Practical Marine Engineering for Marine Engineers and Students, with Aids for Applicants for Marine Engineers' Licenses |
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Common terms and phrases
air pump angle arrangement atomizer bearing blades bolts braces brake horsepower brass burner burning carbon cast iron coal combustion chamber compression condenser connecting rod copper crank crosshead cylinder degrees F diameter draft drum eccentric efficiency elastic limit elongation Evaporation exhaust feed fire fitted flange four-stroke cycle fuel funnel furnace gage gases grate head heat high pressure holes horsepower iron pyrites joint less levers low pressure turbine lower lubrication Marine Engineering Fig material metal motors operation oxygen percent pinion pipe piston rod pitch port pounds per square propeller proportion reciprocating engines reversing rings rivets screw shaft sheet shell ship shown in Fig speed square inch steam steam turbine steel strength of plate stroke stuffing box sulphur surface temperature tensile strength test piece thickness tion tubes usually valve gear vanadium watertube boilers wheel wrought iron zinc
Popular passages
Page 779 - It has been seen that a heat unit is the quantity of heat required to raise one pound of water one degree in temperature...
Page 893 - In the multiplication of whole numbers, place the multiplier under the multiplicand, and multiply each term of the multiplicand by each term of the multiplier, writing the right-hand figure of each product obtained under the term of the multiplier which produces it.
Page 927 - A sphere is a solid bounded by a curved surface, every point of which is equally distant from a point within called the center.
Page 870 - The number below the line is called the denominator, and shows into how many parts the number or thing is divided. The number above the line is called the numerator, and shows how many parts are expressed by the fraction.
Page 172 - Where P = working pressure in pounds per square inch. D = outside diameter of furnace in inches. L — length of section in inches. T = thickness of plate in sixteenths of an inch. Example.
Page 894 - The ratio between two numbers is simply their numerical relationship expressed as the quotient of the first divided by the second. Thus the ratio of 6 to 3 is 2 ; of 1.2 to 3 is .4; of 4 to 5 is .8, etc.
Page 162 - Multiply one-sixth (1-6) of the lowest tensile strength found stamped on any plate in the cylindrical shell by the thickness — expressed in inches or parts of an inch — of the thinnest plate in the. same cylindrical shell, and divide by the radius or half diameter — also expressed in inches — and the...
Page 177 - ... of the greatest pitch of the stay, riveted to the outside of the plates, and stays having one nut inside of the plate, and one nut outside of the washer or doubling strip. For T take 72 percent of the combined thickness of the plate and washer or plate and doubling strip.
Page 175 - The diameter of a screw stay shall be taken at the bottom of the thread, provided this is the least diameter.