Mechanics Magazine, Volum 6Knight & Lacey, 1827 |
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Side 19
... Correspondent recommends and the other 96 for a third wheel ; the second and fourth to be changed as occasion requires . But as the se- cond is easiest changed , I should think it best to change that only , when that will give the ...
... Correspondent recommends and the other 96 for a third wheel ; the second and fourth to be changed as occasion requires . But as the se- cond is easiest changed , I should think it best to change that only , when that will give the ...
Side 30
... correspondent , is perfectly correct , in the importance he ascribes to the colours being perfectly levi- gated , and used with size instead of gum - water , which not only destroys their beauty , but even turns some almost to blackness ...
... correspondent , is perfectly correct , in the importance he ascribes to the colours being perfectly levi- gated , and used with size instead of gum - water , which not only destroys their beauty , but even turns some almost to blackness ...
Side 31
... Correspondent H.R.W. says , he should be obliged to any of your scientific Correspondents , if they could inform him whether it is possible to communicate magnetism to a piece of steel wire , by means of a large electrical battery ...
... Correspondent H.R.W. says , he should be obliged to any of your scientific Correspondents , if they could inform him whether it is possible to communicate magnetism to a piece of steel wire , by means of a large electrical battery ...
Side 41
... Correspondent T. J. M. in your 128th Number , wishes to be informed if he is correct or not in his description of a Russian stove for warming the rooms of the houses in St. Petersburgh , and , if not correct , to be told how this is ...
... Correspondent T. J. M. in your 128th Number , wishes to be informed if he is correct or not in his description of a Russian stove for warming the rooms of the houses in St. Petersburgh , and , if not correct , to be told how this is ...
Side 42
... Correspondent , but not consuming its own smoke , is used in Germany . It is an iron stove , not standing in the wall , but at about one foot from the wall , having a large tube through the wall for putting in the fuel to the lower part ...
... Correspondent , but not consuming its own smoke , is used in Germany . It is an iron stove , not standing in the wall , but at about one foot from the wall , having a large tube through the wall for putting in the fuel to the lower part ...
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Populære avsnitt
Side 381 - tis found, Amongst your friends, amongst your foes, On Christian or on Heathen ground ; The flower 's divine where'er it grows ; Neglect the prickles, and assume the rose.
Side 414 - And understood not that a grateful mind By owing owes not, but still pays, at once Indebted and discharged...
Side 491 - A ray of heavenly light, gilding all forms Terrestrial in the vast and the minute; The unambiguous footsteps of the God Who gives its lustre to an insect's wing, And wheels his throne upon the rolling worlds.
Side 539 - There is no art or science that is too difficult for industry to attain to; it is the gift of tongues, and makes a man understood and valued in all countries...
Side 46 - Phalerion, a painter, celebrated for his nervous representation of the awful and the tremendous, exerted his whole talent. But the flights of poetry can seldom bear to be shackled by homely truth, and if we are to receive the fine imagery, that places the summit of this rock in clouds brooding eternal mists and tempests — that represents it as inaccessible, even to a man provided with twenty hands and twenty feet, and immerses its base among ravenous sea-dogs ; — why not also receive the whole...
Side 314 - Merchant, (in consequence of a Communication made to him by a certain Foreigner residing abroad) for an Invention of certain Improvements in the Construction of Locks and other Fastenings.
Side 512 - His highness, that he might not lose the day uselessly, went again, after dinner, to the other side of the city, extending his excursion as far as Vauxhall, beyond the palace of the Archbishop of Canterbury, to see an hydraulic machine invented by my Lord Somerset, Marquis of Worcester. It raises water more than forty geometrical feet, by the power of one man only; and in a very short...
Side 114 - You will perceive that, by means of these weights placed on different parts of the beam, I can learn the weight of any little mass from one grain, or a little more, to the y^^ of a grain.
Side 232 - To avoid this inconvenience and waste, a brewer of the name of Harwood conceived the idea of making a liquor, which should partake of the same united flavours of ale, beer, and two-penny; he did so, and succeeded, calling it entire...
Side 231 - the natural drink of an Englishman; but beer, on the other hand, which is made of malt, hops, and water, is the natural drink of a Dutchman, and of late is much used in England, to the great detriment of many Englishmen.