George Charles Vincent Holmes eBooks
eBooks di George Charles Vincent Holmes di Formato Pdf
The Steam Engine. E-book. Formato PDF George Charles Vincent Holmes - Forgotten Books, 2017 -
The elementary conception of a steam engine — The essential elements of steam engines-description of a simple form of modern steam engine and boiler — Distribution of steam by an ordinary slide valve — The use of the ?y wheel — Various purposes for which steam engines are employed — Importance of the accurate study of the engine in all its bearings — The natural subdivisions of the subject. The complete study of the steam engine is, in its nature, somewhat complex, involving as it does an acquaintance with the sciences of heat, of chemistry, and of pure and applied mechanics, as well as a knowledge of the theory of mechanism and the strength of materials. It is proposed, therefore, to begin this work by showing, in a very simple case, how steam can be used to do work, and then to pro ceed to describe an actual steam engine of the most modern construction, but one which at the same time is remarkably free from complexity. When studying this description, the student will soon find out how it is that the perfect know ledge of the steam engine involves an acquaintance with so many branches of science; and the order in which these subjects must be studied, so far as they bear on the matter in hand, will naturally be suggested by the description.
Ancient and Modern Ships: Wooden Sailing-Ships. E-book. Formato PDF George Charles Vincent Holmes - Forgotten Books, 2017 -
A museum relating to Naval Architecture and Shipbuilding is of the utmost interest to the people of Great Britain, on account of the importance to them of everything that bears on the carrying of their commerce. Every Englishman knows, in a general way, that the commerce of the British Empire is more extensive than that of any other state in the world, and that the British sea-going mercantile marine compares favour ably in point of size even with that of all the other countries of the world put together; but few are probably aware of the immense importance to us of these ?eets of trading ships, and of the great part which they play in the maintenance of the prosperity of these isles. The shipping industry ranks, after agriculture, as the largest of our national commercial pursuits. There is more capital locked up in it, and more hands are employed in the navigation and construction of Ships, their engines and fittings, than in any other trade of the country excepting the tillage of the soil.