Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers volume 24

Cover Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers volume 24
Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers volume 24
American Society of Civil Engineers
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BAiiDWiN. — Yes, sir.
Mr. Emery. — There is another i^oint which, I think, should go on record in this connection, viz: the practice in some cotton mills. In moderate sized mills of a few thousand spindles, but a small portion of the exhaust steam is required for heating. The engines are generally- double, and connected to the opposite ends of the engine shaft. With these Mr. Corliss adopted the plan of exhausting one end only of one cylinder to a low-pressure steampipe, and exhausting the othe
...r end of the same cylinder and both ends of the other cylinder to the condenser;^ thereby obtaining for three-quarters of the engine-power the economy of a condensing engine, and utilizing the steam for the other one- quarter, first, for power, and afterward to supi^ly the low-pressure steam required in the mill for heating, " slashing " and similar purposes.
Mr. H. W. Brinckerhoff. — I would like to ask if anybody here has seen anything of the practical working of what is called the steam loop^ it was illustrated in Engineering Neios, and has been on exhibition in Cortlandt street.


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