4to. 6pp, 4 fine double-page litho plates. Boards, orig. wrappers bound in. Throughout the 19th century there were constant attempts to reduce the amount of smoke produced in industrial areas, by legislation and also by improvements to boilers and furnaces. Samuel Hall took out a series of patents designed to increase combustion of fuel, which would thereby produce less smoke. His first such patent appeared in 1836 and the present rare item describes and illustrates the smoke-consuming apparatus covered by it. His system involved the introduction of heated air into the entrance of the boiler as well as above its fire bars and he shows how the concept can be applied both to marine engines and to locomotives. Other patents followed and his ideas seem to have been taken up quite extensively by the engineering world.
GBP 400.00
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