New York: Dover Books.D.McCullough, 1982, The Great Bridge: The Epic Story of the Building of the Brooklyn Bridge, New York: Simon \& Schuster.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Roebling, John Augustus
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20 кабельная пряжа
1) Engineering: cable yarn2) Cables: hemp-yarn
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См. также в других словарях:
Cable Street — (pronEng|ˈkeɪbəl striːt) is a mile long road in the East End of London, with several historic landmarks nearby, made famous by the Battle of Cable Street of 1936.LocationCable Street runs between the edge of The City and Limehouse: parallel to,… … Wikipedia
Cable — Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor, and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
cable molding — Cable Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Cable road — Cable Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Cable tier — Cable Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Cable's length — Cable Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
cable — ► NOUN 1) a thick rope of wire or hemp. 2) an insulated wire or wires for transmitting electricity or telecommunication signals. 3) a cablegram. 4) the chain of a ship s anchor. 5) Nautical a length of 200 yards (182.9 m) or (in the US) 240 yards … English terms dictionary
cable — cablelike, adj. /kay beuhl/, n., v., cabled, cabling. n. 1. a heavy, strong rope. 2. a very strong rope made of strands of metal wire, as used to support cable cars or suspension bridges. 3. a cord of metal wire used to operate or pull a… … Universalium
Cable — /kay beuhl/, n. George Washington, 1844 1925, U.S. novelist and short story writer. * * * (as used in expressions) Cable News Network cable modem cable structure cable television coaxial cable * * * ▪ electronics … Universalium
Hemp — This article is about industrial hemp. For its psychoactive variant, see Cannabis (drug). For the biology of the plant, see Cannabis. For other uses, see Hemp (disambiguation). The variety of appearances for cannabis. Only C. sativa (left) is… … Wikipedia
hemp — hemplike, adj. /hemp/, n. 1. Also called Indian hemp, marijuana. a tall, coarse plant, Cannabis sativa, that is native to Asia but naturalized or cultivated in many parts of the world and is the source of a valuable fiber as well as drugs such as … Universalium