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1 паровой брашпиль
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2 паровой брашпиль
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > паровой брашпиль
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3 брашпиль
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4 подкрепление под брашпилем
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > подкрепление под брашпилем
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5 брашпиль
м. windlass -
6 звездочка брашпиля
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > звездочка брашпиля
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7 электрогидравлический брашпиль
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > электрогидравлический брашпиль
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8 паровой брашпиль
Naval: steam windlass, steam-driven windlass -
9 Dampfwinde
f < förd> ■ steam winch; steam windlass -
10 dampvinsj
subst. steam winch, steam windlass -
11 отделение механизмов брашпиля
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > отделение механизмов брашпиля
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12 паротурбинный брашпиль
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > паротурбинный брашпиль
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13 пульт управления брашпилем
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > пульт управления брашпилем
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14 паротурбинный брашпиль
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15 гидравлический брашпиль
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > гидравлический брашпиль
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16 кормовой брашпиль
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > кормовой брашпиль
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17 ручной брашпиль
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > ручной брашпиль
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18 электрический брашпиль
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > электрический брашпиль
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19 argano
m winch* * *argano s.m. hoist; capstan; windlass, winch: argano ad aria compressa, air hoist; argano a mano, monkey winch; argano a vapore, steam capstan; argano dell'ancora, anchor windlass; argano di sollevamento, cargo winch.* * *['argano]sostantivo maschile1) winch, windlass2) mar. capstan* * *argano/'argano/sostantivo m.1 winch, windlass2 mar. capstan. -
20 Fowler, John
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering[br]b. 11 July 1826 Melksham, Wiltshire, Englandd. 4 December 1864 Ackworth, Yorkshire, England[br]English engineer and inventor who developed a steam-powered system of mole land drainage, and a two-engined system of land cultivation, founding the Steam Plough Works in Leeds.[br]The son of a Quaker merchant, John Fowler entered the business of a county corn merchant on leaving school, but he found this dull and left as soon as he came of age, joining the Middlesbrough company of Gilkes, Wilson \& Hopkins, railway locomotive manufacturers. In 1849, at the age of 23, Fowler visited Ireland and was so distressed by the state of Irish agriculture that he determined to develop a system to deal with the drainage of land. He designed an implement which he patented in 1850 after a period of experimentation. It was able to lay wooden pipes to a depth of two feet, and was awarded the Silver Medal at the 1850 Royal Agriculture Show. By 1854, using a steam engine made by Clayton \& Shuttleworth, he had applied steam power to his invention and gained another award that year at the Royal Show. The following year he turned his attention to steam ploughing. He first developed a single-engined system that used a double windlass with which to haul a plough backwards and forwards across fields. In 1856 he patented his balance plough, and the following year he read a paper to the Institution of Mechanical Engineers at their Birmingham premises, describing the system. In 1858 he won the Royal Agricultural Society award with a plough built for him by Ransomes. Fowler founded the Steam Plough Works in Leeds and in 1862 production began in partnership with William Watson Hewitson. Within two years they were producing the first of a series of engines which were to make the name Fowler known worldwide. John Fowler saw little of his success because he died in 1864 at his Yorkshire home as a result of tetanus contracted after a riding accident.[br]Further ReadingM.Lane, 1980, The Story of the Steam Plough Works, Northgate Publishing (provides biographical details of John Fowler, but is mostly concerned with the company that he founded).AP
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См. также в других словарях:
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windlass — I. noun Etymology: Middle English wyneles, wyndlas, alteration of wyndase, from Old French guindas, windas, from Old Norse vindāss, from vinda to wind (akin to Old High German wintan to wind) + āss pole; akin to Gothic ans beam Date: 13th century … New Collegiate Dictionary
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