| Francis Bashforth - 1873 - 410 pages
...on the surfaces of cylinders which are subject to more or less vibration in consequence of tооthed wheels being used to drive them. But there are other...necessary to measure with extreme accuracy the short time Ы in which tч a short space Ss is described, and then the ratio .=- may be oc taken as the velocity... | |
| William Briggs, George Hartley Bryan - 1894 - 254 pages
...other 5 ft. from its centre. Calculate the forces on the props when a weight of 100 Ibs. is placed first at one end and then at the other end of the beam. 4. A uniform bar, 3 ft. long and weighing 5 Ibs., rests on a horizontal table with one end projecting... | |
| Sir Philip Magnus (bart.) - 1896 - 408 pages
...other 5 feet from its centre ; calculate the forces on the props when a weight of 100 Ibs. is placed first at one end and then at the other end of the beam. — 1b. June 1891. . 34. A weight of 20 Ibs., suspended by a string from a peg P, is pulled aside... | |
| Daniel Evan Jones - 1896 - 378 pages
...other 5 feet, from its centre : calculate the forces on the props when a weight of l00 Ibs. is placed first at one end and then at the other end of the beam. Matric. 1891. 49. A uniform beam 12 ft. long and weighing 56 Ibs. rests on and is fastened to... | |
| Sidney H. Wells - 1898 - 274 pages
...other 5 ft. from its centre. Calculate the forces on the props when a weight of 100 Ibs. is placed first at one end, and then at the other end of the beam. 11. A bar projects 6 inches beyond the edge of a table, and when 2ozs. is hung on to the projecting... | |
| 1905 - 530 pages
...bulkheads were braced against the truss members. In filling one of these rings batches were deposited first at one end and then at the other end of the arch — to prevent unequal loading and consequent unequal thrust on the centers. Work was carried... | |
| William Wade Fitzherbert Pullen - 1902 - 436 pages
...other 5 ft., from its centre ; calculate the forces on the props when a weight of 100 Ibs. is placed first at one end and then at the other end of the beam. 44. Explain fully the circumstances under which a rectangular block, standing on a plank which... | |
| Hermann Sahli - 1905 - 1062 pages
...the vein by means of pressure with the fingers, and then, when the pressure is removed, by watching, first at one end and then at the other end of the vein, to see from which direction the blood comes first. If there are no valves or if the valves are... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby - 1906 - 928 pages
...port, Ъ ; the motion of the valve alternately opens and closes the steam-ports so as to admit steam first at one end and then at the other end of the cylinder. In the drawing. Fig. 12, steam is shown entering the forward FlO. Ц. BECTIOS ОГ CYLINDER.... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby - 1909 - 926 pages
...port, b ; the motion of the valve alternately opens and closes the steam-ports so as to admit steam first at one end and then at the other end of the cylinder. In the drawing, Fig. 12, steam is shown entering the forward FlQ. 12. SECTION OF CYLINDER.... | |
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