قراءة كتاب Records of Steam Boiler Explosions

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Records of Steam Boiler Explosions

Records of Steam Boiler Explosions

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 6

explosion that occurred at Darlaston in 1863, and illustrates the way in which these boilers usually explode. They generally open first at a longitudinal seam over the fire, which has become deteriorated by accumulations of scurf preventing proper contact of the water, so that the plates become overheated, their quality injured, their edges cracked or burnt, and the rivets drawn or loosened. The rent generally continues in the longitudinal direction to the sound seam beyond the bridge at the one end, and at the other end to the seam joining the front end to the shell; and then runs up each of the transverse seams, allowing the rent part of the shell to open out flat on both sides, and liberating both ends of the boiler, which fly off in opposite directions. Of course it is seldom that an explosion is quite so simple as this, as the direction of the flight of the various pieces is so much influenced by the last part that held in contact with the main body of the boiler. The want of due observation of this point has often led to erroneous conclusions.

upright boiler lower part blown out
Fig. 28.

In the explosion shown in Fig. 28, and in the model exhibited, which occurred at Westbromwich in 1864, the lower part of the side of an upright boiler was blown out; and the liberated part was also divided into two pieces, each of which fell some distance behind the boiler, in an opposite direction to the side from which they came. The explanation of this became obvious on examination, as the cause of the rupture had been the corrosion of the bottom, and the rent had run up the seams until it met the angle iron of the side tubes, round which it ran to the first seam above. This seam acted as a hinge on which the ruptured pieces turned, and they swung round so violently that they were wrenched off, but not before they had pulled the boiler over and received the diverting force which gave them their direction, for they flew off at a tangent, to the circle in which they had swung round on the sound upper seam as upon a hinge.

Elephant boiler
Fig. 29.
retort boiler
Fig. 30.
diagonally seamed cylindrical boiler
Fig. 31.

In order to avoid having a large diameter for plain cylindrical boilers, especially where exposed to the fire, boilers have been used that have supplied the required steam power by a combination of several cylinders of small diameter. One of these known as the Elephant boiler, has been so much used in France that it is sometimes called the French boiler; it is shown in Fig. 29, and consists of two cylinders of small diameter connected by upright conical tubes to a large cylinder above. Another form called the Retort Boiler, shown in Fig. 30, has been described at a previous meeting of this Institution (see Proceedings Inst. M. E. 1855 page 191). The disadvantages of these two combinations of plain cylinders are that they are not easy to clean or examine internally, and also there is not free exit for the steam, which has to find its way along small channels, and carries the water away with it, causing priming, and also retarding the generation of steam and endangering the boiler plates. With a view to strengthen the plain cylinder made of wrought-iron plates, the seams are sometimes made to run diagonally, as shown in Fig. 31, on the principle that, as the longitudinal is the weakest seam and the transverse the strongest, a diagonal between them gives the greatest amount of strength to the boiler as a whole.


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