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101 Swan, Sir Joseph Wilson
[br]b. 31 October 1828 Sunderland, Englandd. 27 May 1914 Warlingham, Surrey, England[br]English chemist, inventor in Britain of the incandescent electric lamp and of photographic processes.[br]At the age of 14 Swan was apprenticed to a Sunderland firm of druggists, later joining John Mawson who had opened a pharmacy in Newcastle. While in Sunderland Swan attended lectures at the Athenaeum, at one of which W.E. Staite exhibited electric-arc and incandescent lighting. The impression made on Swan prompted him to conduct experiments that led to his demonstration of a practical working lamp in 1879. As early as 1848 he was experimenting with carbon as a lamp filament, and by 1869 he had mounted a strip of carbon in a vessel exhausted of air as completely as was then possible; however, because of residual air, the filament quickly failed.Discouraged by the cost of current from primary batteries and the difficulty of achieving a good vacuum, Swan began to devote much of his attention to photography. With Mawson's support the pharmacy was expanded to include a photographic business. Swan's interest in making permanent photographic records led him to patent the carbon process in 1864 and he discovered how to make a sensitive dry plate in place of the inconvenient wet collodian process hitherto in use. He followed this success with the invention of bromide paper, the subject of a British patent in 1879.Swan resumed his interest in electric lighting. Sprengel's invention of the mercury pump in 1865 provided Swan with the means of obtaining the high vacuum he needed to produce a satisfactory lamp. Swan adopted a technique which was to become an essential feature in vacuum physics: continuing to heat the filament during the exhaustion process allowed the removal of absorbed gases. The inventions of Gramme, Siemens and Brush provided the source of electrical power at reasonable cost needed to make the incandescent lamp of practical service. Swan exhibited his lamp at a meeting in December 1878 of the Newcastle Chemical Society and again the following year before an audience of 700 at the Newcastle Literary and Philosophical Society. Swan's failure to patent his invention immediately was a tactical error as in November 1879 Edison was granted a British patent for his original lamp, which, however, did not go into production. Parchmentized thread was used in Swan's first commercial lamps, a material soon superseded by the regenerated cellulose filament that he developed. The cellulose filament was made by extruding a solution of nitro-cellulose in acetic acid through a die under pressure into a coagulating fluid, and was used until the ultimate obsolescence of the carbon-filament lamp. Regenerated cellulose became the first synthetic fibre, the further development and exploitation of which he left to others, the patent rights for the process being sold to Courtaulds.Swan also devised a modification of Planté's secondary battery in which the active material was compressed into a cellular lead plate. This has remained the central principle of all improvements in secondary cells, greatly increasing the storage capacity for a given weight.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1904. FRS 1894. President, Institution of Electrical Engineers 1898. First President, Faraday Society 1904. Royal Society Hughes Medal 1904. Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur 1881.Bibliography2 January 1880, British patent no. 18 (incandescent electric lamp).24 May 1881, British patent no. 2,272 (improved plates for the Planté cell).1898, "The rise and progress of the electrochemical industries", Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers 27:8–33 (Swan's Presidential Address to the Institution of Electrical Engineers).Further ReadingM.E.Swan and K.R.Swan, 1968, Sir Joseph Wilson Swan F.R.S., Newcastle upon Tyne (a detailed account).R.C.Chirnside, 1979, "Sir Joseph Swan and the invention of the electric lamp", IEEElectronics and Power 25:96–100 (a short, authoritative biography).GWBiographical history of technology > Swan, Sir Joseph Wilson
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102 Woodbury, Walter Bentley
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1834 Manchester, Englandd. 1885 Margate, Kent, England[br]English photographer, inventor of the Woodburytype process.[br]Having been apprenticed to be an engineer, Woodbury left England in 1851 to seek his fortune in the Australian gold-fields. Like many others, he failed, and after a series of transient jobs found a post as Draughtsman at the Melbourne Waterworks. He then went on to Java, where he practised wet-collodion photography before returning to England finally in 1863. Woodbury settled in Birmingham, where like most contemporary photographers he was concerned to find a solution to the troublesome problem of fading prints. He began working the carbon process, and in 1866 and 1867 took out a series of patents which were to lead to the development of the process that took his name. Woodburytypes were continuous-tone prints of high quality that could be mass produced more cheaply than the traditional silver print. This was an important innovation and Woodburytypes were extensively used for quality book illustrations until the introduction of more versatile photomechanical processes in the 1890s. In all, Woodbury took out twenty patents between 1864 and 1884, some relating to a wide range of photographic devices. He was still working to simplify the Woodburytype process when he died from an overdose of laudanum.[br]BibliographyWoodbury took out a series of patents on his process, the most significant being: 23 September 1864, British patent no. 2,338; 12 January 1866, British patent no. 105; 11 February 1866, British patent no. 505; 8 May 1866, British patent no. 1,315; 24 July 1866, British patent no. 1,918.Further ReadingG.Tissandier, 1876, A History and Handbook of Photography, trans. J.Thomson.B.E.Jones (ed.), 1911, Cassell's Cyclopaedia of Photography, London (a brief biography).J.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans. E. Epstean, New York.JWBiographical history of technology > Woodbury, Walter Bentley
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103 Champion, William
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1710 Bristol, Englandd. 1789 England[br]English metallurgist, the first to produce metallic zinc in England on an industrial scale.[br]William, the youngest of the three sons of Nehemiah Champion, stemmed from a West Country Quaker family long associated with the metal trades. His grandfather, also called Nehemiah, had been one of Abraham Darby's close Quaker friends when the brassworks at Baptist Mills was being established in 1702 and 1703. Nehemiah II took over the management of these works soon after Darby went to Coalbrookdale, and in 1719, as one of a group of Bristol copper smelters, he negotiated an agreement with Lord Falmouth to develop copper mines in the Redruth area in Cornwall. In 1723 he was granted a patent for a cementation brass-making process using finely granulated copper rather than the broken fragments of massive copper hitherto employed.In 1730 he returned to Bristol after a tour of European metallurgical centres, and he began to develop an industrial process for the manufacture of pure zinc ingots in England. Metallic zinc or spelter was then imported at great expense from the Far East, largely for the manufacture of copper alloys of golden colour used for cheap jewellery. The process William developed, after six years of experimentation, reduced zinc oxide with charcoal at temperatures well above the boiling point of zinc. The zinc vapour obtained was condensed rapidly to prevent reoxidation and finally collected under water. This process, patented in 1738, was operated in secret until 1766 when Watson described it in his Chemical Essays. After encountering much opposition from the Bristol merchants and zinc importers, William decided to establish his own integrated brassworks at Warmley, five meals east of Bristol. The Warmley plant began to produce in 1748 and expanded rapidly. By 1767, when Warmley employed about 2,000 men, women and children, more capital was needed, requiring a Royal Charter of Incorporation. A consortium of Champion's competitors opposed this and secured its refusal. After this defeat William lost the confidence of his fellow directors, who dismissed him. He was declared bankrupt in 1769 and his works were sold to the British Brass Company, which never operated Warmley at full capacity, although it produced zinc on that site until 1784.[br]Bibliography1723, British patent no. 454 (cementation brass-making process).1738, British patent no. 564 (zinc ingot production process).1767, British patent no. 867 (brass manufacture wing zinc blende).Further ReadingJ.Day, 1973, Bristol Brass: The History of the Industry, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.A.Raistrick, 1970, Dynasty of Ironfounders: The Darbys and Coalbrookdale, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.J.R.Harris, 1964, The Copper King, Liverpool University Press.ASD -
104 Meisenbach, Georg
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 1841 Nuremberg, Germanyd. 12 December 1912 Munich, Germany[br]German engraver, inventor of the first commercially exploitable halftone printing process.[br]Trained in Nuremberg as a copper-plate engraver, Meisenbach moved to Munich in 1873 and established the first zincographic engraving business in Germany. In 1879 he began experimenting with halftone reproductions and in May 1882 he took out a German patent which described a single-line screen made from the proof of an engraved plate ruled with lines. The screen was then placed before a photographic positive of a picture and the two were photographed together. Approximately half-way through the exposure the screen was turned 90 degrees so that the lines crossed. A halftone negative was thus produced, from which could be made a zinc printing block. The full details of the process were not revealed in the patent so that trade competition would be limited. It was the first commercially practicable halftone process. Ill health forced Meisenbach to retire from the business in 1891, by which time his process was being superseded by Ives's cross-line process.[br]BibliographyMay 1882, German patent no. 22,444 (halftone printing process). 1882, British patent no. 2,156.Further ReadingJ.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans. E.Epstean, New York.G.Wakeman, 1973, Victorian Book Illustration (a popular account of the introduction of halftone to England).JW -
105 IPC
1) Авиация: иллюстрированный каталог деталей (Illustrated Parts Catalogue)2) Медицина: железо ( III)-гидроксид полимальтозный комплекс (Iron hydroxide polymaltose complex), ГПК, Intermittent pneumatic compression4) Военный термин: Industrial Planning Committee, Industrial Property Committee, Intelligence Producers' Council, Intelligence Production Center, Inter Process Communications, illustrated parts catalog, independent parachute company, information processing code, instrumentation package container, intermediate processing center5) Техника: Inter-jurisdictional Planning Committee, International Program Committee, indicating pressure controller, information process charts, integrated protection cabinet, isopropyl-N-phenylcarbamate6) Шутливое выражение: I Prefer Compaq7) Строительство: inorganic phosphate cement8) Бухгалтерия: Information Product Cash9) Автомобильный термин: instrument panel cluster, intermediate pressure cylinder10) Астрономия: Inter Planetary Commission11) Ветеринария: International Policy Council (on Agriculutre, Food and Trade)12) Телекоммуникации: Initial Paging Channel, Interprocess Communication13) Сокращение: Information Processing Centre, Integrated Programme for Commodities, Iraq Petroleum Company, interplanetary communications, Inter-Process Communication, Уголовный кодекс Индии (Indian Penal Code), МПК (Международная патентная классификация)14) Университет: Integrated Physics And Chemistry15) Физика: Individual Particle Correlation, Integrated Proton Current16) Электроника: Institute for Interconnecting and Packaging Integrated Circuits, Inter Product Components, Intermittent Positive Control, Intrinsically Passive Control17) Вычислительная техника: interprocessor communication, коммуникации между процессами, связь между процессами, Integrated Polymer Circuit (IC), Internet Privacy Coalition (Internet), InterProcess Communications (protocol)18) Нефть: installed production capacity19) Воздухоплавание: Intermittent Position Control20) Фирменный знак: IP Phone Center, Idea And Production Centre, In Pro Corporation, International Poly Company, International Publishing Company21) Экология: International Poplar Commission23) Деловая лексика: международная патентная классификация (International Patent Classification)24) Авторское право: International Classification of Patents25) Промышленность: текущий контроль производственного процесса (in-process control)26) Сетевые технологии: Inner Process Communication, Interval Preservation Constraint, information processing center, integrated peripheral channel, interprocess communications, interprocessor communications, взаимодействие между процессами, двоичный код обработки нецифровой информации, интегрированный периферийный канал, межпрограммное взаимодействие, межпроцессорное взаимодействие, центр обработки информации, Inter-Processor Communication (Cisco)27) Полимеры: International Patent Classification, indicating pressure control, industrial process control, Интерполимерный комплекс (Interpolymer complex)28) Программирование: Instructions Per Clock, Industrial PC29) Автоматика: industrial personal computer30) Химическое оружие: integrated process team31) Макаров: Interstate Power Company, intelligent peripheral controller32) Безопасность: Internet Privacy Coalition, Internet Protection Community33) SAP.тех. связь 'процесс-процесс'34) Электротехника: individual phase control35) Фантастика Inter Planetary Corps36) Высокочастотная электроника: Institute for Interconnecting and Packaging Electronic Circuits37) Молекулярная биология: Internal Positive Control38) Фармация: Integrated Pollution Control39) Программное обеспечение: Internet Pricing and Configurator40) Единицы измерений: Instructions Per Cycle41) Парашютный спорт: комиссия "FAI" по парашютному спорту -
106 ipc
1) Авиация: иллюстрированный каталог деталей (Illustrated Parts Catalogue)2) Медицина: железо ( III)-гидроксид полимальтозный комплекс (Iron hydroxide polymaltose complex), ГПК, Intermittent pneumatic compression4) Военный термин: Industrial Planning Committee, Industrial Property Committee, Intelligence Producers' Council, Intelligence Production Center, Inter Process Communications, illustrated parts catalog, independent parachute company, information processing code, instrumentation package container, intermediate processing center5) Техника: Inter-jurisdictional Planning Committee, International Program Committee, indicating pressure controller, information process charts, integrated protection cabinet, isopropyl-N-phenylcarbamate6) Шутливое выражение: I Prefer Compaq7) Строительство: inorganic phosphate cement8) Бухгалтерия: Information Product Cash9) Автомобильный термин: instrument panel cluster, intermediate pressure cylinder10) Астрономия: Inter Planetary Commission11) Ветеринария: International Policy Council (on Agriculutre, Food and Trade)12) Телекоммуникации: Initial Paging Channel, Interprocess Communication13) Сокращение: Information Processing Centre, Integrated Programme for Commodities, Iraq Petroleum Company, interplanetary communications, Inter-Process Communication, Уголовный кодекс Индии (Indian Penal Code), МПК (Международная патентная классификация)14) Университет: Integrated Physics And Chemistry15) Физика: Individual Particle Correlation, Integrated Proton Current16) Электроника: Institute for Interconnecting and Packaging Integrated Circuits, Inter Product Components, Intermittent Positive Control, Intrinsically Passive Control17) Вычислительная техника: interprocessor communication, коммуникации между процессами, связь между процессами, Integrated Polymer Circuit (IC), Internet Privacy Coalition (Internet), InterProcess Communications (protocol)18) Нефть: installed production capacity19) Воздухоплавание: Intermittent Position Control20) Фирменный знак: IP Phone Center, Idea And Production Centre, In Pro Corporation, International Poly Company, International Publishing Company21) Экология: International Poplar Commission23) Деловая лексика: международная патентная классификация (International Patent Classification)24) Авторское право: International Classification of Patents25) Промышленность: текущий контроль производственного процесса (in-process control)26) Сетевые технологии: Inner Process Communication, Interval Preservation Constraint, information processing center, integrated peripheral channel, interprocess communications, interprocessor communications, взаимодействие между процессами, двоичный код обработки нецифровой информации, интегрированный периферийный канал, межпрограммное взаимодействие, межпроцессорное взаимодействие, центр обработки информации, Inter-Processor Communication (Cisco)27) Полимеры: International Patent Classification, indicating pressure control, industrial process control, Интерполимерный комплекс (Interpolymer complex)28) Программирование: Instructions Per Clock, Industrial PC29) Автоматика: industrial personal computer30) Химическое оружие: integrated process team31) Макаров: Interstate Power Company, intelligent peripheral controller32) Безопасность: Internet Privacy Coalition, Internet Protection Community33) SAP.тех. связь 'процесс-процесс'34) Электротехника: individual phase control35) Фантастика Inter Planetary Corps36) Высокочастотная электроника: Institute for Interconnecting and Packaging Electronic Circuits37) Молекулярная биология: Internal Positive Control38) Фармация: Integrated Pollution Control39) Программное обеспечение: Internet Pricing and Configurator40) Единицы измерений: Instructions Per Cycle41) Парашютный спорт: комиссия "FAI" по парашютному спорту -
107 Parkes, Alexander
[br]b. 29 December 1813 Birmingham, Englandd. 29 June 1890 West Dulwich, England[br]English chemist and inventor who made the first plastic material.[br]After serving apprentice to brassfounders in Birmingham, Parkes entered Elkington's, the celebrated metalworking firm, and took charge of their casting department. They were active in introducing electroplating and Parkes's first patent, of 1841, was for the electroplating of works of art. The electrodeposition of metals became a lifelong interest.Notably, he achieved the electroplating of fragile objects, such as flowers, which he patented in 1843. When Prince Albert visited Elkington's, he was presented with a spider's web coated with silver. Altogether, Parkes was granted sixty-six patents over a period of forty-six years, mainly relating to metallurgy.In 1841 he patented a process for waterproofing textiles by immersing them in a solution of indiarubber in carbon disulphide. Elkingtons manufactured such fabrics until they sold the process to Mackintosh Company, which continued making them for many years. While working for Elkingtons in south Wales, Parkes developed the use of zinc for desilvering lead. He obtained a patent in 1850 for this process, which was one of his most important inventions and became widely used.The year 1856 saw Parkes's first patent on pyroxylin, later called Xylonite or celluloid, the first plastic material. Articles made of Parkesine, as it came to be called, were shown at the International Exhibition in London in 1862, and he was awarded a medal for his work. Five years later, Parkesine featured at the Paris Exhibition. Even so, Parkes's efforts to promote the material commercially, particularly as a substitute for ivory, remained stubbornly unsuccessful.[br]Bibliography1850, British patent no. 13118 (the desilvering of lead). 1856, British patent no. 235 (the first on Parkesine).1865, Parkes gave an account of his invention of Parkesine in J.Roy.Arts, (1865), 14, 81–.Further ReadingObituary, 1890, Engineering, (25 July): 111.Obituary, 1890, Mining Journal (26 July): 855.LRD -
108 Arkwright, Sir Richard
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 23 December 1732 Preston, Englandd. 3 August 1792 Cromford, England[br]English inventor of a machine for spinning cotton.[br]Arkwright was the youngest of thirteen children and was apprenticed to a barber; when he was about 18, he followed this trade in Bol ton. In 1755 he married Patients Holt, who bore him a son before she died, and he remarried in 1761, to Margaret Biggins. He prospered until he took a public house as well as his barber shop and began to lose money. After this failure, he travelled around buying women's hair for wigs.In the late 1760s he began spinning experiments at Preston. It is not clear how much Arkwright copied earlier inventions or was helped by Thomas Highs and John Kay but in 1768 he left Preston for Nottingham, where, with John Smalley and David Thornley as partners, he took out his first patent. They set up a mill worked by a horse where machine-spun yarn was produced successfully. The essential part of this process lay in drawing out the cotton by rollers before it was twisted by a flyer and wound onto the bobbin. The partners' resources were not sufficient for developing their patent so Arkwright found new partners in Samuel Need and Jedediah Strutt, hosiers of Nottingham and Derby. Much experiment was necessary before they produced satisfactory yarn, and in 1771 a water-driven mill was built at Cromford, where the spinning process was perfected (hence the name "waterframe" was given to his spinning machine); some of this first yarn was used in the hosiery trade. Sales of all-cotton cloth were initially limited because of the high tax on calicoes, but the tax was lowered in 1774 by Act of Parliament, marking the beginning of the phenomenal growth of the cotton industry. In the evidence for this Act, Arkwright claimed that he had spent £12,000 on his machine. Once Arkwright had solved the problem of mechanical spinning, a bottleneck in the preliminary stages would have formed but for another patent taken out in 1775. This covered all preparatory processing, including some ideas not invented by Arkwright, with the result that it was disputed in 1783 and finally annulled in 1785. It contained the "crank and comb" for removing the cotton web off carding engines which was developed at Cromford and solved the difficulty in carding. By this patent, Arkwright had mechanized all the preparatory and spinning processes, and he began to establish water-powered cotton mills even as far away as Scotland. His success encouraged many others to copy him, so he had great difficulty in enforcing his patent Need died in 1781 and the partnership with Strutt ended soon after. Arkwright became very rich and financed other spinning ventures beyond his immediate control, such as that with Samuel Oldknow. It was estimated that 30,000 people were employed in 1785 in establishments using Arkwright's patents. In 1786 he received a knighthood for delivering an address of thanks when an attempt to assassinate George III failed, and the following year he became High Sheriff of Derbyshire. He purchased the manor of Cromford, where he died in 1792.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1786.Bibliography1769, British patent no. 931.1775, British patent no. 1,111.Further ReadingR.S.Fitton, 1989, The Arkwrights, Spinners of Fortune, Manchester (a thorough scholarly work which is likely to remain unchallenged for many years).R.L.Hills, 1973, Richard Arkwright and Cotton Spinning, London (written for use in schools and concentrates on Arkwright's technical achievements).R.S.Fitton and A.P.Wadsworth, 1958, The Strutts and the Arkwrights, Manchester (concentrates on the work of Arkwright and Strutt).A.P.Wadsworth and J.de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, Manchester (covers the period leading up to the Industrial Revolution).F.Nasmith, 1932, "Richard Arkwright", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 13 (looks at the actual spinning invention).R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (discusses the technical problems of Arkwright's invention).RLH -
109 Macintosh, Charles
[br]b. 29 December 1766 Glasgow, Scotlandd. 25 July 1843 Dunchattan, near Glasgow, Scotland[br]Scottish inventor of rubberized waterproof clothing.[br]As the son of the well-known and inventive dyer George Macintosh, Charles had an early interest in chemistry. At the age of 19 he gave up his work as a clerk with a Glasgow merchant to manufacture sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride) and developed new processes in dyeing. In 1797 he started the first Scottish alum works, finding the alum in waste shale from coal mines. His first works was at Hurlet, Renfrewshire, and was followed later by others. He then formed a partnership with Charles Tennant, the proprietor of a chemical works at St Rollox, near Glasgow, and sold "lime bleaching liquor" made with chlorine and milk of lime from their bleach works at Darnley. A year later the use of dry lime to make bleaching powder, a process worked out by Macintosh, was patented. Macintosh remained associated with Tennant's St Rollox chemical works until 1814. During this time, in 1809, he had set up a yeast factory, but it failed because of opposition from the London brewers.There was a steady demand for the ammonia that gas works produced, but the tar was often looked upon as an inconvenient waste product. Macintosh bought all the ammonia and tar that the Glasgow works produced, using the ammonia in his establishment to produce cudbear, a dyestuff extracted from various lichens. Cudbear could be used with appropriate mordants to make shades from pink to blue. The tar could be distilled to produce naphtha, which was used as a flare. Macintosh also became interested in ironmaking. In 1825 he took out a patent for converting malleable iron into steel by taking it to white heat in a current of gas with a carbon content, such as coal gas. However, the process was not commercially successful because of the difficulty keeping the furnace gas-tight. In 1828 he assisted J.B. Neilson in bringing hot blast into use in blast furnaces; Neilson assigned Macintosh a share in the patent, which was of dubious benefit as it involved him in the tortuous litigation that surrounded the patent until 1843.In June 1823, as a result of experiments into the possible uses of naphtha obtained as a by-product of the distillation of coal tar, Macintosh patented his process for waterproofing fabric. This comprised dissolving rubber in naphtha and applying the solution to two pieces of cloth which were afterwards pressed together to form an impermeable compound fabric. After an experimental period in Glasgow, Macintosh commenced manufacture in Manchester, where he formed a partnership with H.H.Birley, B.Kirk and R.W.Barton. Birley was a cotton spinner and weaver and was looking for ways to extend the output of his cloth. He was amongst the first to light his mills with gas, so he shared a common interest with Macintosh.New buildings were erected for the production of waterproof cloth in 1824–5, but there were considerable teething troubles with the process, particularly in the spreading of the rubber solution onto the cloth. Peter Ewart helped to install the machinery, including a steam engine supplied by Boulton \& Watt, and the naphtha was supplied from Macintosh's works in Glasgow. It seems that the process was still giving difficulties when Thomas Hancock, the foremost rubber technologist of that time, became involved in 1830 and was made a partner in 1834. By 1836 the waterproof coat was being called a "mackintosh" [sic] and was gaining such popularity that the Manchester business was expanded with additional premises. Macintosh's business was gradually enlarged to include many other kinds of indiarubber products, such as rubber shoes and cushions.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1823.Further ReadingG.Macintosh, 1847, Memoir of Charles Macintosh, London (the fullest account of Charles Macintosh's life).T.Hancock, 1957, Narrative of the Indiarubber Manufacture, London.H.Schurer, 1953, "The macintosh: the paternity of an invention", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 28:77–87 (an account of the invention of the mackintosh).RLH / LRD -
110 use
1) польза, эффект2) использование, пользование, применение; употребление; использовать, пользоваться, применять; употреблять•- use for new purpose
- used to
- use exclusively
- use in practice- use up- use under secrecy
- when in use
- use of a mark
- use of invention
- use of known process
- use of monopoly
- use of patent
- use of patent information
- use of patent license
- use of patent rights
- actual use
- actual use of invention
- analogous use
- authorized use
- commercial use
- concurrent use
- continued use
- crown use
- dead use
- double use
- exclusive use
- experimental use
- fair use
- fair use of copyright material
- foreign use
- free use
- full use
- government use of a patented invention
- hidden use
- improper use of monopoly
- improper use of patent
- industrial use of invention
- information use
- infringing use
- intended use
- intentional improper use of monopoly
- inventive use
- joint use
- later use
- legal use
- limited public use
- new and full use
- new use of known process
- noninfringing use
- notorious prior use
- open use
- patent use
- permitted use
- practical use
- previous use
- prior use
- prior use of invention
- prior public use
- public use
- secondary use of a mark
- secret use
- token use
- unauthorized use
- unlawful use
- unlicensed use
- unrestricted use
- verbal use -
111 Craufurd, Henry William
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]fl. 1830s[br]English patentee of the process of coating iron with zinc (galvanized iron).[br]Although described as Commander of the Royal Navy, other personal details of Craufurd appear to be little known. His process for coating sheet iron with a protective layer of zinc, conveyed as a communication from abroad, was granted a patent in 1837. The details closely resembled, indeed are believed to have been based upon, those developed and patented in France in 1836 by Sorel, who had worked in collaboration with Ledru. There had been French interest in substituting zinc for tin as a coating for iron from 1742 with work by Malouin. Zinc-coated iron saucepans were produced in Rouen in the 1780s, but the work was later abandoned. Craufurd's patent directed that iron objects should be dipped into molten zinc, protected from volatilization by a layer of sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride, NH4Cl which also served as a flux. The quite misleading term "galvanizing" had already been introduced by Sorel for his process. Later its pro-tective properties were discovered to depend for effectiveness on the formation of a thin layer of zinc-iron alloy between the iron sheet and its zinc coating. Craufurd's patent was infringed in England soon after being granted, and was followed by several improvements, particularly those of Edmund Morewood, collaborating with George Rogers in five patents, of which four referred to methods of corrugation. The resulting production of zinc-coated iron implements, together with corrugated iron sheeting quickly adopted for building purposes, developed into an important industry of the West Midlands, Bristol, London and other parts of Britain.[br]Bibliography1837, British patent no. 7,355 (coating sheet iron with zinc).Further ReadingH.W.Dickinson, 1943–4, "A study of galvanised and corrugated sheet metal", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 24:27–36 (the best and most concise account).JDBiographical history of technology > Craufurd, Henry William
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112 Evans, Oliver
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 13 September 1755 Newport, Delaware, USAd. 15 April 1819 New York, USA[br]American millwright and inventor of the first automatic corn mill.[br]He was the fifth child of Charles and Ann Stalcrop Evans, and by the age of 15 he had four sisters and seven brothers. Nothing is known of his schooling, but at the age of 17 he was apprenticed to a Newport wheelwright and wagon-maker. At 19 he was enrolled in a Delaware Militia Company in the Revolutionary War but did not see active service. About this time he invented a machine for bending and cutting off the wires in textile carding combs. In July 1782, with his younger brother, Joseph, he moved to Tuckahoe on the eastern shore of the Delaware River, where he had the basic idea of the automatic flour mill. In July 1782, with his elder brothers John and Theophilus, he bought part of his father's Newport farm, on Red Clay Creek, and planned to build a mill there. In 1793 he married Sarah Tomlinson, daughter of a Delaware farmer, and joined his brothers at Red Clay Creek. He worked there for some seven years on his automatic mill, from about 1783 to 1790.His system for the automatic flour mill consisted of bucket elevators to raise the grain, a horizontal screw conveyor, other conveying devices and a "hopper boy" to cool and dry the meal before gathering it into a hopper feeding the bolting cylinder. Together these components formed the automatic process, from incoming wheat to outgoing flour packed in barrels. At that time the idea of such automation had not been applied to any manufacturing process in America. The mill opened, on a non-automatic cycle, in 1785. In January 1786 Evans applied to the Delaware legislature for a twenty-five-year patent, which was granted on 30 January 1787 although there was much opposition from the Quaker millers of Wilmington and elsewhere. He also applied for patents in Pennsylvania, Maryland and New Hampshire. In May 1789 he went to see the mill of the four Ellicot brothers, near Baltimore, where he was impressed by the design of a horizontal screw conveyor by Jonathan Ellicot and exchanged the rights to his own elevator for those of this machine. After six years' work on his automatic mill, it was completed in 1790. In the autumn of that year a miller in Brandywine ordered a set of Evans's machinery, which set the trend toward its general adoption. A model of it was shown in the Market Street shop window of Robert Leslie, a watch-and clockmaker in Philadelphia, who also took it to England but was unsuccessful in selling the idea there.In 1790 the Federal Plant Laws were passed; Evans's patent was the third to come within the new legislation. A detailed description with a plate was published in a Philadelphia newspaper in January 1791, the first of a proposed series, but the paper closed and the series came to nothing. His brother Joseph went on a series of sales trips, with the result that some machinery of Evans's design was adopted. By 1792 over one hundred mills had been equipped with Evans's machinery, the millers paying a royalty of $40 for each pair of millstones in use. The series of articles that had been cut short formed the basis of Evans's The Young Millwright and Miller's Guide, published first in 1795 after Evans had moved to Philadelphia to set up a store selling milling supplies; it was 440 pages long and ran to fifteen editions between 1795 and 1860.Evans was fairly successful as a merchant. He patented a method of making millstones as well as a means of packing flour in barrels, the latter having a disc pressed down by a toggle-joint arrangement. In 1801 he started to build a steam carriage. He rejected the idea of a steam wheel and of a low-pressure or atmospheric engine. By 1803 his first engine was running at his store, driving a screw-mill working on plaster of Paris for making millstones. The engine had a 6 in. (15 cm) diameter cylinder with a stroke of 18 in. (45 cm) and also drove twelve saws mounted in a frame and cutting marble slabs at a rate of 100 ft (30 m) in twelve hours. He was granted a patent in the spring of 1804. He became involved in a number of lawsuits following the extension of his patent, particularly as he increased the licence fee, sometimes as much as sixfold. The case of Evans v. Samuel Robinson, which Evans won, became famous and was one of these. Patent Right Oppression Exposed, or Knavery Detected, a 200-page book with poems and prose included, was published soon after this case and was probably written by Oliver Evans. The steam engine patent was also extended for a further seven years, but in this case the licence fee was to remain at a fixed level. Evans anticipated Edison in his proposal for an "Experimental Company" or "Mechanical Bureau" with a capital of thirty shares of $100 each. It came to nothing, however, as there were no takers. His first wife, Sarah, died in 1816 and he remarried, to Hetty Ward, the daughter of a New York innkeeper. He was buried in the Bowery, on Lower Manhattan; the church was sold in 1854 and again in 1890, and when no relative claimed his body he was reburied in an unmarked grave in Trinity Cemetery, 57th Street, Broadway.[br]Further ReadingE.S.Ferguson, 1980, Oliver Evans: Inventive Genius of the American Industrial Revolution, Hagley Museum.G.Bathe and D.Bathe, 1935, Oliver Evans: Chronicle of Early American Engineering, Philadelphia, Pa.IMcN -
113 Hall, Charles Martin
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 6 December 1863 Thompson, Ohio, USAd. 27 December 1914 USA[br]American metallurgist, inventor of the first feasible electrolytic process for the production of aluminium.[br]The son of a Congregationalist minister, Hall was educated at Oberlin College. There he was instructed in chemistry by Professor F.F.Jewett, a former student of the German chemist Friedrich Wöhler, who encouraged Hall to believe that there was a need for a cheap process for the manufacture of aluminium. After graduating in 1885, Hall set to work in his private laboratory exploring the method of fused salt electrolysis. On Wednesday 10 February 1886 he found that alumina dissolved in fused cryolite "like sugar in water", and that the bath so produced was a good conductor of electricity. He contained the solution in a pure graphite crucible which also acted as an efficient cathode, and by 16 February 1886 had produced the first globules of metallic aluminium. With two backers, Hall was able to complete his experiments and establish a small pilot plant in Boston, but they withdrew after the US Patent Examiners reported that Hall's invention had been anticipated by a French patent, filed by Paul Toussaint Héroult in April 1886. Although Hall had not filed until July 1886, he was permitted to testify that his invention had been completed by 16 February 1886 and on 2 April 1889 he was granted a seventeen-year monopoly in the United States. Hall now had the support of Captain A.E. Hunt of the Pittsburgh Testing Institute who provided the capital for establishing the Pittsburgh Reduction Company, which by 1889 was selling aluminium at $1 per pound compared to the $15 for sodium-reduced aluminium. Further capital was provided by the banker Andrew Mellon (1855–1937). Hall then turned his attention to Britain and began negotiations with Johnson Matthey, who provided land on a site at Patricroft near Manchester. Here the Aluminium Syndicate, owned by the Pittsburgh Reduction Company, began to produce aluminium in July 1890. By this time the validity of Hall's patent was being strongly contested by Héroult and also by the Cowles brothers, who attempted to operate the Hall process in the United States. Hall successfully sued them for infringement, and was confirmed in his patent rights by the celebrated ruling in 1893 of William Howard Taft, subsequently President of the USA. In 1895 Hall's company changed its name to the Pittsburgh Aluminium Company and moved to Niagara Falls, where cheap electrical power was available. In 1903 a legal compromise ended the litigation between the Hall and Héroult organizations. The American rights in the invention were awarded to Hall, and the European to Héroult. The Pittsburgh Aluminium Company became the Aluminium Company of America on 1 January 1907. On his death he left his estate, worth about $45 million, for the advancement of education.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsChemical Society, London, Perkin Medal 1911.Further ReadingH.N.Holmes, 1930, "The story of aluminium", Journal of Chemical Education. E.F.Smith, 1914, Chemistry in America.ASD -
114 application
1) заявка (заявка на патент - это комплект документов, состоящий из: ходатайства, описания изобретения, чертежей, формулы изобретения, присяги или торжественного заявления изобретателя и подтверждения уплаты заявочной пошлины)2) заявление, прошение, ходатайство3) применение, употребление4) внесение (напр. поправки)5) прикладная задача, прикладная система•- confidential nature of an application
- application establishing priority
- application for a foreign patent
- application for a license
- application for a patent
- application for a postponement
- application for cancellation
- application for compensation
- application for continuation of examination
- application for conversion
- application for registration
- application for respite
- application for revocation
- application for the grant of a patent
- application for the protection of an invention
- application for the registration of a mark
- application for the registration of a trademark
- application for the reissue of a patent
- application for the renewal of a patent
- application for the renewal of the registration of mark
- application for urgency
- application in home country
- application in issue
- application made special
- application not satisfying requirements of patentability
- application on appeal
- application on file
- application on record
- patent application as published for opposition
- application of correction
- abandoned application
- accepted application
- actual application
- additional application
- allowed application
- amended application
- amplified application
- attacked application
- basic application
- challenging application
- chemical application
- CIP application
- cognate application
- colliding application
- commercial application
- continuation application
- continuation-in-part application
- continuing application
- Convention application
- copending applications
- copyright application
- corresponding application
- defective application
- defensively published application
- defensive publication application
- definite application
- denial application
- dependent application
- design patent application
- divisional application
- dragnet application
- earlier filed application
- employment application
- examined application
- ex parte application
- fatally defective application
- faulty application
- filed application
- finally rejected application
- first application
- foreign patent application
- forfeited application
- forfeitured application
- illegal application
- improper application
- improvement application
- incomplete application
- incorrect patent application
- independent application
- industrial application
- initial application
- instant application
- interfering application
- international application under the PCT
- joint application
- later application
- later-dated application
- later-field application
- main application
- mark application
- method application
- national application
- native application
- new application
- non-convention application
- nonexamined application
- nonpriority application
- opposed patent application
- original application
- original foreign application
- parent application
- patent application
- pending application
- pending patent application
- plant patent application
- practical application
- preliminary application
- previous application
- prior application
- priority application
- private patent application
- process application
- provisional application for a patent
- published application
- reciprocity application
- refiled application
- refused application
- regional application under the PCT
- regular application - related applications
- renewal application
- representative application
- restricted application
- secret application
- secret patent application
- semifinished application
- separate application
- signed application
- special application
- streamlined continuation application
- subsequent application
- substitute application
- trademark application
- united application
- U. S. application
- useful application
- verified application
- vicious patent application
- withdrawn application
- written application* * *заявка (комплект официальных документов, представляемый заявителем в патентное ведомство для получения охранного документа: патента, свидетельства о регистрации товарного знака или промышленного образца) -
115 Saniter, Ernest Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1863 Middlesbrough, Englandd. 2 November 1934 Rotherham, Yorkshire[br]English chemist and metallurgist who introduced a treatment to remove sulphur from molten iron.[br]Saniter spent three years as a pupil in J.E.Stead's chemical laboratory in Middlesbrough, and then from 1883 was employed in the same town as Assistant Chemist at the new North-Eastern Steelworks. In 1890 he became Chief Chemist to the Wigan Coal and Iron Company in Lancashire. There he devised a desulphurizing treatment for molten iron and steel, based upon the presence of abundant lime together with calcium chloride. Between 1898 and 1904 he was in the Middlesbrough district once more, employed by Dorman Long \& Co. and Bell Brothers in experiments which led to the establishment of Teesside's first large-scale basic open-hearth steel plant. Calcium fluoride (fluorspar), mentioned in Saniter's 1892 patent, soon came to replace the calcium chloride; with this modification, his method retained wide applicability throughout the era of open-hearth steel. In 1904 Saniter became chief metallurgist to Steel, Peech \& Tozer Limited of Sheffield, and he remained in this post until 1928. Throughout the last forty years of his life he participated in the discussion of steelmaking developments and practices.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsVice-President, Iron and Steel Institute 1927–34. Iron and Steel Institute (London) Bessemer Gold Medal 1910.Bibliography1892. "A new process for the purification of iron and steel from sulphur", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 2:216–22.1893. "A supplementary paper on a new process for desulphurising iron and steel", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 1:73–7. 29 October 1892, British patent no. 8,612.15 October 1892, British patent no. 8,612A. 29 July 1893, British patent no. 17, 692.28 October 1893, British patent no. 23,534.Further ReadingK.C.Barraclough, 1990, Steelmaking: 1850–1900 458, London: Institute of Metals, 271– 8.JKA -
116 Talbot, William Henry Fox
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 11 February 1800 Melbury, Englandd. 17 September 1877 Lacock, Wiltshire, England[br]English scientist, inventor of negative—positive photography and practicable photo engraving.[br]Educated at Harrow, where he first showed an interest in science, and at Cambridge, Talbot was an outstanding scholar and a formidable mathematician. He published over fifty scientific papers and took out twelve English patents. His interests outside the field of science were also wide and included Assyriology, etymology and the classics. He was briefly a Member of Parliament, but did not pursue a parliamentary career.Talbot's invention of photography arose out of his frustrating attempts to produce acceptable pencil sketches using popular artist's aids, the camera discura and camera lucida. From his experiments with the former he conceived the idea of placing on the screen a paper coated with silver salts so that the image would be captured chemically. During the spring of 1834 he made outline images of subjects such as leaves and flowers by placing them on sheets of sensitized paper and exposing them to sunlight. No camera was involved and the first images produced using an optical system were made with a solar microscope. It was only when he had devised a more sensitive paper that Talbot was able to make camera pictures; the earliest surviving camera negative dates from August 1835. From the beginning, Talbot noticed that the lights and shades of his images were reversed. During 1834 or 1835 he discovered that by placing this reversed image on another sheet of sensitized paper and again exposing it to sunlight, a picture was produced with lights and shades in the correct disposition. Talbot had discovered the basis of modern photography, the photographic negative, from which could be produced an unlimited number of positives. He did little further work until the announcement of Daguerre's process in 1839 prompted him to publish an account of his negative-positive process. Aware that his photogenic drawing process had many imperfections, Talbot plunged into further experiments and in September 1840, using a mixture incorporating a solution of gallic acid, discovered an invisible latent image that could be made visible by development. This improved calotype process dramatically shortened exposure times and allowed Talbot to take portraits. In 1841 he patented the process, an exercise that was later to cause controversy, and between 1844 and 1846 produced The Pencil of Nature, the world's first commercial photographically illustrated book.Concerned that some of his photographs were prone to fading, Talbot later began experiments to combine photography with printing and engraving. Using bichromated gelatine, he devised the first practicable method of photo engraving, which was patented as Photoglyphic engraving in October 1852. He later went on to use screens of gauze, muslin and finely powdered gum to break up the image into lines and dots, thus anticipating modern photomechanical processes.Talbot was described by contemporaries as the "Father of Photography" primarily in recognition of his discovery of the negative-positive process, but he also produced the first photomicrographs, took the first high-speed photographs with the aid of a spark from a Leyden jar, and is credited with proposing infra-red photography. He was a shy man and his misguided attempts to enforce his calotype patent made him many enemies. It was perhaps for this reason that he never received the formal recognition from the British nation that his family felt he deserved.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS March 1831. Royal Society Rumford Medal 1842. Grand Médaille d'Honneur, L'Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1855. Honorary Doctorate of Laws, Edinburgh University, 1863.Bibliography1839, "Some account of the art of photographic drawing", Royal Society Proceedings 4:120–1; Phil. Mag., XIV, 1839, pp. 19–21.8 February 1841, British patent no. 8842 (calotype process).1844–6, The Pencil of Nature, 6 parts, London (Talbot'a account of his invention can be found in the introduction; there is a facsimile edn, with an intro. by Beamont Newhall, New York, 1968.Further ReadingH.J.P.Arnold, 1977, William Henry Fox Talbot, London.D.B.Thomas, 1964, The First Negatives, London (a lucid concise account of Talbot's photograph work).J.Ward and S.Stevenson, 1986, Printed Light, Edinburgh (an essay on Talbot's invention and its reception).H.Gernsheim and A.Gernsheim, 1977, The History of Photography, London (a wider picture of Talbot, based primarily on secondary sources).JWBiographical history of technology > Talbot, William Henry Fox
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117 Tennant, Charles
[br]b. 3 May 1768 Ochiltree, Ayrshire, Scotlandd. 1 October 1838 Glasgow, Scotland[br]Scottish inventor of bleaching powder.[br]After education at the local school, Tennant went to Kilbachan to learn the manufacture of silk. He then went on to Wellmeadow, where he acquired a knowledge of the old bleaching process, which enabled him to establish his own bleachfield at Darnly. The process consisted of boiling the fabric in weak alkali and then laying it flat on the ground to expose it to sun and air for several months. This process, expensive in time and space, would have formed an intolerable bottleneck in the rapidly expanding textile industry, but a new method was on the way. The French chemist Berthollet demonstrated in 1786 the use of chlorine as a bleaching agent and James Watt learned of this while on a visit to Paris. On his return to Glasgow, Watt passed details of the new process on to Tennant, who set about devising his own version of it. First he obtained a bleaching liquor by passing chlorine through a stirred mixture of lime and water. He was granted a patent for this process in 1798, but it was promptly infringed by bleachers in Lancashire. Tennant's efforts to enforce the patent were unsuccessful as it was alleged that others had employed a similar process some years previously. Nevertheless, the Lancashire bleachers had the good grace to present Tennant with a service of plate in recognition of the benefits he had brought to the industry.In 1799 Tennant improved on his process by substituting dry slaked lime for the liquid, to form bleaching powder. This was patented the same year and proved to be a vital element in the advance of the textile industry. The following year, Tennant established his chemical plant at St Roll ox, outside Glasgow, to manufacture bleaching powder and alkali substances. The plant prospered and became for a time the largest chemical works in Europe.[br]Further ReadingL.F.Haber, 1958, The Chemical Industry During the Nineteenth Century, London: Oxford University Press.F.S.Taylor, 1957, A History of Industrial Chemistry, London: Heinemann.Walker, 1862, Memoirs of Distinguished Men of Science of Great Britain Living in 1807– 1808, London, p. 186.LRD -
118 Lister, Samuel Cunliffe, 1st Baron Masham
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 1 January 1815 Calverly Hall, Bradford, Englandd. 2 February 1906 Swinton Park, near Bradford, England[br]English inventor of successful wool-combing and waste-silk spinning machines.[br]Lister was descended from one of the old Yorkshire families, the Cunliffe Listers of Manningham, and was the fourth son of his father Ellis. After attending a school on Clapham Common, Lister would not go to university; his family hoped he would enter the Church, but instead he started work with the Liverpool merchants Sands, Turner \& Co., who frequently sent him to America. In 1837 his father built for him and his brother a worsted mill at Manningham, where Samuel invented a swivel shuttle and a machine for making fringes on shawls. It was here that he first became aware of the unhealthy occupation of combing wool by hand. Four years later, after seeing the machine that G.E. Donisthorpe was trying to work out, he turned his attention to mechanizing wool-combing. Lister took Donisthorpe into partnership after paying him £12,000 for his patent, and developed the Lister-Cartwright "square nip" comber. Until this time, combing machines were little different from Cartwright's original, but Lister was able to improve on this with continuous operation and by 1843 was combing the first fine botany wool that had ever been combed by machinery. In the following year he received an order for fifty machines to comb all qualities of wool. Further combing patents were taken out with Donisthorpe in 1849, 1850, 1851 and 1852, the last two being in Lister's name only. One of the important features of these patents was the provision of a gripping device or "nip" which held the wool fibres at one end while the rest of the tuft was being combed. Lister was soon running nine combing mills. In the 1850s Lister had become involved in disputes with others who held combing patents, such as his associate Isaac Holden and the Frenchman Josué Heilmann. Lister bought up the Heilmann machine patents and afterwards other types until he obtained a complete monopoly of combing machines before the patents expired. His invention stimulated demand for wool by cheapening the product and gave a vital boost to the Australian wool trade. By 1856 he was at the head of a wool-combing business such as had never been seen before, with mills at Manningham, Bradford, Halifax, Keighley and other places in the West Riding, as well as abroad.His inventive genius also extended to other fields. In 1848 he patented automatic compressed air brakes for railways, and in 1853 alone he took out twelve patents for various textile machines. He then tried to spin waste silk and made a second commercial career, turning what was called "chassum" and hitherto regarded as refuse into beautiful velvets, silks, plush and other fine materials. Waste silk consisted of cocoon remnants from the reeling process, damaged cocoons and fibres rejected from other processes. There was also wild silk obtained from uncultivated worms. This is what Lister saw in a London warehouse as a mass of knotty, dirty, impure stuff, full of bits of stick and dead mulberry leaves, which he bought for a halfpenny a pound. He spent ten years trying to solve the problems, but after a loss of £250,000 and desertion by his partner his machine caught on in 1865 and brought Lister another fortune. Having failed to comb this waste silk, Lister turned his attention to the idea of "dressing" it and separating the qualities automatically. He patented a machine in 1877 that gave a graduated combing. To weave his new silk, he imported from Spain to Bradford, together with its inventor Jose Reixach, a velvet loom that was still giving trouble. It wove two fabrics face to face, but the problem lay in separating the layers so that the pile remained regular in length. Eventually Lister was inspired by watching a scissors grinder in the street to use small emery wheels to sharpen the cutters that divided the layers of fabric. Lister took out several patents for this loom in his own name in 1868 and 1869, while in 1871 he took out one jointly with Reixach. It is said that he spent £29,000 over an eleven-year period on this loom, but this was more than recouped from the sale of reasonably priced high-quality velvets and plushes once success was achieved. Manningham mills were greatly enlarged to accommodate this new manufacture.In later years Lister had an annual profit from his mills of £250,000, much of which was presented to Bradford city in gifts such as Lister Park, the original home of the Listers. He was connected with the Bradford Chamber of Commerce for many years and held the position of President of the Fair Trade League for some time. In 1887 he became High Sheriff of Yorkshire, and in 1891 he was made 1st Baron Masham. He was also Deputy Lieutenant in North and West Riding.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCreated 1st Baron Masham 1891.Bibliography1849, with G.E.Donisthorpe, British patent no. 12,712. 1850, with G.E. Donisthorpe, British patent no. 13,009. 1851, British patent no. 13,532.1852, British patent no. 14,135.1877, British patent no. 3,600 (combing machine). 1868, British patent no. 470.1868, British patent no. 2,386.1868, British patent no. 2,429.1868, British patent no. 3,669.1868, British patent no. 1,549.1871, with J.Reixach, British patent no. 1,117. 1905, Lord Masham's Inventions (autobiography).Further ReadingJ.Hogg (ed.), c. 1888, Fortunes Made in Business, London (biography).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London; and C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. IV, Oxford: Clarendon Press (both cover the technical details of Lister's invention).RLHBiographical history of technology > Lister, Samuel Cunliffe, 1st Baron Masham
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119 claim
kleɪm
1. сущ.
1) требование;
претензия;
притязание;
заявление, утверждение Persons are not to be their own judges in claims of justice. ≈ Люди не должны сами становиться судьями в требованиях справедливости. to raise a claim ≈ предъявить претензию to lay claim to ≈ предъявлять права на (что-л.) to put smth. in a claim ≈ предъявлять права на что-л. Syn: perquisite, right, title, pretension
2) иск;
претензия, рекламация
3) обыкн. амер. австрал. участок земли, отведенный под разработку недр;
заявка на отвод участка to stake out a claim ≈ отмечать границы отведенного участка;
закреплять свое право на что-л. jump a claim
2. гл.
1) требовать;
предъявлять требования;
заявлять о своих правах на что-л. (for) This matter requires our attention. ≈ Это дело требует нашего внимания. to claim the inheritance ≈ заявить права на наследство Magical properties are sometimes claimed for certain medicines. ≈ Некоторым целебным травам иногда приписывают магические свойства. The discoverer claimed the island for the nation. ≈ Первооткрыватель присоединил остров к своей родине. to claim damages ≈ требовать возмещения убытков to claim attention ≈ требовать к себе внимания to claim one's right ≈ требовать своего to claim the victory ≈ заявлять о своей победе Syn: demand, require, take
2) заявлять, утверждать He claimed that he'd been cheated. ≈ Он заявил, что его одурачили. Syn: maintain
3) юр. возбуждать иск( о возмещении убытков) (against/from;
for) You should be able to claim against the car insurance. ≈ Думаю, тебе удастся выиграть иск против страховой компании. требование;
претензия, притязание - territorial *s территориальные претензии - to lay * to smth., to set up a * to smth., to put in a * for smth. предъявлять требование на что-л;
претендовать на получение чего-л - does anyone make a * to this purse? (разговорное) чей это кошелек? право (на что-л) ;
(законная) претензия;
(юридическое) тж. право требования - * to attention право на внимание - moral * моральное право - prior * (юридическое) преимущественное требование - he has no * on me он не имеет права рассчитывать на меня - what * has he to the property? какие у него права на это имущество? патентные притязания, патентная формула (отдельный) пункт патентной заявки иск;
претензия;
рекламация - * in return, counter * встречное требование;
встречный иск - * against the public расход, относимый за счет государства - to abandon a * отказаться от требования - to acknowledge a * признать требование - to allow a * удовлетворить требование;
признать правильность претензии - to make a * against smb. for smth. предъявить иск кому-л на что-л - to lay * to smth., to put smth. to a * предъявлять права на что-л - to reject a * отказать в требовании;
отклонить рекламацию (юридическое) иск о возмещении убытков или ущерба (в связи с увечьем) - to put in a * подавать иск о возмещении ущерба (разговорное) утверждение, заявление - his *s to the contrary notwithstanding несмотря на то, что он утверждает обратное преим (американизм) и (австралийское) участок, отведенный под разработку недр;
горный отвод - to jump a * незаконно захватить участок, отведенный другому;
захватить чужое - to stake out a * отмечать границы отведенного участка;
закреплять свое право (на что-л) преим (американизм) и (австралийское) заявка на отвод участка требовать (обыкн как принадлежащее по праву) - to * to be exempt требовать льготы;
требовать (для себя) исключения - to * one's right требовать того, что полагается по праву;
требовать своего - to * attention требовать внимания;
заслуживать внимания - this matter *s our attention это дело заслуживает внимания - he went to * his bags at the station он пошел на вокзал получить свой багаж - does anyone * this umbrella? (разговорное) чей это зонтик? претендовать, предъявлять претензию, требование, притязание;
заявлять права( на что-л) ;
добиваться - to * a court of inquiry требовать назначения следственной комиссии - to * the throne претендовать на престол - to * a fault( спортивное) считать ошибкой - I * that the hearing should be postponed я требую, чтобы рассмотрение дела было отложено - may I not * your confidence? разве я не могу рассчитывать на ваше доверие? (юридическое) возбуждать иск (особ о возмещении ущерба) ;
to * damages требовать возмещения ущерба - to * on smb. возбудить иск против кого-л;
- to * compensation for the loss требовать возмещения убытков, подавать иск о возмещении убытков (американизм) (разговорное) утверждать, заявлять (что-л) - I * that it is false я утверждаю, что это неправда - he is *ed to be the only survivor утверждают, что спасся только он - he *ed to have reached the top of the mountain он утверждал, что достиг вершины горы - he *ed to be the best tennis-player in the school он считал себя лучшим теннисистом школы (американизм) (австралийское) занимать участок земли на основе своей заявки advance a ~ заявлять претензию advance a ~ предъявлять иск advance ~ предварительное требование advise a ~ сообщать об иске alternative ~ юр. альтернативная претензия apparatus ~ патентное притязание на устройство apparatus ~ пункт формулы изобретения на устройство apparatus ~ формула изобретения на устройство article ~ пат. предмет заявки assert a ~ предъявлять претензию average ~ страх. иск об убытках от аварии belated ~ задержанный иск cash ~ денежное требование civil ~ гражданский иск claim юр. возбуждать иск о возмещении убытков ~ добиваться ~ заявление ~ заявление права ~ заявлять ~ заявлять права ~ заявлять право ~ заявлять претензию ~ преим. амер. и австрал. участок земли, отведенный под разработку недр;
заявка на отвод участка ~ иск;
рекламация ~ иск ~ иск о возмещении ущерба ~ искать ~ патентная формула ~ патентные притязания ~ право требования ~ предъявлять иск ~ предъявлять претензию ~ предъявлять притязание ~ предъявлять рекламацию ~ предъявлять требование ~ претендовать, предъявлять претензию, заявлять права (на что-л.) ;
to claim the victory настаивать на своей победе ~ претендовать ~ претензия ~ притязать ~ пункт патентной заявки ~ рекламация ~ требование;
претензия;
притязание;
утверждение, заявление ~ требование, рекламация, иск ~ требование ~ требовать;
to claim damages требовать возмещения убытков;
to claim attention требовать к себе внимания ~ требовать ~ утверждать, заявлять ~ утверждать ~ утверждение ~ участок, отведенный под разработку недр ~ требовать;
to claim damages требовать возмещения убытков;
to claim attention требовать к себе внимания ~ требовать;
to claim damages требовать возмещения убытков;
to claim attention требовать к себе внимания damages: claim ~ взыскивать убытки claim ~ требовать возмещения убытков claim ~ требовать компенсации ~ for compensation требование компенсации ~ for damages требование о возмещении ущерба ~ for dismissal требование об отклонении иска ~ for indemnification требование о возмещении ущерба ~ for nonperformance of activity иск на неисполнение действия ~ for payment иск на оплату ~ for recovery иск о возмещении ущерба ~ for reduction просьба о возврате долга ~ for refund требование возврата денег ~ for relief требование снижения суммы платежа ~ for restitution of property требование восстановления первоначального права собственности ~ not settled неурегулированная претензия ~ of indemnity требование возмещения убытков ~ of recourse требование права регресса to ~ one's right требовать своего ~ over against возбуждать иск против ~ that the defendant be ordered to требовать явки ответчика в суд ~ претендовать, предъявлять претензию, заявлять права (на что-л.) ;
to claim the victory настаивать на своей победе ~ to personal property предъявление иска на личную собственность commercial ~ торговая претензия compensation ~ иск о компенсации ущерба consider a ~ рассматривать претензию damage ~ требование возмещения ущерба debt ~ иск о взыскании долга deferred ~ отсроченное требование delayed ~ задержанная претензия delayed ~ задержанное требование delayed ~ задержанный иск dependent ~ дополнительный пункт формулы изобретения dependent ~ зависимый пункт формулы изобретения dismiss a ~ отклонять претензию due ~ платежное требование entitlement to ~ право на жалобу erase a ~ отказываться от претензии established ~ обоснованная претензия fictitious ~ ложная жалоба fiscal ~ финансовая претензия free ~ свободное требование garnished ~ иск с наложенным арестом groundless ~ необоснованная претензия illiquid ~ юридически не обоснованный иск inadmissible ~ неприемлемое требование independent ~ независимый пункт формулы изобретения independent ~ самостоятельный пункт формулы изобретения insurance ~ страховое требование interest ~ требование о выплате процентов irrecoverable ~ требование невозместимости joint ~ совместный иск to jump a ~ незаконно захватить (что-л.), принадлежащее другому to jump a ~ незаконно захватить участок, отведенный другому jump: ~ захватывать( что-л.), завладевать( чем-л. в отсутствие владельца) ;
to jump a (mining) claim завладеть чужим (горным) участком justified ~ справедливое требование lawful ~ законная претензия lawful ~ законное требование lawful ~ законный иск lay ~ заявлять претензию lay ~ предъявлять права lay ~ претендовать to raise a ~ предъявить претензию;
to lay claim( to smth.), to put (smth.) in a claim предъявлять права (на что-л.) lay: ~ приписывать( кому-л. что-л.) ;
предъявлять;
обвинять;
to lay claim предъявлять права, притязания legal ~ судебный иск legitimate ~ законная претензия legitimate ~ обоснованный иск legitimate: ~ правильный, разумный;
legitimate argument правильный довод;
legitimate claim законное требование, обоснованная претензия liquid ~ ликвидный иск main ~ основная претензия main ~ основное притязание main ~ основной пункт формулы изобретения maintain a ~ выставлять требование maintain a ~ предъявлять иск maintenance ~ иск по алиментам maintenance ~ обращение за пособием на содержание make a ~ предъявлять иск make a ~ предъявлять претензию maritime ~ морской иск meet a ~ готовить возражения против иска meet a ~ оспаривать иск method ~ пункт формулы изобретения на способ method ~ формула изобретения на способ minor ~ мелкая претензия monetary ~ денежная претензия monetary ~ денежное требование money ~ денежное требование mortgage ~ требование по ипотеке omnibus ~ заключительный пункт формулы изобретения omnibus ~ общая формула изобретения omnibus ~ пат. общее притязание omnibus ~ очень широкая формула изобретения outstanding ~ неурегулированная претензия outstanding ~ просроченный иск patent ~ патентное притязание patent ~ притязание на выдачу патента patent ~ пункт формулы изобретения patent ~ формула изобретения pecuniary ~ денежный иск pecuniary ~ имущественный иск pending ~ неудовлетворенный иск pension ~ иск о получении страховой пенсии petty ~ незначительное требование prefer a ~ подавать иск prefer a ~ предъявлять требование preferential ~ преимущественное требование preferential ~ привилегированное требование, преимущественное требование preferential ~ привилегированное требование present a ~ предъявлять претензию primary ~ основной иск primary ~ первичный иск principal ~ главный иск principal ~ основной иск prior ~ преимущественное требование prior: ~ более важный, веский;
a prior claim более веская претензия priority ~ преимущественное требование priority ~ пат. притязание на приоритет privileged ~ преимущественное требование process ~ пат. пункт формулы изобретения на способ process ~ пат. формула изобретения на способ product ~ пат. пункт формулы изобретения на продукт product ~ пункт формулы изобретения на фабрикат product ~ пат. формула изобретения на фабрикат product ~ пат. характеристика продукции prove a ~ засвидетельствовать правильность иска to raise a ~ предъявить претензию;
to lay claim (to smth.), to put (smth.) in a claim предъявлять права (на что-л.) put: ~ in a claim предъявлять иск raise a ~ подавать иск to raise a ~ предъявить претензию;
to lay claim (to smth.), to put (smth.) in a claim предъявлять права (на что-л.) raise a ~ предъявлять претензию raise: ~ ставить, поднимать (вопрос) ;
to raise a question поставить вопрос;
to raise objections выдвигать возражения;
to raise a claim предъявить претензию recourse ~ юр. регрессное требование register a ~ подавать иск reject a ~ отвергать требование reject a ~ отклонять иск reject a ~ отклонять претензию renounce ~ отказываться от претензии salary ~ требование повышения заработной платы sales ~ коммерческий аргумент salvage ~ требование о выплате спасательного вознаграждения secondary ~ дополнительный иск secured ~ удовлетворенный иск settled ~ урегулированная претензия small ~ мелкая претензия to stake out a ~ закреплять свое право (на что-л.) to stake out a ~ отмечать границы отведенного участка stake: to ~ out a claim заявлять свои права (на что-л.) ;
stake up загораживать кольями to ~ out a claim отмечать вехами границу земельного участка в подтверждение своего права на него stale ~ притязание, не заявленное вовремя stale ~ притязание, заявленное после неосновательного промедления subordinated ~ субординированная претензия substance ~ сущность формулы изобретения supplementary ~ дополнительное требование tax refund ~ требование возврата налога unenforceable ~ претензия, не могущая быть заявленной в суде unliquidated ~ неурегулированный иск unsecured ~ необоснованный иск use ~ притязание на право использования vindicate a ~ доказывать справедливость иска wage ~ требование увеличения заработной платы waive a ~ отказываться от иска waive a ~ отказываться от требования withdraw a ~ отзывать иск withdraw a ~ отказываться от иска -
120 Anmeldung
Anmeldung f 1. GEN, PAT application divisional application (abgetrennte); 2. RECHT notification; registration (Kraftfahrzeug) • nur nach vorheriger Anmeldung GEN, SOZ by appointment only* * *f 1. <Geschäft, Patent> application abgetrennte divisional application; 2. < Recht> notification, Kraftfahrzeug registration* * *Anmeldung
notification, notice, report, announcement, filing [of an application], registration, application, enrol(l)ment, (Empfangsbüro) reception, (im Hotel) enquiries, reception, (Vermögen, Verzollung) declaration;
• bei der Anmeldung (Patentrecht) upon filing;
• nach vorheriger Anmeldung by appointment;
• ausgeschiedene Anmeldungen (Patentrecht) divisional applications;
• frühere Anmeldung prior application;
• kollidierende Anmeldung interfering application;
• polizeiliche Anmeldung report to (registration with) the police;
• rechtzeitige Anmeldung due application;
• zentralisierte Anmeldung centralised notification;
• Anmeldung von Aktien zur Hauptversammlung depositing of shares for the general meeting;
• Anmeldung eines Ferngesprächs booking of a telephone call;
• handelsgerichtliche Anmeldung einer Firma registration of a company (corporation, US);
• doppelte Anmeldung einer Forderung (Konkurs) double proof;
• Anmeldung eines Kindes beim Standesamt registration of a new-born child;
• Anmeldung des Konkurses petition in bankruptcy;
• Anmeldung einer Konkursforderung proof of a debt;
• Anmeldung eines Kraftfahrzeugs registration of a motor vehicle;
• Anmeldung zu einem Kursus enrol(l)ment, enlistment, enlisting;
• Anmeldung von Neufahrzeugen registration of new cars;
• Anmeldung eines Patents application for a patent;
• Anmeldung für den ausgeschiedenen Teil (Patentrecht) divisional application;
• Anmeldung eines Verfahrens (Patentrecht) process application;
• Anmeldung eines Warenzeichens registration of a trademark;
• Anmeldung von Wertpapieren registration of securities;
• Anmeldungen bearbeiten to process registration;
• Anmeldung zur Patentreife bringen to mature an application into a patent;
• Anmeldung durchführen to prosecute an application;
• Anmeldung einreichen to file an application;
• Anmeldung beim Börsenaufsichtsamt erforderlich machen to trigger a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (US);
• Anmeldung zurückweisen (Patent) to reject an application;
• Anmeldung zurückziehen (Patentantrag) to withdraw an application.
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