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XXIX.—On the Application of Graphic Methods to the Determination of the Efficiency of Machinery

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2016

Extract

§ 31. In a previous paragraph (29) the loaded dynamic frame (fig. 38) for one position of a direct-acting horizontal steam-engine has been described, and the mode of drawing that frame explained, on the assumption that the loads La, Lb, Lc, Ld, are known: it was stated that these loads had been calculated for one particular engine. The present paper gives the varying effort which this engine is capable of exerting at each part of its stroke with given pressures (both constant and varying) in the cylinder, and given constant velocities of the crank-axle. The same calculations show the efficiency of the engine at each part of the stroke, and its total efficiency under the same circumstances. This problem has, it is believed, never hitherto been solved so as to take into account all the circumstances of mass, weight, and friction.

§ 32. No pains has been taken in the choice of the particular example. The object of the paper is not so much to draw general conclusions as to all steam-engines—which, indeed, differ too much in arrangement to make this feasible—as to show how, by a method of no great complexity, full information can be obtained as to any particular engine or class of engines.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1877

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References

page 709 ntoe * The initial steam pressure, the ratio of expansion, and the back pressure were assumed to be the same as in example E.