-
61 pouring
1. n наливание; разливание2. n метал. разливка; заливка3. n стр. укладка4. n стр. разлив5. a проливнойpouring rain — проливной дождь, ливень
pouring rain — ливень, проливной дождь
6. a разливательный; разливочныйСинонимический ряд:1. discharging (verb) discharging; emitting; giving off; voiding2. drawing (verb) decanting; drawing; effusing3. drenching (verb) drenching; lashing; teeming4. flooding (verb) flooding; swarming; thronging; trooping5. welling (verb) coursing; flowing; gushing; rolling; rushing; sluicing; streaming; surging; welling -
62 brick
1. закладывать кирпичом; заполнять кирпичом; облицовывать кирпичом; мостить кирпичом; замуровывать в кирпичной кладке; возводить конструкцию из кирпича; придавать внешний вид кирпичной кладки, делать разрезку под кирпичbrick on bed — кирпич, уложенный плашмя
brick on edge — кирпич, уложенный на ребро
2. вентилируемый кирпич3. вентиляционная решётка в стенеaluminous brick — алюминатный кирпич; шамотный кирпич
angle brick — косоугольный кирпич, кирпич со скошенным тычком
clinker brick — клинкерный кирпич, клинкер
common brick — обыкновенный кирпич, рядовой кирпич
compass brick — клиновой кирпич; лекальный кирпич
crushed bricks — кирпичный щебень; кирпичный бой
Dutch brick — клинкерный кирпич, клинкер
4. кирпич, скошенный по ширине; клиновой кирпич5. ребровый клиновой кирпич6. клиновой кирпич для арок7. кирпич, механически обработанный до заданных размеров; лекальный кирпичhalf brick — половняк, полкирпича
hollow brick — пустотный кирпич с площадью пустот не более 40% или не более 25% от площади постели кирпича
internal-quality brick — кирпич для забутки, забутовочный кирпич
lining brick — лицевой кирпич; футеровочный кирпич
8. фасонный декоративный кирпич, профильный лицевой кирпич9. обычный формованный кирпичmoler brick — диатомитовый кирпич; теплоизолирующий кирпич
radial brick — лекальный кирпич; клиновой кирпич
radius brick — лекальный кирпич; клиновой кирпич
-
63 Junghans, Siegfried
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1887d. 1954[br]German pioneer of the continuous casting of metals.[br]Junghans was of the family that owned Gebrüder Junghans, one of the largest firms in the German watch-and clockmaking industry. From 1906 to 1918 he served in the German Army, after which he took a course in metallurgy and analytical chemistry at the Technical High School in Stuttgart. Junghans was then given control of the brassworks owned by his family. He wanted to make castings simply and cheaply, but he found that he lacked the normal foundry equipment. By 1927, formulating his ideas on continuous casting, he had conceived a way of overcoming this deficiency and began experiments. By the time the firm was taken over by Wieland-Werke AG in 1931, Junghans had achieved positive results. A test plant was erected in 1932, and commercial production of continuously cast metal followed the year after. Wieland told Junghans that a brassfounder who had come up through the trade would never have hit on the idea: it took an outsider like Junghans to do it. He was made Technical Director of Wielands but left in 1935 to work privately on the development of continuous casting for all metals. He was able to license the process for non-ferrous metals during 1936–9 in Germany and other countries, but the Second World War interrupted his work; however, the German government supported him and a production plant was built. In 1948 he was able to resume work on the continuous casting of steel, which he had been considering since 1936. He pushed on in spite of financial difficulties and produced the first steel by this process at Schorndorf in March 1949. From 1950 he made agreements with four firms to work towards the pilot plant stage, and this was achieved in 1954 at Mannesmann's Huckingen works. The aim of continuous casting is to bypass the conventional processes of casting molten steel into ingots, reheating the ingots and shaping them by rolling them in a large mill. Essentially, in continuous casting, molten steel is drawn through the bottom of a ladle and down through a water-cooled copper mould. The unique feature of Junghans's process was the vertically reciprocating mould, which prevented the molten metal sticking as it passed through. A continuous length of steel is taken off and cooled until it is completely solidified into the required shape. The idea of continuous casting can be traced back to Bessemer, and although others tried to apply it later, they did not have any success. It was Junghans who, more than anybody, made the process a reality.[br]Further ReadingK.Sperth and A.Bungeroth, 1953, "The Junghans method of continuous casting of steel", Metal Treatment and Drop Forging, Mayn.J.Jewkes et al., 1969, The Sources of Invention, 2nd edn, London: Macmillan, pp. 287 ff.LRD
См. также в других словарях:
Ladle (metallurgy) — In foundry work a ladle is a container used to transport and pour out molten metals. It needs to be: *Strong enough to contain a heavy load of metal. *Heat resistant like a furnace. *Heat insulated as much as can be managed, to avoid losing heat… … Wikipedia
steel — steellike, adj. /steel/, n. 1. any of various modified forms of iron, artificially produced, having a carbon content less than that of pig iron and more than that of wrought iron, and having qualities of hardness, elasticity, and strength varying … Universalium
Asymptotic stability — See also Lyapunov stability for an alternate definition used in dynamical systems. In control theory, a continuous linear time invariant system is asymptotically stable if and only if the system has eigenvalues only with strictly negative real… … Wikipedia
List of Chinese inventions — A bronze Chinese crossbow mechanism with a buttplate (the wooden components have … Wikipedia
Electric arc furnace — An electric arc furnace (EAF) is a furnace that heats charged material by means of an electric arc. Arc furnaces range in size from small units of approximately one ton capacity (used in foundries for producing cast iron products) up to about 400 … Wikipedia
Wok — Stir frying (爆 bào) with a wok A wok (in Cantonese; simplified Chinese: 镬; traditional Chinese: 鑊; Jyutping: wok6) is a versatile round bottomed cooking vessel originating in China. It is used especially in … Wikipedia
Continuous casting — The macrostructure of continuously cast copper (99.95% pure), etched, ∅ ≈ 83 mm. Continuous casting, also called strand casting, is the process whereby molten metal is solidified into a semifinished billet, bloom, or slab for subsequent rolling… … Wikipedia
Degreasing — Defatting redirects here. For the skin condition, see defatting (medical). Degreasing often called Defatting, is a term used to describe the removal of fatty acids from an object. In culinary science, the word degreasing refers to various methods … Wikipedia
List of Japanese tea ceremony equipment — Some implements for tea ceremony. From bottom left: chashaku (tea scoop), sensu (fan), chasen kusenaoshi (whisk shaper), chasen (bamboo whisk) and fukusa (purple silk cloth) This is a list of articles used in Japanese tea ceremony. Please add… … Wikipedia
Pactio — is a system of magic within the fictional work . The word is based on the Latin word pactiō , the action of making a pactum or agreement . Pactio can also be referred as a provisional contract. Characters in pactio involve a magic user who can… … Wikipedia
Fathom the Bowl — (Roud 880) is an English Drinking song, probably dating from the nineteenth century.ynopsis With a Come all ye opening, the singer invites heroes to join him in praise of punch. There is a catalogue of the ingredients that come from various… … Wikipedia