Patents for inventions. Abridgments of specifications, Volume 711862 |
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Page 5
... engines of extraordinary vse for discharging water out of mines and shipps , wetting of sayles , quenching of fire ... engine for the drawing of both Spanish and Swedish iron into all sorts of rounds for bolts 66 66 66 shipping and ...
... engines of extraordinary vse for discharging water out of mines and shipps , wetting of sayles , quenching of fire ... engine for the drawing of both Spanish and Swedish iron into all sorts of rounds for bolts 66 66 66 shipping and ...
Page 6
... engine all sorts of round iron for ship- ping " " will be much better and cheaper made here in our " realme of ... engines , and vessells . " The invention relates also to the draining of land by pumping , and to the management of water ...
... engine all sorts of round iron for ship- ping " " will be much better and cheaper made here in our " realme of ... engines , and vessells . " The invention relates also to the draining of land by pumping , and to the management of water ...
Page 7
... engine or rollers to draw , " roll , or mill plates or sheets of lead by them cast or prepared " for that purpose , " granted to Richard Kent , Charles Davenant , Thomas Agar , John Warter , Thomas Hale , and Michael Hale , " as well ...
... engine or rollers to draw , " roll , or mill plates or sheets of lead by them cast or prepared " for that purpose , " granted to Richard Kent , Charles Davenant , Thomas Agar , John Warter , Thomas Hale , and Michael Hale , " as well ...
Page 10
... engine that works " without friction of solids ( so long sought after by the ingenious , " but not happily ... engines hitherto in- " vented are subject , by reason of its being worked without " friction , it would be of vnspeakable ...
... engine that works " without friction of solids ( so long sought after by the ingenious , " but not happily ... engines hitherto in- " vented are subject , by reason of its being worked without " friction , it would be of vnspeakable ...
Page 11
... engine , by meanes whereof the water constantly ascend through a tube or " set of tubes from any depth proposed , even five hundred feet or more , by the pressure of the atmosphere only during such applicačon . " The engine will take up ...
... engine , by meanes whereof the water constantly ascend through a tube or " set of tubes from any depth proposed , even five hundred feet or more , by the pressure of the atmosphere only during such applicačon . " The engine will take up ...
Expressions et termes fréquents
66 Printed angle iron apparatus application arrangement attached bars beams boat boilers bolts bottom bulkheads buoyancy caisson capstan carriage caulking centre chain chain pump chamber compartments connected construction copper covering curved cylinder deck diagonal Drawings edges employed engine fastened fitted fixed flanges floating frame groove gunwale gutta percha holes hollow horizontal hull improvements consist india-rubber inner invention consists invention relates inventor iron ships joints keel keelson length London Journal Newton's longitudinal lower manner masts material means metal mode motion naphtha ordinary outer paddle wheels pass Patent Journal pieces pipe piston placed planking pontoon propeller protection pumps purpose Repertory of Arts ribs rivetted rollers Rolls Chapel Reports rope rudder screw secured shaft sheathing sheets ship or vessel ship's ships and vessels side space steam stern post suitable surface thickness timber transverse treenails tubes upper valve ventilating vertical water-tight wood wrought iron zinc
Fréquemment cités
Page xx - And in mine own time the shape of our English ships hath been greatly bettered. It is not long since the striking of the topmast (a wonderful ease to great ships, both at sea and in...
Page 1 - French, encountering the Wonder of the World, she so warmly plied the French admiral, that she forced him out of his three-decked wooden castle, and chasing the Royal Sun before her, forced her to fly for shelter among the rocks, where she became a prey to lesser vessels that reduced her to ashes. At length, leaky and defective herself with age, she was laid up at Chatham, in order to be rebuilt ; but, being set on fire by negligence, she was...
Page 93 - ... and that quality of zinc, known in England as ' foreign zinc," and melt them together in the usual manner in any...
Page 93 - I take that quality of copper known in the trade by the appellation of ' best selected copper,' and that quality of zinc, known in England as
Page xxi - ... nor stoop upon a wind, by which the breaking loose of our ordnance, or the not use of them, with many other discommodities, are avoided.
Page 620 - NAVAL ARCHITECTURE; Or, the RUDIMENTS and RULES of SHIP BUILDING : exemplified in a SERIES of DRAUGHTS and PLANS ; with Observations tending to the further Improvement of that important Art.
Page 27 - Birmingham, gentleman : of an invention of a compound metal capable of being forged when red hot, or when cold more fit for the making of bolts, nails, and sheathing for ships, than any metals heretofore used or applied for those purposes, and also for various other purposes where other metals have been used or applied.