James WattThe Floating Press, 2009 M08 1 - 174 pages The essential improvements that Scottish inventor James Watt (1736 - 1819) made to the steam engine were fundamental to the Industrial Revolution. It would be hard to overstate the value of this invention to technological and social change - it gave us the modern world we live in today. This is his biography as written by Andrew Carnegie, the Scottish-born American industrialist, businessman, and philanthropist. |
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Page 50
... strokes of the piston and the engine stopped. Smiles says that exactly at the point when ordinary experimentalists would have abandoned the task, Watt became thoroughly aroused. "Every obstacle," says Professor Robison, "was to him the ...
... strokes of the piston and the engine stopped. Smiles says that exactly at the point when ordinary experimentalists would have abandoned the task, Watt became thoroughly aroused. "Every obstacle," says Professor Robison, "was to him the ...
Page 60
... open to the air, and also cooled below in condensing the charge of steam that had driven the piston up in order to create a vacuum, without which the piston would not descend from top to bottom, to begin another upward stroke. 60.
... open to the air, and also cooled below in condensing the charge of steam that had driven the piston up in order to create a vacuum, without which the piston would not descend from top to bottom, to begin another upward stroke. 60.
Page 61
... stroke of lightning. Eureka! he had found it. Not one scintilla of doubt ever intruded thereafter. The solution lay right there and he would invent the needed appliances. His mode of procedure, when on the trail of big game, is ...
... stroke of lightning. Eureka! he had found it. Not one scintilla of doubt ever intruded thereafter. The solution lay right there and he would invent the needed appliances. His mode of procedure, when on the trail of big game, is ...
Page 64
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Page 80
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Contents
4 | |
6 | |
26 | |
48 | |
Chapter IV Partnership with Roebuck | 73 |
Chapter V Boulton Partnership | 93 |
Chapter VI Removal to Birmingham | 129 |
Chapter VII Second Patent | 171 |
Chapter VIII The Record of the Steam Engine | 221 |
Chapter IX Watt in Old Age | 238 |
Chapter X Watt the Inventor and Discoverer | 249 |
Chapter XI Watt the Man | 264 |
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Common terms and phrases
admirable altho became Birmingham Boulton and Watt Britain canal Captain character coal condenser Cornwall cylinder difficulty discovery doubt erected expansion experiments famous father fortune genius give Glasgow Glasgow University Greenock hand heart honor horse-power idea important improved invention inventor James Watt kind knew labor latent heat less letter locomotive London Lord Lord Brougham Lord Kelvin Lunar Society machine machinery manufacture mathematical instrument matter mechanical mind mother motion Muirhead Murdoch nature needed never Newcomen engine partner partnership passed patent perfect philosopher phlogiston piston pounds Priestley principle probably Professor Black proved pumping record rendered Richard Lovell Edgeworth Robison Roebuck says Scot Scotch Scotland seems skilled Soho soon steam engine stroke success things to-day trial trouble Watt and Boulton Watt engine Watt wrote Watt's day wonder workmen writes young youth