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  2. Rowenta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rowenta

    Rowenta is a German manufacturer of small household appliances. Since 1988, it has been part of the global French Groupe SEB. ... 1957 - the first steam iron; 1967 ...

  3. John Wilkinson (industrialist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wilkinson_(industrialist)

    John "Iron-Mad" Wilkinson (1728 – 14 July 1808) was an English industrialist who pioneered the manufacture of cast iron and the use of cast-iron goods during the Industrial Revolution. He was the inventor of a precision boring machine that could bore cast iron cylinders, such as cannon barrels [ 1 ] and piston cylinders used in the steam ...

  4. Timeline of steam power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_steam_power

    Steam power developed slowly over a period of several hundred years, progressing through expensive and fairly limited devices in the early 17th century, to useful pumps for mining in 1700, and then to Watt's improved steam engine designs in the late 18th century.

  5. Clothes iron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothes_iron

    A clothes iron (also flatiron, smoothing iron, dry iron, steam iron or simply iron) is a small appliance that, when heated, is used to press clothes to remove wrinkles and unwanted creases. Domestic irons generally range in operating temperature from between 121 °C (250 °F) to 182 °C (360 °F).

  6. History of the steam engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_steam_engine

    In the engines of Newcomen and Watt, it is the condensation of the steam that creates most of the pressure difference, causing atmospheric pressure (Newcomen) and low-pressure steam, seldom more than 7 psi boiler pressure, [40] plus condenser vacuum [41] (Watt), to move the piston. In a high-pressure engine, most of the pressure difference is ...

  7. Steam power during the Industrial Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_power_during_the...

    In the mid-1750s, the steam engine was applied to the water power-constrained iron, copper and lead industries for powering blast bellows. These industries were located near the mines, some of which were using steam engines for mine pumping. Steam engines were too powerful for leather bellows, so cast iron blowing cylinders were developed in 1768.