On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th

Cover On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th
On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th
Thomas Symes Prideaux
The book On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th was written by author Here you can read free online of On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th a good or bad book?
Where can I read On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th for free?
In our eReader you can find the full English version of the book. Read On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th Online - link to read the book on full screen. Our eReader also allows you to upload and read Pdf, Txt, ePub and fb2 books. In the Mini eReder on the page below you can quickly view all pages of the book - Read Book On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th
What reading level is On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:

In each cubic ft.
70 . . 8 80 ' . . 10-81 90 14-5 Now, 4000 cubicfeetofairperminute=240, 000 cubic feet per hour = 5, 760, 000 cubic feet per day, is a common quantity for a blast furnace to consume, and therefore, if we suppose the state of saturation of the air to be '75, such a furnace will receive per day in the air of the blast, 1364 Ibs. Avoirdupois of water, when the temperature is 30, and 4, 937 Ibs, or nearly four times the quantity, when the thermometer stands at 70.
E 9 82 ECONOMY ON
... FUEL.
melts at 2, 1 9 2, it follows that the gases, when burned with hot air, would yield a temperature more than sufficient to melt iron, l^or the futility of the use of hot air for such an object, I refer the 3-eader to the remarks on attenuated flame, pars. 110 and 112. In the next place, the temperature attainable by the gases is over- stated, and that required for melting cast iron ifWfferstated, the most reliable observations, those of Daniel, fixing its melting point at 2, 786. However, the very fact of there being a difference of 600 in the melting point assigned to cast iron, by different observers, shows how unsatisfactory are arguments founded on such theoretical deductions, when compared with the very con- c'asive evidence on the subject lying open before us, in the results attending the use of coal.


What to read after On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces for Th?
You can find similar books in the "Read Also" column, or choose other free books by Thomas Symes Prideaux to read online
MoreLess
10
Tokens
On Economy of Fuel Particularly With Reference to Reverberatory Furnaces fo...
+Write review

User Reviews:

Write Review:

Guest

Guest