قراءة كتاب The Romance of War Inventions A Description of Warships, Guns, Tanks, Rifles, Bombs, and Other Instruments and Munitions of Warfare, How They Were Invented & How They Are Employed
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The Romance of War Inventions A Description of Warships, Guns, Tanks, Rifles, Bombs, and Other Instruments and Munitions of Warfare, How They Were Invented & How They Are Employed
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LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
A Tank | Frontispiece |
page | |
Machine-gun versus Rifle | 32 |
An Italian Mine-layer | 64 |
An Incident at Loos | 80 |
An 18-pounder in Action | 96 |
A German Automatic Pistol | 112 |
Bomb Throwing | 136 |
Bomb-throwers at Work | 160 |
The Tripod Mast | 208 |
Listening for the Enemy | 248 |
Diagram showing the principle by which the Aerials are connected to the Apparatus | 251 |
The Parent of the Tank | 280 |
The "Guardian Angel" Parachute | 304 |
THE ROMANCE OF WAR INVENTIONS
CHAPTER I
HOW PEACEFUL ARTS HELP IN WAR
In the olden times warfare was supported by a single trade, that of the armourer. Nowadays the whole resources of the greatest manufacturing nations scarcely suffice to supply the needs of their armies. So much is this the case that no nation can possibly hope to become powerful in a military or naval sense unless they are either a great manufacturing community or can rely upon the support of some great manufacturing ally or neutral.
It is most astonishing to find how closely some of the most innocent and harmless of the commodities of peace are related to the death-dealing devices of war. Of these no two examples could be more striking than the common salt with which we season our food and the soap with which we wash. Yet the manufacture of soap furnishes the material for the most
furious of explosives and the chief agent in its manufacture is the common salt of the table.
Common salt is a combination of the metal sodium and the gas chlorine. There are many places, of which Cheshire is a notable example, where vast quantities of this salt lie buried in the earth.
Fortunately it is very easily dissolved in water so that if wells be sunk in a salt district the water pumped from them will have much salt in solution in it. This is how the underground deposits are tapped. It is not necessary for men to go down as they do after coal, for the water excavates the salt and brings it to the surface.
To obtain the solid salt from the salt water, or brine as it is called, it is only necessary to heat the liquid, when the water passes away as steam leaving the salt behind.
Important though this salt is in connection with our food, it is perhaps still more important as the source from which is derived chlorine and caustic soda. How this is done can best be explained by means of a simple experiment which my readers can try in imagination with me or, better still, perform for themselves.
Take a tumbler and fill it with water with a little salt dissolved in it. Next obtain two short pieces of wire and two pieces of pencil lead, which with a pocket lamp battery will complete the apparatus. Connect one piece of wire to each terminal of the battery and twist the other end of it round a piece of pencil lead. Place these so that the ends of the leads dip into the salt water. It is important to keep
the wires out of the solution, the leads alone dipping into the liquid, and the two leads should be an inch or so apart.
In a few moments you will observe that tiny bubbles are collecting upon the leads and these joining together into larger