When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Marine steam engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_steam_engine

    Period cutaway diagram of a triple-expansion steam engine installation, circa 1918. This particular diagram illustrates possible engine cutoff locations, after the Lusitania disaster and others made it clear that this was an important safety feature. A marine steam engine is a steam engine that is used to power a ship or boat.

  3. Compound steam engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compound_steam_engine

    A compound steam engine unit is a type of steam engine where steam is expanded in two or more stages. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] A typical arrangement for a compound engine is that the steam is first expanded in a high-pressure (HP) cylinder , then having given up heat and losing pressure, it exhausts directly into one or more larger-volume low-pressure (LP ...

  4. Steamboat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamboat

    Rainer Radow's Steam Boat Page Description of his steamlaunch project Emma and a 1,000 picture collection of over 110 small still existing steamlaunches. Barlow Cumberland, A Century of Sail and Steam on the Niagara River, 2001; Robert H. Thurston, A history of the growth of the steam-engine, 1878 (Chapter 5) The Steam Boat Association of Great ...

  5. Wikipedia : Featured picture candidates/Steam engine ...

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Steam_engine_indicator_diagram

    These diagrams were used to determine the efficiency of steam engines, such as those found aboard Western Rivers steamboats. Reason This image is of high technical standards, sufficient scalable resolution, is an excellent illustration of the related concepts, has a free license, supplements two separate articles, is accurate, has valuable ...

  6. Marine propulsion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_propulsion

    Marine steam reciprocating engines, ca. 1905 A wind propelled fishing boat in Mozambique. Until the application of the coal-fired steam engine to ships in the early 19th century, oars or the wind were the principal means of watercraft propulsion.

  7. Paddle steamer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paddle_steamer

    A typical river paddle steamer from the 1850s. Fall Line's steamer Providence, launched 1866 Finlandia Queen, a paddle-wheel ship from 1990s in Tampere, Finland [1]. A paddle steamer is a steamship or steamboat powered by a steam engine driving paddle wheels to propel the craft through the water.

  8. Steam-powered vessel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam-powered_vessel

    Screw-driven steamships generally carry the ship prefix "SS" before their names, meaning 'Steam Ship' (or 'Screw Steamer' i.e. 'screw-driven steamship', or 'Screw Schooner' during the 1870s and 1880s, when sail was also carried), paddle steamers usually carry the prefix "PS" and steamships powered by steam turbine may be prefixed "TS" (turbine ship).

  9. Scotch marine boiler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotch_marine_boiler

    German example. Note the steam dome, a typically German feature, and also the corrugated furnaces. A "Scotch" marine boiler (or simply Scotch boiler) is a design of steam boiler best known for its use on ships. Sectional diagram of a "wet back" boiler. The general layout is that of a squat horizontal cylinder.