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1 upper draw roller
Прокат: подающий верхний ролик -
2 bar
штанга; тяга; вороток; засов; рейка; стропильная балка; связь; авто. балка; стержень; перекладина; шлагбаум; полоса (металла); брусок; кусок; пруток (напр. олова); плитка; панель; чушка (свинца); болванка; ограничение; препятствие; преграда; барометр (сокр. от barometer); бар (единица давления); с.х. бич; нфт. бур; бурильная штанга; эл. шина; пластина коллектора; ламель; II преграждать; загораживать; исключать- bar code - bar connection - bar coupler - bar coupling - bar crane - bar cutting machine - bar door - bar electromagnet - bar end - bar grizzly - bar head - bar indicator - bar iron - bar link - bar-link motion - bar-point share - bar puller - bar roller - bar shifter - bar solder - bar stock - bar suspension - bar tension - bar the engine - bar tin - bar winding - boring bar - brake bar - brass bar - bulb bar - bumper bar - bus bar - chain bar - channel bar - charging bar - circular bar - claw bar - commutator bar - contact bar - continuous draw bar - copper bar - core bar - corrugated bar - cover-bar - cramp bar - cranking bar - cross bar - crow-bar - crown bar - curved bar - cutter bar - cutter bar shoe - cutter loader bar - cutting bar - cylinder bar - deflecting bar - diamond bar - differential boring bar - disengaging bar - distance bar - doctor bar - dolly bar - dowel bar - drag bar - draw-bar - drum bar - dumping bar - equalizing bar - extension for handle bar - finger bar - fire bar - fish-bellied bar - flat bar - fly bar - foot bar - free draw bar - furnace bar - gauge bar - grate bar - grizzly bar - guard bar - guide-bar - handle bar - H-bar - hinged bar - hitch bar - joint bar - iron bar- L-bar- lace bar- lifting bar - locking bar - loop bar - marginal bar - merchant bar - natural bar - picker bar cam - pilot bar - pinch bar - plugging bar - proportional test bar - push bar - rack bar - radial bar - radial bar of a disintegrator - radius bar - rake bar - rasp bar - reel bar - reinforcing bar - rest bar - rifling bar - rocker bar - rocking bar - round bar - scraper bar - set bar - shaped bar - shackle bar - shear bar - sheet bar - sickle-bar - slide bar - splice bar - stabilizer bar- T-bar- tension bar - test bar - thin-kerf bar - threaded bar - tie bar - tool bar - toothed bar - tow bar - trailing bar - trigger bar - upper bar - water bar - wrecking bar with one chisel tip and one curved claw tip - Z-bar -
3 Paul, Lewis
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]d. April 1759 Brook Green, London, England[br]English inventor of hand carding machines and partner with Wyatt in early spinning machines.[br]Lewis Paul, apparently of French Huguenot extraction, was quite young when his father died. His father was Physician to Lord Shaftsbury, who acted as Lewis Paul's guardian. In 1728 Paul made a runaway match with a widow and apparently came into her property when she died a year later. He must have subsequently remarried. In 1732 he invented a pinking machine for making the edges of shrouds out of which he derived some profit.Why Paul went to Birmingham is unknown, but he helped finance some of Wyatt's earlier inventions. Judging by the later patents taken out by Paul, it is probable that he was the one interested in spinning, turning to Wyatt for help in the construction of his spinning machine because he had no mechanical skills. The two men may have been involved in this as early as 1733, although it is more likely that they began this work in 1735. Wyatt went to London to construct a model and in 1736 helped to apply for a patent, which was granted in 1738 in the name of Paul. The patent shows that Paul and Wyatt had a number of different ways of spinning in mind, but contains no drawings of the machines. In one part there is a description of sets of rollers to draw the cotton out more finely that could have been similar to those later used by Richard Arkwright. However, it would seem that Paul and Wyatt followed the other main method described, which might be called spindle drafting, where the fibres are drawn out between the nip of a pair of rollers and the tip of the spindle; this method is unsatisfactory for continuous spinning and results in an uneven yarn.The spinning venture was supported by Thomas Warren, a well-known Birmingham printer, Edward Cave of Gentleman's Magazine, Dr Robert James of fever-powder celebrity, Mrs Desmoulins, and others. Dr Samuel Johnson also took much interest. In 1741 a mill powered by two asses was equipped at the Upper Priory, Birmingham, with, machinery for spinning cotton being constructed by Wyatt. Licences for using the invention were sold to other people including Edward Cave, who established a mill at Northampton, so the enterprise seemed to have great promise. A spinning machine must be supplied with fibres suitably prepared, so carding machines had to be developed. Work was in hand on one in 1740 and in 1748 Paul took out another patent for two types of carding device, possibly prompted by the patent taken out by Daniel Bourn. Both of Paul's devices were worked by hand and the carded fibres were laid onto a strip of paper. The paper and fibres were then rolled up and placed in the spinning machine. In 1757 John Dyer wrote a poem entitled The Fleece, which describes a circular spinning machine of the type depicted in a patent taken out by Paul in 1758. Drawings in this patent show that this method of spinning was different from Arkwright's. Paul endeavoured to have the machine introduced into the Foundling Hospital, but his death in early 1759 stopped all further development. He was buried at Paddington on 30 April that year.[br]Bibliography1738, British patent no. 562 (spinning machine). 1748, British patent no. 636 (carding machine).1758, British patent no. 724 (circular spinning machine).Further ReadingG.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, London, App. This should be read in conjunction with R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester, which shows that the roller drafting system on Paul's later spinning machine worked on the wrong principles.A.P.Wadsworth and J.de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, 1600–1780, Manchester (provides good coverage of the partnership of Paul and Wyatt and the early mills).E.Baines, 1835, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, London (this publication must be mentioned, but is now out of date).A.Seymour-Jones, 1921, "The invention of roller drawing in cotton spinning", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 1 (a more modern account).RLH -
4 head
3) верхняя часть; верхний элемент (конструкции, аппарата)4) передняя часть ( конструкции)5) головная часть (напр. тоннеля, слитка)6) штрек7) мн. ч. руда, поступающая на обогатительную фабрику8) метал. прибыль9) замочный камень ( свода печи)10) дека ( сотрясательного стола)13) пробка ( разливочного ковша)14) гидр. головное сооружение15) оголовок (напр. контрфорса)16) верхний бьеф17) высота столба ( жидкости); напор18) высота (сооружения, конструкции) в свету19) насадок; патрубок20) насадка; сопло22) дно, днище (бочки, барабана); верхнее днище ( резервуара)23) мн. ч. головная фракция, головной погон24) продвижение25) направление26) интервал ( на транспорте)27) англ. крыша ( автомобиля)29) крышка цилиндра ( поршневого насоса)30) мор. носовая часть, нос31) барабан (напр. якорного шпиля)35) ригель; верхний брус ( рамы)37) вчт. первый элемент списка38) вчт. дескриптор40) рекордер42) кипа (напр. джута, пеньки)43) пищ. сливки45) швейн. верхняя подушка ( гладильного пресса)46) заголовок, "шапка"; рубрика•to barb bolt head — заёршивать головку болта;to expand rivet head — раздавать головку заклёпки;head of culvert — оголовок водопропускной трубыhead of delta — вершина дельты рекиhead of dock — голова докаhead of pile — наголовник сваи-
accumulator-type felling head
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adiabatic head
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adjustable boring head
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air-floating head
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airspeed head
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anamorphic head
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angular head
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antifoam still head
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aquifer pressure head
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aquifer head
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armature head
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arrow head
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assembling head
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attachment head
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audio head
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auger-drill head
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automatic arc-welding head
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available head
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axe head
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ball-and-socket head
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band head
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banner head
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barrel head
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beetle head
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binding head
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blow head
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blowpipe head
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boiler head
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bolt head
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boom head
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boring head
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boring-and-facing head
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brake head
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breakwater head
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buffer head
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bull head
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bumped head
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buoyancy head
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cable distribution head
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cable head
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camera head
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capstan head
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carding head
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casing head
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cassette head
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casting head
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cementing head
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cementing plug dropping head
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chain saw felling head
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chimney head
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chipping head
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chord head
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circulating head
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cistern head
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closing head
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closure head
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cluster head
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color head
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color-light signal head
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column head
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combination head
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compensation head
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condenser head
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conductor head
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cone head
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confidence head
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connecting rod head
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connection head
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contour-facing head
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conveyor drive head
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core receiver retrieving head
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countersunk head
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coupler head
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coupling head
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cross head
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cross milling and drilling head
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cross-feed head
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cross-flow head
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crusher head
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crystal-oriented HPF video head
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C-type spot-welding head
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cue head
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culvert head
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cup head
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cushion head
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cutter head
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cutting head
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cylinder head
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dado head
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dead head
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deaerator head
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debranching head
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detecting head
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diamond head
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die head
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differential head
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discard head
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discharge head
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dished head
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distributor head
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dividing head
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door head
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double head
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double-gap erase head
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drafting head
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drawing head
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draw head
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drilling head
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drill head
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drilling-boring head
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dual grinding head
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dummy head
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dust head
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dynamic head
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dynamic tracking head
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electrode wheel head
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electrooptic head
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elevation head
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engraving head
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enlarger head
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erase head
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exhaust head
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extruder head
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facing head
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feeder head
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felling head
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ferrite head
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ferrostatic head
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fillister head
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filter head
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fishing head
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fixed head
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flared column head
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flex-hone head
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floating head
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fluid panning head
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flying head
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friction head
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gage head
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gear head
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gear-shaping cutter head
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gipsy head
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graduated head
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grapple head
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gravity head
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grinding head
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gross head
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gyroscopic head
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hammer head
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harvesting head
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hexagon head
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hex head
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hexagon turret head
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homing head
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hopper head
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hose coupling head
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hydraulic pressure head
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hydraulic head
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impact head
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indexing head
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index head
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injection head
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integrated head
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interchangeable head
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interchangeable horizontal spindle head
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ion gage head
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irrigation head
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jet head
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joist head
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kinetic head
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knitting head
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knurling head
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laser head
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latch bumper head
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laying head
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leader head
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leak detector head
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lever gun welding head
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light signal head
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liquid head
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liquid-dividing head
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live head
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loading head
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lost head
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machining head
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magnetic head
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main rotor head
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marking head
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mechanical recording head
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milling head
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modified boring head
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molder head
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movable head
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moving head
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multidrill head
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multiple drill head
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multiple head
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multiple sensor head
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multiple-arc head
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multiple-tree accumulating head
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multispindle head
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multistem felling head
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multivertical spindle head
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mushroom head
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nail head
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NC indexing head
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NC/TP head
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net positive suction head
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nigger head
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nozzle loss head
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operating head
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optical scanning head
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pan-and-tilt head
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panoramic head
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parallel movement gripper head
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pelletizing head
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pickup head
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picture head
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pier head
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pilot head
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pipeline head
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piston head
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piston motor head
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pit head
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Pitot-static head
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Pitot head
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pivoting drafting head
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placement head
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planning head
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playback head
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plotting head
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plunge milling head
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potential head
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pouring head
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power head
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preread head
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press head
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pressure head
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priming head
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printing head
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probe head
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profiling head
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protractor head
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pulling head
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punch head
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pusher-beam head
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pyranometer head
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quill-type head
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rail head
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rail-wing head
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rainwater head
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ram head
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randomly selected head
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reactor vessel head
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read head
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read-write head
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record head
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recording head
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recording/playback head
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refacing head
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remote head
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removable cylinder head
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replay head
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reservoir head
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resurfaced cylinder head
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RF head
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right-angle head
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river head
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rivet head
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roller head
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rope-type head
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rosser head
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rotary head
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round head
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rudder head
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running head
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safety head
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scanning head
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screw-cutting head
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seal-priming head
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seam-welding head
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search head
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seepage head
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self-cleaning head
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self-powered welding head
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self-powered head
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sensing head
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set head
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shake head
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shear mixing head
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shear-and-grapple head
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shearing head
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sheeting head
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sink head
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sinker head
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sleeve head
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sleeve milling head
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sliding head
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slipper head
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slotted head
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sluice head
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solid head
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solid-state laser head
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sound head
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spear-point head
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spike head
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spindle head
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spindle-type rotary head
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splash head
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split head
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splitter head
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static head
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steering head
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stem head
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stitcher head
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stitching head
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stock head
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stopper head
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suction head
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supply head
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surcharge head
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swivel work head
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takeout head
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tank head
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tapered head
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tappet head
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tapping head
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temperature head
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tension head
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test head
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testing machine head
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thermal head
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thin-film head
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thread-cutting head
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thread-rolling head
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tight head
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time-code head
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tool head
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torch head
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tracing head
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tractor head
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traveling head
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trigger probe head
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tripod head
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trolley head
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tubing head
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turret head
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U-flow head
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unit-type head
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universal boring head
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universal milling head
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upper head
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valve head
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valveless distillation column head
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vapor-dividing head
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velocity head
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video erasing head
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video head
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video rotary heads
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warping head
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water head
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well head
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window head
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write head -
5 Wyatt, John
[br]b. April 1700 Thickbroom, Weeford, near Lichfield, Englandd. 29 November 1766 Birmingham, England[br]English inventor of machines for making files and rolling lead, and co-constructor of a cotton-spinning machine.[br]John Wyatt was the eldest son of John and Jane Wyatt, who lived in the small village of Thickbroom in the parish of Weeford, near Lichfield. John the younger was educated at Lichfield school and then worked as a carpenter at Thickbroom till 1730. In 1732 he was in Birmingham, engaged by a man named Heely, a gunbarrel forger, who became bankrupt in 1734. Wyatt had invented a machine for making files and sought the help of Lewis Paul to manufacture this commercially.The surviving papers of Paul and Wyatt in Birmingham are mostly undated and show a variety of machines with which they were involved. There was a machine for "making lead hard" which had rollers, and "a Gymcrak of some consequence" probably refers to a machine for boring barrels or the file-making machine. Wyatt is said to have been one of the unsuccessful competitors for the erection of London Bridge in 1736. He invented and perfected the compound-lever weighing machine. He had more success with this: after 1744, machines for weighing up to five tons were set up at Birmingham, Chester, Gloucester, Hereford, Lichfield and Liverpool. Road construction, bridge building, hydrostatics, canals, water-powered engines and many other schemes received his attention and it is said that he was employed for a time after 1744 by Matthew Boulton.It is certain that in April 1735 Paul and Wyatt were working on their spinning machine and Wyatt was making a model of it in London in 1736, giving up his work in Birmingham. The first patent, in 1738, was taken out in the name of Lewis Paul. It is impossible to know which of these two invented what. This first patent covers a wide variety of descriptions of the vital roller drafting to draw out the fibres, and it is unknown which system was actually used. Paul's carding patent of 1748 and his second spinning patent of 1758 show that he moved away from the system and principles upon which Arkwright built his success. Wyatt and Paul's spinning machines were sufficiently promising for a mill to be set up in 1741 at the Upper Priory, Birmingham, that was powered by two asses. Wyatt was the person responsible for constructing the machinery. Edward Cave established another at Northampton powered by water while later Daniel Bourn built yet another at Leominster. Many others were interested too. The Birmingham mill did not work for long and seems to have been given up in 1743. Wyatt was imprisoned for debt in The Fleet in 1742, and when released in 1743 he tried for a time to run the Birmingham mill and possibly the Northampton one. The one at Leominster burned down in 1754, while the Northampton mill was advertised for sale in 1756. This last mill may have been used again in conjunction with the 1758 patent. It was Wyatt whom Daniel Bourn contacted about a grant for spindles for his Leominster mill in 1748, but this seems to have been Wyatt's last association with the spinning venture.[br]Further ReadingG.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, London (French collected many of the Paul and Wyatt papers; these should be read in conjunction with Hills 1970).R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (Hills shows that the rollerdrafting system on this spinning machine worked on the wrong principles). A.P.Wadsworth and J.de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, 1600–1780, Manchester (provides good coverage of the partnership of Paul and Wyatt and of the early mills).E.Baines, 1835, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, London (this publication must be mentioned, although it is now out of date).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a more recent account).W.A.Benton, "John Wyatt and the weighing of heavy loads", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 9 (for a description of Wyatt's weighing machine).RLH
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