Memorial of Alexander Lyman Holley, C.E., LL. D.: President of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, Vice-president of the American Society of Civil Engineers, Vice-president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers ... Etc., Etc. Born July 20, 1832. Died January 29, 1882American institute of mining engineers, 1884 - 224 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 42
Página 5
... facts of Mr. Holley's career . It was the general desire of members of the Institute that Mr. Holley's professional papers and addresses , and also , if possible , some or all of his brilliant speeches should be included in the volume ...
... facts of Mr. Holley's career . It was the general desire of members of the Institute that Mr. Holley's professional papers and addresses , and also , if possible , some or all of his brilliant speeches should be included in the volume ...
Página 23
... fact , I did not know that I was expected to speak on this occasion ; but to be silent in the presence of such a loss , knowing Holley as I knew him , would be more than the heart could tolerate . I do not know who in this audience ...
... fact , I did not know that I was expected to speak on this occasion ; but to be silent in the presence of such a loss , knowing Holley as I knew him , would be more than the heart could tolerate . I do not know who in this audience ...
Página 28
... fact that he was so well acquainted with the leading engineers throughout the country . When the wire flashed to me the information of his death , I felt at once an overpowering sense of loss . I was about leaving home , and it seemed ...
... fact that he was so well acquainted with the leading engineers throughout the country . When the wire flashed to me the information of his death , I felt at once an overpowering sense of loss . I was about leaving home , and it seemed ...
Página 35
... fact that not one stroke of his overwork hastened his departure . We feel almost called upon to regret that he did not do more work , for he was bound to die ; death struck him months before , and of all the brilliant work that he ever ...
... fact that not one stroke of his overwork hastened his departure . We feel almost called upon to regret that he did not do more work , for he was bound to die ; death struck him months before , and of all the brilliant work that he ever ...
Página 36
... fact that he always gave more information than he received , accounted for the exceptional facilities afforded him . His capacity for work was something remarkable , and , as you all know , he had a world - wide reputation at an age ...
... fact that he always gave more information than he received , accounted for the exceptional facilities afforded him . His capacity for work was something remarkable , and , as you all know , he had a world - wide reputation at an age ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
A. L. Holley abroad acquaintance Alexander Holley Alexander L Alexander Lyman Holley American Institute American Society armor beautiful Bessemer plant Bessemer process Bessemer steel better boilers called carbon career cent character Civil Engineers coal Colburn converter cut-off death economy Edgar Thomson Steel England experience fact feel fuel furnace genius Gun Cotton heart heat Holley's honor improvement ingots Institute of Mining invention Iron and Steel knew knowledge labor live locomotive machinery manufacture Martin steel materials Mechanical Engineers meeting memory ment metal metallurgical Mining Engineers nature never Octavo open-hearth ordnance paper read patented Pittsburgh plates practice present President professional Published Railroad Advocate rails railway refractory remember reverberatory furnace scientific seems Society of Civil Society of Mechanical speak steam steam-engine success technical things thought tion to-day tribute Troy words wrought-iron Zerah Colburn
Pasajes populares
Página 59 - THOSE WHO BEST DESERVE THEIR GRATITUDE, THE KING HIS MINISTERS, AND MANY OF THE NOBLES AND COMMONERS OF THE REALM RAISED THIS MONUMENT TO JAMES WATT, WHO DIRECTING THE FORCE OF AN ORIGINAL GENIUS, EARLY EXERCISED IN...
Página 68 - Bessemer plant. He did away with the English deep pit, and raised the vessels so as to get working space under them on the ground floor ; he substituted top-supported hydraulic cranes for the more expensive counter-weighted English ones, and put three ingot cranes around the pit instead of two, and thereby obtained greater area of power ; he changed the location of the...
Página 53 - The hand that rounded Peter's dome, And groined the aisles of Christian Rome, Wrought in a sad sincerity: Himself from God he could not free; He builded better than he knew : The conscious stone to beauty grew.
Página 121 - Setting aside 52 miscellaneous articles (descriptive, political, etc.), and 30 which may be called "scattering," though devoted to engineering "topics, we have 194, divided as follows : Railways (including street railways), 49 ; steam navigation, 42 ; war ships and armor, 30; the Stevens battery, 22 ; arms and ordnance, 19 ; boiler explosions, 11 ; and steam engines, 7. The most important and remarkable of these articles were, perhaps, those on the Great Eastern, written under the signature of
Página 65 - The Permanent Way and Coal-Burning Locomotive Boilers of European Railways, with a Comparison of the Working Economy of European and American Lines, and the Principles upon which Improvement Must Proceed.
Página 68 - Bottom, which, either in its form as patented, or in a modification of it as now used in all American works, has rendered possible, as much as any other one thing, the present immense production.
Página 134 - The converter is then turned upon its side, the blast shut off, and the recarburizer run in. Then for a moment the war of the elements rages again ; the mass boils and flames with higher intensity, and with a rapidity of chemical reaction, sometimes throwing it violently out of the converter-mouth ; then all is quiet, and the product is steel — liquid, milky steel, that pours out into the ladle from under its roof of slag, smooth, shining, and almost transparent.
Página 132 - ... present accepted type of American Bessemer plant. He did away with the English deep pit and raised the vessels so as to get working space under them on the ground floor; he substituted top-supported hydraulic cranes for the more expensive counter-weighted English ones, and put three ingot cranes around the pit instead of two, and thereby obtained greater area of power. He changed the location of the vessels as related to the pit and melting-house.
Página 64 - The thoughtful locomotive driver is clothed upon, not with the mere machinery of a larger organism, but with all the attributes except volition of a power superior to his own. Every faculty is stimulated, and every sense exalted. An unusual sound amid the roaring exhaust and the clattering wheels, tells him instantly the place and degree of danger as would a pain in his own flesh. The consciousness of a certain jarring...
Página 179 - He proposes using this property to define steel as "a compound or alloy of iron whose modulus of resilience (or spring) can be rendered by proper mechanical treatment as great as that of a compound of 99.7 per cent, iron with 0.3 per cent, carbon can be by tempering.