C. under atmospheric pressure. The agreement between the available heat and the amount of water evaporated is satisfactory, such difference as there is being accounted for partly by greater radiation loss consequent on the higher temperature of the engine,... Gas Review - Side 781914Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| American Society of Naval Engineers - 1913 - 970 sider
...hour, which would be sufficient to evaporate 108 pounds of water at a temperature of 20 degrees C. under atmospheric pressure. The agreement between...into the walls. The engine consumed in this trial 15 cubic feet of Cambridge coal gas per BHP-hour reckoned at atmospheric temperature and pressure.... | |
| Harry Egerton Wimperis - 1915 - 350 sider
...B.Th.U. per hour, which would be sufficient to evaporate 108 Ib. of water at a temperature of 20° C. under atmospheric pressure. The agreement between...into the walls. " The engine consumed in this trial 15 cub. ft. of Cambridge coal-gas per BHP hour, reckoned at atmospheric temperature and pressure. This... | |
| Bertram Hopkinson, James Alfred Ewing - 1921 - 548 sider
...B.TH.U. per hour, which would be sufficient to evaporate 108 Ibs. of water at a temperature of 20°. C. under atmospheric pressure. The agreement between...into the walls. The engine consumed in this trial 15 cubic feet of Cambridge coal gas per BHp-hour reckoned at atmospheric temperature and pressure.... | |
| Institution of Mechanical Engineers (Great Britain) - 1913 - 798 sider
...B.Th.U. per hour, which would be sufficient to evaporate 108 Ib. of water at a temperature of 20° C. under atmospheric pressure. The agreement between...into the walls. The engine consumed in this trial 15 cubic feet of Cambridge coal-gas per bhp-hour reckoned at atmospheric temperature and pressure.... | |
| Bertram Hopkinson - 1975 - 632 sider
...B.TH.U. per hour, which would be sufficient to evaporate 108 Ibs. of water at a temperature of 20° C. under atmospheric pressure. The agreement between...into the walls. The engine consumed in this trial 15 cubic feet of Cambridge coal gas per BHP-hour reckoned at atmospheric temperature and pressure.... | |
| 1913 - 962 sider
...would be sufficient to evaporate 108 pounds of water at a temperature of 20 degrees C. (68 degrees F.) under atmospheric pressure. The agreement between...consequent on the higher temperature of the engine, and part ly by the reduction in flame temperature produced by the steam, which somewhat reduces the total... | |
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