Lapas attēli
PDF
ePub
[blocks in formation]

chanical agent generally, which he intends to denominate rotæ vivæ. September 10.

Henry Scott, jun., and Robert Stephen Oliver, hatters, of Edinburgh, in consequence of a com... munication from abroad, for a certain improvement or improvements in the manufacture of hats,' caps, and bonnets. September 10.

Elisha Haydon Collier, of the East India Cottage, City-road, Middlesex, formerly of Boston Massachusetts, U. S., civil engineer, for an improvement or improvements in steam-boilers, September 20.

William Barnett, of Brighton, founder, for certain improvements in apparatus for generating and purifying gas for the purposes of illumination. September 21.

NOTES AND NOTICES.

Submarine Illumination by the Drummond Light. We find by the Irish newspapers, that Mr. Steele, who has devoted himselt with so much ardour to the subject of submarine operations, and who is the inventor of the communicating divingbell, has lately made a very important improve ment in this departinent of physica' science. This improvement consists in the substitution for the light which he originally proposed for the irradia. tion of objects under water, of what he calls "the piercing ray of the Drummond light in its gorgeous glory." He has con nited several highly distinguished engineers of this m trop lis, and they have been unanimous in their opinion, that this new ap plication of the Drummond light is an improvement of the greatest importance, an it is impossible that any thing can be more simple than the mode pro-" posed by Mr. Steele for its application to his pur pose. It appears from the Irish newspapers that this improvement in his theory was made by him while observing Mr. Deane's operations at Kilkee, on the coast of the county Clare. We have seen several of Mr. Steele's publications on this subject in the journals of our Irish contemporaries, and he writes in terms of measureless admiration of the. infinite beauty and perfection of Mr. Deane's sys tem of rapid diving. Among the London engineers who have expressed the highest approbation of Mr. Steele's new theory of submarine irra. diation by the Drummond light, is, we understand, Mr. Alexander Gordon, who has particularly applied himself to the subject, and lately obtained a patent for a very beautiful mode of generating and applying the oxy-hydrogen gas.-Sun.

Manumotive Carriage.-A mechanic, a whitesmith by trade, named Nicholson, of the town of Enniscorthy, has invented a new carriage, on cost simple principles. It is very ingeniously constructed, having three wheels, one in front and Two behind-the latter about three feet in diameter, the former one and a half. It is propelled by an iron baudle, which the guide moves to and fro with the right hand, and not tiresome, being quite a gentle motion; on the left there is a small lever, to he touched by the finger when any obstruction appears on the road, which raises the first wheel over such impediments, and prevents the guide from receiv ing any shock or interruption. Then over the sma wheel there is a handle, or tiller-stick, to be touched when the driver wishes to turn the gig, and which is done instantan ously; there is another spring for the foot. whi h retards the progress of the machine. The maker is quite confident of its ultimate success, and says he can

improve on the general principle, the present mo, del being too small to contain more than one per sou; and we suppose the driver or guide would work it for eight or ten miles without tiring. It has taken the artist some years in its completion, and we wish him every success and encouragement to which his genius and industry justly entitle him.-Dublin Paper.

Another Locomotive-Engine for Russia. - Oa Thurs tay, the 15th of September, a large and power. ful locomotive-engine, built by Mr. Timothy Hackworth, of New Shildon, for the Emperor of Russia, was shipped on board the Barbara, at Middlesbro'. This engine is constructed on an improved prin ciple, and finished in the best manner. She has been tried on the premises, and propelled at the rate of 72 miles per hour. It is said that this ma chine, and the similar one built at Newcastle, will, on their arrival at St. Petersburgh, have cost A the Emperor upwards of 2,000, each. Who, a few years ago, would have dreamed of the exportation of machinery from the river Tees. This engine is for travelling on the railroad from St. Pet rsburgi to Pawlowsky, where stands one of the country palaces of his Imperial Majesty.-From a Correspondent.

Magnetic Balance.-Could not small philosophical scales be more nicely suspended by magnetism than by the present method; with the precaution, to use no metal in their construction acted on by magnetism, except the centres, the edges of which must be reversed?-TYRO-MECHANICUS.

Correction.-Sir, If you will review p. 383, you will find that some alteration of the manuscript text of that paper on "The Tides"-through inad vertent omission, I apprehend-has rendered the pa sage unintelligible as it there stands. I there. fore beg leave to send you the subjoined emenda. tion, in failure of the original being at hand "It is manifest that atmosphere, a transparent firmament, is interposed to contret (not originate,. if to qualify the hues by extraneous floating particles of moisture,) the light, however distant; rather than, by a property at variance with its fitness as medium of all rays, to impede their progress to recipient vision."-W. FRA. GODOLPHIN WALDRON, Sept. 15, 1836.

British and Foreign Patents taken out with economy and despatch; Specifications, Dis. claimers, and Amendments, prepared or revised; Caveats entered; and generally every Branch of Patent Business promptly transacted.

A complete list of Patents from the earliest period (15 Car. II. 1675,) 10. the present time may be examined. Fee 2s. 6d.; Clients, gratis. Patent Agency Office,

Peterborough-court, Fleet-street.

LONDON: Published by J. CUNNINGHAM, at the Mechanics' Magazine Office, No. 6, Peterbo rough-court, between 135 and 136, Fleet-street. Agent for the American Edition. Mr. O. RICH, 12, Red Lion-square. Sold by G. W. M. REYNOLDS, Proprietor of the French, English, and American Library, 55, Rue Neuve, Saint Angustin, Paris.

CUNNINGHAM and SALMON, Printers,
Fleet-street.

END OF THE TWENTY-FIFTH VOLUME.

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

Alloys, fusible, inquiry into the use of plates
of, to prevent explosions of steam-boilers,
103, 114

America, rise of a city in the wilds of, 315
American Patents, recent, 44, 125, 151, 190,
255, 398

4

law of patents, 232, 249
Animal substances, preservation of, 112,
159, 192
Anthracite, fire places and grates for burn-
ing, 45, 126

coal, use of, in steam-vessels, 368
Anvil, how to deaden the noise of hammering
on, 224

Apples, alcohol from, 190

Arago, M., experiments by, on steam-boiler
explosions, 91

Arches, Mr. Brunel's mode of constructing,
without centering, 48

Arms and hands, mechanical, 112
Arnott's, Dr., new stoves, 320
Arsenic, detection of, 202, 320

Ash-pan for locomotive-engines, Curtis's, 337
Artronomical observations facilitated, 293
Auger, improved, 46

Aurora Borealis, cause of the, 204
Automaton, Hancock's steam-carriage, 401
Avery's rotary steam-engine, 412

[blocks in formation]

Balloon, double, with two gases," 393

[ocr errors]

Mr. Green's large, 288, 395, 410.
See Aerial Locomotion.
Balloons, Dr. Agme's project for propelling,

32

as now constructed, 383

Barry's, Mr., designs for New Houses of
Parliament, 132

Bedstead, invalid's, Cherry's patent, 385
Beer from potatoes, 176

Beet-root sugar, manufacture of, in France,

96

366

in Russia,

Belgium, steam engines in, 432
Birch's first-class railway-carriage, 369
Bismuth plates, alloy of, &c., to prevent
steam-boiler explosions, 103

--, fusing point, &c. of, 121

Black Sea, substitute for lighthouses on the
shores of the, 357

Blackfriars Bridge, widening of, 21

report of Commons

Committee on, 287
Blind, printing for the, 304

Book lettering-tools, new mode of heating,
142

Boot and shoe studs, 22

Boots and shoes, making and water-proofing,
125

Botanical Society of London, 384

Brass, ductility, &c. of, 202

Brick-making machine, Heaton's, 282, 336
Bridge, Blackfriars, 21, 287

49

224

-, suspension, at Battersea, 32'
at Sagar, Central India,

over the Rhone, fall of,

[blocks in formation]

-, History of the, 259

-, report of the Commons

Committee on, 285

Bronzing iron, mode of, 192

Brunel's mode of constructing arches without
centering, 48

Brunton's patent gas-retort, 449

Buffer, railway-carriage, Millichap's, 147
Burden's twin steam-boat, 176

Burrs, improved mode of casting, 128
Busk's improved mode of propelling vessels,
61

C.

Cab, Hansom's new safety, 59
Calendering cloth, improvement in, 191
Canal locks, suggestions for working, 198
navigation, experiments in, 364

[blocks in formation]

Cape of Good Hope Library, 222
Capillary tubes, methods of making, in me-
tal, 22

Carbonic acid in vegetation, 140
Carbonisation, preservation of animal sub-
stances by, 112, 159

Carlisle, Sir Anthony, evidence by, against
railway-tunnels, 326

Carriage speed-regulator, 384

warmer, new, 176

Carstairs, on steel-pens, 155
Case-hardening iron, 64

Catalogues of the British and other Mu-
seums, 76

Cave, M., the French engine-maker, notice
of, 272

Cement for road-making, 151
Chaffinch, maternal affection of, 314
Charcoal, improved modes of preparing, 401
meat safe, 192

Chemical works, St. Rollox, 400
Cherry's patent invalid's bedstead, 385
Cheverton, Benjamin, Esq.; Observations
on Exley's Theory of Physics, 418
Chimney-hood for locomotive-engines, Cur-
tis's, 337

--

turn-cap, Dr. Fox's, 40

Chinese Magazine, Gutzlaff's, 179
Chronometers, prize, 32

Chuck, Wilbee's eccentric, 297
Churning, machine for, 45

Circulating decimals, 12, 43, 68, 109, 175,
197, 253

City in the Wilds, rise of a, 315
Clock, oldest English, 26

Clocks and watches, Henderson's history of,
26

Cloth, improvement in the manufacture of,
121

Colossus Redivivus, 112

Condensing railway-locomotive, Nickolls's,

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

Copper sheathing, mode of preserving, 25
Cork-cutting machine, 126

Cornish steam-engine work.

engine.

See Steam-

Cornwall Polytechnie Society, third report
of, 2

Cotton trade of Glasgow, 432

Crosse, Mr. A., galvanic experiments of, 375
Crystals, artificial, produced by galvanism,
375, 397

Cube-root, extraction of the, 366
Curtains, &c., new roller for, 125
Curtis's safety-break for railway-carriages,
145; safety railway-carriages, 144; chim-
ney-hood and ash-pan for locomotives,
337; lubrication by water, 380

D.

Danube, steam-boats on the, 48
Davy's, Sir H., safety-lamp, 442
Deakin, Mr. Thomas, on the long-work
system of mining, 108

Deep sea lead, Ericsson's patent, 354, 459
Deposits in steam-boilers, experiments on the
effect of, 215

Design, School of, National, 143, 345
Dickson's steam-plough, 289

Drapery obstructs the transmission of sound,
74

Drawing-boards, improved in, 232, 281, 390
Drummond light for submarine illumination,
464

Dust, protection from, 259

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors]

Ericsson's patent lead, 353, 459
Euphrates expedition, 287, 302
Evaporation, machine to facilitate, 151
Ewbank's mode of preventing the foaming of
water in steam-boilers, 89

alarm-float, 90

Exley's theory of physics, Mr. Cheverton's
observations on, 418

F.

Felloes, machine for bending, 125
Férussac, Baron de, notice of, 32
Fire-engine, horse-worked, 9
American, 46

Odiorn's, 153

establishment, London, 36

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]

Hansom's new safety-cab, 59
Hat, folding travelling, 399
Hearing, Webster's instrument for assisting,
347

Heat, polarisation of, 48

Heating the elephant's house at the Zoologi-
cal Gardens, mode of, 48

Heaton's brick-making machine, 282
Hebert's patent flour-mill, 65, 305
Heineken's medal-cutting engine, 241
Hinge-making apparatus, 191

Hogs, scent of, inimical to weavils, 152
Horology, Rise and Progress of, Henderson's,
26

House-burning system, the, 411

Hunter's stone-planing machine, 79
Hutchison's gas-generator for ships, 1; pa-
tent retort-bed, 177

Hydrogen in vegetation, 141

Hydraulic power-apparatus, Hale's, 146
Hydraulics, experiments in, 35

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]
[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

Macerone, Colonel; improved mode of
scythe sharpening, 174; note on a chaf-
finch, 314; substitute for lighthouses on
the shores of the Black Sea, 357; the
British Association, 397; impracticability
of aerial navigation,-Montgolfier's safer
than gas balloons, 408, 458; proposals
for navigating the Po by steam, 439
Mackintosh, Mr. T. S.; electrical theory

of the universe, 92, 94, 107, 148, 274,
298, 313, 339, 358, 359, 380, 388, 406,
417, 437, 459

improved paddle-

wheel, 33; on the practicability of aerial
navigation, 463

Magnetic balance, 464

Magneto-electric apparatus, 311
Maise sugar, 368

Manumotive-carriage, 464

Manuscripts in British Museum, 39
Marble cement, 292

Mechanics' Magazine, German, 240
Medal-cutting engine, Heineken's, 241-
Medals, plan for exhibiting, at British Mu-
seum, 39

&c., new mode of taking casts from,

432
Mercurial steam-wheel, Jones's, 312

steam safety-pipe and gauge, 41
Merryweather's fire-engine branch-pipe, 35;
fire-ladders, 57
Metallic lighthouses, Capt. Brown's, 318

Metals, ductility and malleability of vari
ous, 201

Meteo ological Society of London, 384
Metropolitan improvements, 132, 144
Microscope, hydro-oxygen, improvements in,

280

Mincing-machine, meat, 46

Minerals, change in the chemical character
of, by galvanism, 374

production of artificial, by gal-

vanism, 375

Mining, on the long-work system of, 108
Montgolfier's balloons, safety of, 408, 441,

458

Moon, siderial and tropical periods of the,
138

Mordan's triple-pens, 111, 153, 231
Music, new division of the scale in, 20
N.

Napier's rods, improvement in, 365
Napoleon, statue of, raising on the Colonne
Vendôme, 239

National debt, 7

Nettles, uses of, 336

Nickolls's condensing railway-locomotive,
124

0.

Oils, vegetable, duties on raw material of, 23:
Opium, consumption of, in China, 336
Organ at Munich, curious, 304
Otaphone, Webster's, 347

Oxygen, operation of, in vegetation, 53

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]
« iepriekšējāTurpināt »