Lives of the Engineers, with an Account of Their Principal Works: Comprising Also a History of Inland Communication in Britain, Том 3J. Murray, 1862 |
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Стр. xvii
... Bill rejected - The line re - surveyed and Act obtained - George Stephenson's visit to Edward Pease - Stephen- son appointed engineer of the railway - The line re - surveyed- Mr. Pease visits Killingworth - The Newcastle foundry ...
... Bill rejected - The line re - surveyed and Act obtained - George Stephenson's visit to Edward Pease - Stephen- son appointed engineer of the railway - The line re - surveyed- Mr. Pease visits Killingworth - The Newcastle foundry ...
Стр. xviii
... Bill in Parliament - Thrown out in the Lords - The project revived - The Act obtained The works let in contracts - The difficulties of the undertaking — The line described - Blisworth Cutting - Primrose Hill Tunnel - Kilsby Tunnel Its ...
... Bill in Parliament - Thrown out in the Lords - The project revived - The Act obtained The works let in contracts - The difficulties of the undertaking — The line described - Blisworth Cutting - Primrose Hill Tunnel - Kilsby Tunnel Its ...
Стр. 20
... Bill Thirlwall . The place is still pointed out , " just aboon the cut - end , " as the people of the hamlet describe it , where the future engineers made their first essays in modelling . The boys found the clay for their engines in ...
... Bill Thirlwall . The place is still pointed out , " just aboon the cut - end , " as the people of the hamlet describe it , where the future engineers made their first essays in modelling . The boys found the clay for their engines in ...
Стр. 24
... where he had for his mate a young man named Bill Coe ; and to these two was intrusted the working of the little engine put up at Mid Mill . They worked together there for about two years , by twelve- 24 CHAP . III . LIFE AT NEWBURN .
... where he had for his mate a young man named Bill Coe ; and to these two was intrusted the working of the little engine put up at Mid Mill . They worked together there for about two years , by twelve- 24 CHAP . III . LIFE AT NEWBURN .
Стр. 32
... Bill Coe , his friend and fellow - workman , was appointed the brakesman . He frequently allowed George to try his hand at the brake , and instructed him how to proceed . Coe was , however , opposed in this by several of the other ...
... Bill Coe , his friend and fellow - workman , was appointed the brakesman . He frequently allowed George to try his hand at the brake , and instructed him how to proceed . Coe was , however , opposed in this by several of the other ...
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Lives of the Engineers, with an Account of Their Principal Works ..., Том 3 Samuel Smiles Полный просмотр - 1862 |
Lives of the Engineers, with an Account of Their Principal Works ..., Том 3 Samuel Smiles Полный просмотр - 1862 |
Lives of the Engineers, with an Account of Their Principal Works ..., Том 3 Samuel Smiles Полный просмотр - 1862 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
adopted afterwards amongst atmospheric railway became bill Black Callerton boiler bridge Britannia Bridge canal carriages carried Chat Moss chimney coach coal colliery Committee common roads Company constructed contrived cylinders Darlington Railway difficulty directors district early Edward Pease employed experiments father favour feet fixed engines formed Geordy lamp George Stephenson horses improvements inches increased invention iron journey Killingworth Kilsby Tunnel labour laid lamp length Liverpool and Manchester locomotive engine Lord Manchester Railway means mechanical ment Midland miles an hour neighbourhood Newcastle Nicholas Wood North occasion opening Parliament passed passengers patent Pease phenson practical proceeded proposed proved purpose rail railroad Robert Stephenson Rocket safety-lamp Sandars Sankey viaduct shortly speed steam steam-blast Stockton and Darlington success survey Tapton Tapton House tion tons took traffic train tramroad travelling Trevithick tubes tunnel waggons weight West Moor wheels William Hedley workmen Wylam
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Стр. 260 - The engine must effectually consume its own smoke. 2. The engine, if of six tons weight, must be able to draw after it, day by day, twenty tons weight (including the tender and water-tank) at ten miles an hour, with a pressure of steam on the boiler not exceeding fifty pounds to the square inch. 3. The boiler must have two...
Стр. 99 - The mode of communicating the motive power to the wheels by means of the spur gear also caused frequent jerks, each cylinder alternately propelling or becoming propelled by the other, as the pressure of the one upon the wheels became greater or less than the pressure of the other ; and, when the teeth of the cogwheel became at all worn, a rattling noise was produced during the travelling of the engine.
Стр. 260 - A mercurial gauge must be affixed to the machine, showing the steam pressure above forty-five pounds per square inch. 7. The engine must be delivered, complete and ready for trial, at the Liverpool end of the railway, not later than the 1st of October, 1829. 8. The price of the engine must not exceed £550.
Стр. 161 - I know all about it," said he; " and you will wonder how I learnt it. I will tell you. When I was a brakesman at Killingworth, I learnt the art of embroidery while working the pitmen's buttonholes by the engine fire at night.
Стр. 167 - I have said will come to pass as sure as you live. I only wish I may live to see the day, though that I can scarcely hope for, as I know how slow all human progress is, and with what difficulty I have been able to get the locomotive thus far adopted, notwithstanding my more than ten years' successful experiment at Killingworth.
Стр. 375 - Parliament, whose previous conduct in connection with railway legislation was so open to reprehension, interposed no check — attempted no remedy. On the contrary, it helped to intensify the evils arising from this unseemly state of things. Many of its members were themselves involved in the mania, and as much interested in its continuance as the vulgar herd of money-grubbers.
Стр. 97 - I said to my friends, there was no limit to the speed of such an engine, if the works could be made to stand it.
Стр. 496 - Its efficiency was further augmented by narrowing the orifice by which the waste steam escaped into the chimney ; for by this means the velocity of the air in the chimney — or, in other words, the draught of the fire — was increased to an extent that far surpassed the expectations even of those who had been the authors of the combination. "From the date of running the
Стр. 154 - Richardson, and take a look at this wonderful machine that was to supersede horses. On Mr. Pease referring to the difficulties and the opposition which the projectors of the railway had had to encounter, and the obstacles which still lay in their way, Stephenson said to him, ' I think, sir, I have some knowledge of craniology, and from what I see of your head I feel sure, that if you will fairly buckle to this railway you are the man successfully to carry it through.
Стр. 293 - Colonel Sibthorpe openly declared his hatred of the " infernal railroads," and said that he " would rather meet a highwayman, or see a burglar on his premises, than an engineer!