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COMPOUND ENGINE

  • Compound steam engine
  • Steam engine where steam is expanded in stages

    A compound steam engine unit is a type of steam engine where steam is expanded in two or more stages. A typical arrangement for a compound engine is that

    Compound steam engine

    Compound steam engine

    Compound_steam_engine

  • Compound engine
  • Type of engine

    A compound engine is an engine that has more than one stage for recovering energy from the same working fluid, with the exhaust from the first stage passing

    Compound engine

    Compound engine

    Compound_engine

  • Turbo-compound engine
  • Reciprocating engine combined with a blowdown turbine

    A turbo-compound engine is a reciprocating engine that uses a turbine to recover energy from the exhaust gases and return it as mechanical power to the

    Turbo-compound engine

    Turbo-compound engine

    Turbo-compound_engine

  • Steam engine
  • Engine that uses steam to perform mechanical work

    A steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid. The steam engine uses the force produced by steam pressure

    Steam engine

    Steam engine

    Steam_engine

  • Steeple compound engine
  • Form of tandem compound steam engine

    A steeple compound engine is a form of tandem compound steam engine that is constructed as an inverted vertical engine. Because of their great height,

    Steeple compound engine

    Steeple compound engine

    Steeple_compound_engine

  • Marine steam engine
  • Steam engine that is used to power a ship or boat

    therefore find examples of engines classified under both methods. An engine can be a compound walking beam type, compound being the cylinder technology

    Marine steam engine

    Marine steam engine

    Marine_steam_engine

  • Compound
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Chemical compound, combination of two or more elements Plastic compounding, a method of preparing plastic formulations Compound engine, a steam engine in which

    Compound

    Compound

  • Beam engine
  • Early configuration of the steam engine

    Arthur Woolf, who compounded the cylinders; and William McNaught, who devised a method of compounding an existing engine. Beam engines were first used to

    Beam engine

    Beam engine

    Beam_engine

  • List of aircraft engines
  • Advanced Engine Design K2-1000 Advanced Engine Design 110 HP (BMW Conversion) Advanced Engine Design 220 LC Advanced Engine Design 440 LC Advanced Engine Design

    List of aircraft engines

    List of aircraft engines

    List_of_aircraft_engines

  • Compound locomotive
  • Type of railroad steam engine

    A compound locomotive is a steam locomotive which is powered by a compound engine, a type of steam engine where steam is expanded in two or more stages

    Compound locomotive

    Compound_locomotive

  • Stationary steam engine
  • Fixed steam engine for pumping or power generation

    engine (1700) Newcomen engine (1712) Watt engine (1775) Hornblower (1781) Trevithick (1799) Woolf (1804) Cornish engine (1812) McNaught'ed compound beam

    Stationary steam engine

    Stationary steam engine

    Stationary_steam_engine

  • Compound internal combustion engine
  • Internal Combustion engine

    A compound internal combustion engine is a type of internal combustion engine (ICE) where gasses of combustion are expanded in two or more stages. A typical

    Compound internal combustion engine

    Compound internal combustion engine

    Compound_internal_combustion_engine

  • Arthur Woolf
  • Cornish engineer (1766-1837)

    high-pressure compound steam engine. In this way he made an outstanding contribution to the development and perfection of the Cornish engine. Woolf left

    Arthur Woolf

    Arthur Woolf

    Arthur_Woolf

  • Engine efficiency
  • Work done divided by heat provided

    efficiency. Compound engines gave further improvements in efficiency. By the 1870s triple-expansion engines were being used on ships. Compound engines allowed

    Engine efficiency

    Engine_efficiency

  • Vauclain compound
  • The compounding system's integration into the cylinder saddle made conversion to conventional engines straightforward, so most Vauclain compounds were

    Vauclain compound

    Vauclain compound

    Vauclain_compound

  • Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation
  • US airliner with 4 piston engines, 1951

    R-3350-972-TC18DA-1 turbo-compound engines on the L-1049C had a new turbine system, the Power Recovery Turbines (PRT). Each engine's exhaust gas flowed through

    Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation

    Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation

    Lockheed_L-1049_Super_Constellation

  • Connecting rod
  • Piston engine component which connects the piston to the crankshaft

    A connecting rod, also called a 'con rod', is the part of a piston engine which connects the piston to the crankshaft. Together with the crank, the connecting

    Connecting rod

    Connecting rod

    Connecting_rod

  • Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone
  • 1937 18-cylinder radial piston engine family by Wright

    Superfortress. After the war, the engine had matured sufficiently to be used in many civilian airliners, notably in its turbo-compound forms, and remained in use

    Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone

    Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone

    Wright_R-3350_Duplex-Cyclone

  • Willans engine
  • Willans' engine was one of the best-known examples of the steeple compound engine. These were double- or triple-expansion compound engines, with the

    Willans engine

    Willans engine

    Willans_engine

  • Doble steam car
  • US make of steam-powered cars

    appear to have been built, if that. It is said that the two-cylinder compound engine sometimes gave difficulty in starting. The Model E had been developed

    Doble steam car

    Doble steam car

    Doble_steam_car

  • History of the steam engine
  • Heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid

    continued by William Sims. In a parallel, Arthur Woolf developed a compound engine with two cylinders, so that steam expanded in a high-pressure cylinder

    History of the steam engine

    History of the steam engine

    History_of_the_steam_engine

  • Thomas Newcomen
  • English inventor, preacher and ironmonger

    1664 – 5 August 1729) was an English inventor, creator of the atmospheric engine in 1712, Baptist preacher by calling and ironmonger by trade. He was born

    Thomas Newcomen

    Thomas Newcomen

    Thomas_Newcomen

  • SS Waesland
  • Ocean liner

    Waesland. Red Star replaced her engine with a compound engine which, in 1889, was replaced in turn with a triple expansion engine. In 1895 she was chartered

    SS Waesland

    SS Waesland

    SS_Waesland

  • Jonathan Hornblower
  • English scientist (1753–1815)

    Churchyard. He invented the compound steam engine in 1781 and patented it on 16 July in the same year. This type of engine has two cylinders, an evolution

    Jonathan Hornblower

    Jonathan Hornblower

    Jonathan_Hornblower

  • Steamship
  • Type of steam-powered vessel

    The compound engine, where steam was expanded twice in two separate cylinders, still had inefficiencies. The solution was the triple expansion engine, in

    Steamship

    Steamship

    Steamship

  • Crankshaft
  • Mechanism for converting reciprocating motion to rotation

    A crankshaft is a mechanical component used in a piston engine to convert the reciprocating motion into rotational motion. The crankshaft is a rotating

    Crankshaft

    Crankshaft

    Crankshaft

  • Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot
  • French inventor (1725-1804)

    engineer. In 1765, he began experimenting with working models of steam-engine-powered vehicles for the French Army, intended for transporting cannons

    Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot

    Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot

    Nicolas-Joseph_Cugnot

  • Cornish engine
  • Type of steam beam engine

    A Cornish engine is a type of steam engine developed in Cornwall, England, mainly for pumping water from a mine. It is a form of beam engine that uses

    Cornish engine

    Cornish engine

    Cornish_engine

  • Condenser (heat transfer)
  • System for condensing gas into liquid by cooling

    Piston Reciprocating engine Return connecting rod engine Six-column beam engine Steeple engine Safety valve Steeple compound engine Stroke Working fluid

    Condenser (heat transfer)

    Condenser (heat transfer)

    Condenser_(heat_transfer)

  • SS Parisian
  • UK transatlantic liner

    Parisian was refitted in 1899. Her obsolete compound engine was replaced with a three-cylinder triple-expansion engine that was built by Workman, Clark and Company

    SS Parisian

    SS Parisian

    SS_Parisian

  • Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company
  • Scottish shipbuilding company

    phases can be discerned: 'low' pressure compound engines and 'high' pressure compound engines. The compound engine with low (as it would later be called)

    Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company

    Fairfield_Shipbuilding_and_Engineering_Company

  • Safety valve
  • Device for releasing excess pressure in a system

    Stockton and Darlington Railway, the safety valve tended to go off when the engine hit a bump in the track. A valve less sensitive to sudden accelerations

    Safety valve

    Safety valve

    Safety_valve

  • Traction engine
  • Steam-powered haulage engine

    replaced with gears. In America traction engines fitted with continuous tracks were being used from 1869. Compound engine designs were introduced in 1881. Until

    Traction engine

    Traction engine

    Traction_engine

  • Reciprocating engine
  • Engine utilising one or more reciprocating pistons

    increasingly lower pressures. These engines are called compound engines. Aside from looking at the power that the engine can produce, the mean effective pressure

    Reciprocating engine

    Reciprocating engine

    Reciprocating_engine

  • Antifreeze
  • Liquid additive

    of the engine. If plain water were to be used as an engine coolant in northern climates freezing would occur, causing significant internal engine damage

    Antifreeze

    Antifreeze

  • Hydrolock
  • Type of hydraulic compression system failure

    entering the device. In the case of a reciprocating internal combustion engine, a piston cannot complete its travel and mechanical failure may occur if

    Hydrolock

    Hydrolock

    Hydrolock

  • Twin-turbo
  • Turbo layout that uses two turbochargers

    setups (which theoretically could have 15 different setups): Compound Compressors Staged Compound Compressors Staged Sequential Compressors Parallel Sequential

    Twin-turbo

    Twin-turbo

    Twin-turbo

  • SS Carnatic
  • British steamship wrecked in the gulf of Suez

    competitive with sail. As one of the first British steamships to use a compound engine, Carnatic achieved a much better fuel economy (at 2lbs of coal per

    SS Carnatic

    SS Carnatic

    SS_Carnatic

  • William Murdoch
  • Scottish engineer and inventor (1754–1839)

    the firm of Boulton & Watt and worked for them in Cornwall, as a steam engine erector for ten years, spending most of the rest of his life in Birmingham

    William Murdoch

    William Murdoch

    William_Murdoch

  • Napier Nomad
  • British diesel aircraft engine

    5 MW) class engine with good fuel economy. Curtiss-Wright was designing an engine of this sort of power known as the turbo-compound engine, but Sir Harry

    Napier Nomad

    Napier Nomad

    Napier_Nomad

  • RMS Umbria
  • 1884 British ocean liner

    steamship to be built for a North Atlantic route with a compound engine. By 1885, the triple expansion engine was the almost universal specification for newly

    RMS Umbria

    RMS Umbria

    RMS_Umbria

  • Dobrynin VD-4K
  • Soviet-designed large turboprop aircraft engine

    24-cylinder, turbo-compound, inline radial engine developed after the end of World War II. It was superseded by turboprop engines before it could be widely

    Dobrynin VD-4K

    Dobrynin VD-4K

    Dobrynin_VD-4K

  • Timeline of steam power
  • erection. 1781 (1781): Jonathan Hornblower patents a two-cylinder "compound" engine, in which the steam pushes on one piston (as opposed to pulling via

    Timeline of steam power

    Timeline_of_steam_power

  • Ceramic engine
  • Engine with large amounts of ceramics

    rocker arms. Predictions for an adiabatic turbo-compound engine (a theoretical heat-efficient engine) were seen as plausible with the use of technical

    Ceramic engine

    Ceramic_engine

  • History of steam road vehicles
  • road vehicles encompasses the development of vehicles powered by a steam engine for use on land and independent of rails, whether for conventional road

    History of steam road vehicles

    History of steam road vehicles

    History_of_steam_road_vehicles

  • Hercules (1829 ship)
  • Dutch steam paddle tugboat

    vessel to effectively use a compound steam engine. In about 1890, a discussion about the invention of the compound steam engine made that Fijenoord brought

    Hercules (1829 ship)

    Hercules (1829 ship)

    Hercules_(1829_ship)

  • Clipper
  • Merchant sailing ship of the 19th century

    instead of the previously permitted 25 psi, and using an efficient compound engine, Agamemnon had the fuel efficiency to steam at 10 knots to China and

    Clipper

    Clipper

    Clipper

  • Mary White (trawler)
  • British fishing trawler and boom defence vessel

    a compound steam engine and an exhaust steam turbine, with reduction gearing for both engines onto the same propeller shaft. In 1948 her compound engine

    Mary White (trawler)

    Mary_White_(trawler)

  • Allaire Iron Works
  • 19th-century marine engineering company in New York City

    it supplied the engine cylinder for the first steamship to cross the Atlantic, Savannah, pioneered the use of the compound engine in steamships, and

    Allaire Iron Works

    Allaire_Iron_Works

  • Steam donkey
  • Steam-powered winch or logging engine

    their cylinder type – simplex (single-acting cylinder) or duplex (a compound engine); by their connection to the winches (or "drums") – triple-drum, double-drum

    Steam donkey

    Steam donkey

    Steam_donkey

  • Working fluid
  • Pressurized gas or liquid in a heat engine

    (pumped liquid cooling, air cooling, etc.). The working fluid of a heat engine or heat pump is a gas or liquid, usually called a refrigerant, coolant,

    Working fluid

    Working_fluid

  • Single- and double-acting cylinders
  • Classification of reciprocating engine cylinders

    In mechanical engineering, the cylinders of reciprocating engines are often classified by whether they are single- or double-acting, depending on how

    Single- and double-acting cylinders

    Single- and double-acting cylinders

    Single-_and_double-acting_cylinders

  • Expansion valve (steam engine)
  • have Meyer expansion valves. Expansion valves were also fitted to compound steam engines. Both techniques are an attempt to achieve greater efficiency, even

    Expansion valve (steam engine)

    Expansion valve (steam engine)

    Expansion_valve_(steam_engine)

  • Napier Naiad
  • 1940s British aircraft turboprop engine

    both engine projects were cancelled before finding a market. The Naiad was also used, in adapted form, in the Napier Nomad turbo-compound engine design

    Napier Naiad

    Napier Naiad

    Napier_Naiad

  • Age of Sail
  • Historical era when sailing ships dominated global trade and warfare

    ISBN 0-415-21478-5, pp. 73–74. Jarvis, Adrian (1993). "9: Alfred Holt and the Compound Engine". In Gardiner, Robert; Greenhill, Dr Basil (eds.). The Advent of Steam

    Age of Sail

    Age of Sail

    Age_of_Sail

  • Fijenoord
  • Shipbuilding and machine factory in Rotterdam

    pressure cylinders. Afterwards her engine was finished as a compound engine. The invention of the compound engine was of great significance for the company

    Fijenoord

    Fijenoord

    Fijenoord

  • Five-stroke engine
  • Conceptual engine

    The five-stroke engine is a compound internal combustion engine patented by Gerhard Schmitz in 2000. The goal of the five-stroke engine is to achieve higher

    Five-stroke engine

    Five-stroke_engine

  • High-speed steam engine
  • Steam engine designed to run at comparatively high speed

    of compounding. High-speed engines did develop a reputation for profligacy. For larger engines the fuel cost savings were worthwhile and compound designs

    High-speed steam engine

    High-speed steam engine

    High-speed_steam_engine

  • SS Aberdeen (1881)
  • British cargo liner

    world's first marine "triple expansion" compound steam engine on the SS Propontis in 1874. Triple expansion engines required much higher boiler pressures

    SS Aberdeen (1881)

    SS Aberdeen (1881)

    SS_Aberdeen_(1881)

  • CVCC
  • Reduced-emissions engine by Honda

    or Compound Vortex Controlled Combustion (Japanese: 複合渦流調整燃焼方式, Hepburn: Fukugō Uzuryū Chōsei Nenshō Hōshiki), is an internal combustion engine technology

    CVCC

    CVCC

    CVCC

  • Advanced steam technology
  • Evolution of steam power beyond mainstream mid-20th-century implementations

    modern steam) reflects an approach to the technical development of the steam engine intended for a wider variety of applications than has recently been the

    Advanced steam technology

    Advanced steam technology

    Advanced_steam_technology

  • Charles Harding Loring
  • American engineer (1828–1907)

    of compound engines and the abandonment of the simple form, and the conversion of a number of the engines which were on hand into compound engines. Four

    Charles Harding Loring

    Charles Harding Loring

    Charles_Harding_Loring

  • RMS Quetta
  • British ocean liner wrecked in the Torres Strait

    Queensland canefields. Quetta had a single screw, driven by a two-cylinder compound engine built by Denny. It was rated at 500 HP and gave her a speed of 12 knots

    RMS Quetta

    RMS Quetta

    RMS_Quetta

  • Gab valve gear
  • valve gear was an early form of valve gear used on steam engines. Its simplest form allowed an engine to be stopped and started. A double form, mostly used

    Gab valve gear

    Gab valve gear

    Gab_valve_gear

  • Cutty Sark
  • British clipper ship, on display at Greenwich, England

    forward in 1866 with Agamemnon, using higher boiler pressure and a compound engine, so obtaining a large improvement in fuel efficiency. Ships of this

    Cutty Sark

    Cutty Sark

    Cutty_Sark

  • Crosshead
  • Sliding pin joint in a slider-crank linkage, commonly used in engine pistons

    in a trunk engine. Therefore, the longitudinal dimension of the crosshead must be matched to the stroke of the engine. On smaller engines, the connecting

    Crosshead

    Crosshead

    Crosshead

  • Soho Manufactory
  • Early factory in Birmingham, England (1766–1853)

    of gilded bronze). In 1782, it became the first site with a Watt steam engine with the sun and planet gear. It was also home to the first steam-powered

    Soho Manufactory

    Soho Manufactory

    Soho_Manufactory

  • SS Grecian (1879)
  • 9.4 metres (30 ft 10 in). She was assessed at 3,481 GRT and had a Compound engine driving a screw propeller that could achieve a speed of 11 knots. The

    SS Grecian (1879)

    SS_Grecian_(1879)

  • James Watt
  • Scottish inventor, engineer and chemist (1736–1819)

    using steam at pressures well above atmospheric). A compound engine, which connected two or more engines, was described. Two more patents were granted for

    James Watt

    James Watt

    James_Watt

  • SS Nailsea Meadow
  • had a compound engine. Triple-expansion engines had largely superseded compound engines in the 1860s. But in these four sisters the compound engine was

    SS Nailsea Meadow

    SS_Nailsea_Meadow

  • SS Llanashe
  • UK cargo steamship sunk during World War II

    a compound engine. Triple-expansion engines had largely superseded compound engines in the 1860s. But in Llanashe and Llandaff the compound engine was

    SS Llanashe

    SS_Llanashe

  • Water-returning engine
  • Early steam engine

    A water-returning engine was an early form of stationary steam engine, developed at the start of the Industrial Revolution in the middle of the 18th century

    Water-returning engine

    Water-returning_engine

  • Matthew Murray
  • British steam engine and machine tool engineer and manufacturer (1765-1826)

    Matthew Murray (1765 – 20 February 1826) was an English steam engine and machine tool manufacturer, who designed and built the first commercially viable

    Matthew Murray

    Matthew Murray

    Matthew_Murray

  • Turbosteamer
  • production. COGAS Cogeneration Exhaust heat recovery system Still engine Turbo-compound engine R. Freymann, W. Strobl, A. Obieglo: The Turbosteamer: A System

    Turbosteamer

    Turbosteamer

  • Newcomen Memorial Engine
  • Preserved beam engine in Devon, England

    The Newcomen Memorial Engine (sometimes called the Coventry Canal Engine) is a preserved beam engine in Dartmouth, Devon. It was preserved as a memorial

    Newcomen Memorial Engine

    Newcomen Memorial Engine

    Newcomen_Memorial_Engine

  • Gas-turbine engine
  • Type of internal and continuous combustion engine

    gas-turbine engine, or, informally, a gas turbine, is a type of continuous flow internal combustion engine. The main parts common to all gas-turbine engines form

    Gas-turbine engine

    Gas-turbine engine

    Gas-turbine_engine

  • Victoria-class ironclad
  • British warship class (1890–1907)

    a battleship) which used triple expansion steam engines, previous classes having used compound engines. There were only two ships in this class. The lead

    Victoria-class ironclad

    Victoria-class ironclad

    Victoria-class_ironclad

  • List of torpedo boats of the United States Navy
  • (88 ft 6in waterline) x 11 ft 6in x 3 ft, and had a 1-shaft vertical compound engine of 359 ihp, achieving 18.2 knots. She was stricken on 27 January 1911

    List of torpedo boats of the United States Navy

    List of torpedo boats of the United States Navy

    List_of_torpedo_boats_of_the_United_States_Navy

  • USS Charleston (C-2)
  • American protected cruiser

    US Navy ship with the older compound engine design; later ships had more powerful and efficient triple expansion engines. Unlike some contemporary designs

    USS Charleston (C-2)

    USS Charleston (C-2)

    USS_Charleston_(C-2)

  • Lap Engine
  • Beam engine designed by James Watt

    The Lap Engine is a beam engine designed by James Watt, built by Boulton and Watt in 1788. It is now preserved at the Science Museum, London. It is important

    Lap Engine

    Lap Engine

    Lap_Engine

  • Lamport and Holt
  • Defunct UK merchant shipping line

    cargo, so that many longer routes were economically unfeasible. A compound engine achieved much better fuel economy, but generally required higher boiler

    Lamport and Holt

    Lamport and Holt

    Lamport_and_Holt

  • Lockheed L-1649 Starliner
  • US airliner with 4 piston engines, 1956

    Constellation line of airliners. Powered by four Wright R-3350 Turbo-compound engines, it was built at Lockheed's Burbank, California plant from 1956 to

    Lockheed L-1649 Starliner

    Lockheed L-1649 Starliner

    Lockheed_L-1649_Starliner

  • Fuel economy in automobiles
  • Distance traveled by a vehicle compared to volume of fuel consumed

    Scuderi engine Compound engines Two-stroke diesel engines High-efficiency gas turbine engines BMW's Turbosteamer – using the heat from the engine to spin

    Fuel economy in automobiles

    Fuel economy in automobiles

    Fuel_economy_in_automobiles

  • Agamemnon (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Werder SS Agamemnon, an early long-distance merchant steamship with a compound engine, so achieving good fuel economy French ship Agamemnon, a ship of the

    Agamemnon (disambiguation)

    Agamemnon_(disambiguation)

  • Prussian S 5.1
  • Prussian express steam locomotive

    between 1900 and 1903 in two variants. It featured a four-cylinder compound engine using saturated steam and a wheel arrangement of 2'B (2-2-0). After

    Prussian S 5.1

    Prussian S 5.1

    Prussian_S_5.1

  • Pre-dreadnought battleship
  • Battleships built from the 1880s to 1905

    expansion compound engine was in use. Some fleets, though not the British, adopted the quadruple-expansion steam engine. The main improvement in engine performance

    Pre-dreadnought battleship

    Pre-dreadnought battleship

    Pre-dreadnought_battleship

  • Surface condenser
  • Steam engine component

    Piston Reciprocating engine Return connecting rod engine Six-column beam engine Steeple engine Safety valve Steeple compound engine Stroke Working fluid

    Surface condenser

    Surface condenser

    Surface_condenser

  • Feedwater heater
  • Power plant component

    Piston Reciprocating engine Return connecting rod engine Six-column beam engine Steeple engine Safety valve Steeple compound engine Stroke Working fluid

    Feedwater heater

    Feedwater heater

    Feedwater_heater

  • Yacht
  • Recreational boat or ship

    propeller. Near the end of the 19th century, compound engines came into widespread use. Compound engines exhausted steam into successively larger cylinders

    Yacht

    Yacht

    Yacht

  • SS Wairarapa
  • New Zealand ship

    36.3 ft (11.1 m) Depth 23.7 ft (7.2 m) Installed power 2-cylinder compound engine Propulsion single screw Sail plan brigantine Speed 14 knots (26 km/h)

    SS Wairarapa

    SS Wairarapa

    SS_Wairarapa

  • Internal combustion engine
  • Engine in which fuel combusts with an oxidizer

    An internal combustion engine (ICE or IC engine) is a heat engine in which the combustion of a fuel occurs with an oxidizer (usually air) in a combustion

    Internal combustion engine

    Internal combustion engine

    Internal_combustion_engine

  • Sentinel boiler
  • Type of steam-generating furnace

    Highways and Locomotives (Amendment) Act 1878 (41 & 42 Vict. c. 77) that engines should "consume their own smoke". By the nature of their use, steam wagons

    Sentinel boiler

    Sentinel boiler

    Sentinel_boiler

  • House-built engine
  • A house-built engine is a stationary steam engine that is built into an engine house, such that it uses the masonry of the engine house as an integral

    House-built engine

    House-built engine

    House-built_engine

  • SS Sardinian
  • British ship

    assessed at 4,376 GRT. She had 1 x 2 cyl. Compound engine driving a single screw propeller and 3 Masts. The engine was rated at 600 nhp. Sardinian sailed

    SS Sardinian

    SS Sardinian

    SS_Sardinian

  • Airspeed Ambassador
  • British twin piston-engined airliner, 1947

    conventional Bristol Centaurus radial engines, the Ambassador was designed to accommodate four Napier Nomad turbo-compound engines, a then-recent innovation. Its

    Airspeed Ambassador

    Airspeed Ambassador

    Airspeed_Ambassador

  • HMY Iolaire
  • British armed yacht wrecked in 1919

    412 GRT and 261 NRT. She had a single screw, driven by a two-cylinder compound engine that was made by Matthew Paul & Co of Dumbarton and rated at 110 NHP

    HMY Iolaire

    HMY Iolaire

    HMY_Iolaire

  • List of steam technology patents
  • for use in compound locomotives and other compound engines GB 190504645 (A), 1905, Improvements relating to the working of compound engines and in regulator

    List of steam technology patents

    List_of_steam_technology_patents

  • Engine balance
  • Balance of reciprocating and rotating engine components

    Engine balance refers to how the inertial forces produced by moving parts in an internal combustion engine or steam engine are neutralised with counterweights

    Engine balance

    Engine_balance

  • South London Electric Supply Corporation
  • x Ferranti vertical cross compound engine driving a 1,200 kW Ferranti alternator 1 x Ferranti vertical cross compound engine driving a 1,000 kW Ferranti

    South London Electric Supply Corporation

    South_London_Electric_Supply_Corporation

  • SS Agamemnon (1865)
  • Iron-hulled steamship with more efficient engine

    steamship design: higher boiler pressure, an efficient and compact compound steam engine, and a hull form with modest power requirements. Before Agamemnon

    SS Agamemnon (1865)

    SS Agamemnon (1865)

    SS_Agamemnon_(1865)

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing COMPOUND ENGINE

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Online names & meanings

  • Gerard Gearoid
  • Boy/Male

    Irish

    Gerard Gearoid

    Means “”brave with a spear”” or “”spear carrier.”” The name is associated with Gearoid Fitzgerald, the 3rd Earl of Desmond (1338-98) and leader of the most powerful Norman family in late medieval Ireland. It was believed he had magical powers and is reputed to protect the environment at Lough Gur, where he had a castle in County Limerick. In one story, when a local landowner planned to drain the lake or forbid local people access to it Gearoid made his horse bolt, fatally injuring the landowner. Some even say that he is sleeping at the bottom of Lough Gur, waiting to return to the land of the living.

  • Jesal
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu

    Jesal

    Poof

  • Bahiya |
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim

    Bahiya |

    Nice, Beautiful, Radiant

  • Kavipranita | கவீப்ரநீதா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Kavipranita | கவீப்ரநீதா

  • Temperance
  • Girl/Female

    British, Christian, English

    Temperance

    Temperance; One of the Qualities Adopted as a First Name by the Puritans After the Reformation; Moderation; Self Restraint

  • Oberron
  • Boy/Male

    German

    Oberron

    Highborn; Bearlike

  • Cambridge
  • Surname or Lastname

    Irish

    Cambridge

    Irish : reduced form of McCambridge.English : habitational name for someone from either of two places called Cambridge: one in Gloucestershire, the other in Cambridgeshire (the university city). Until the late 14th century the latter was known as Cantebrigie ‘bridge on the (river) Granta’, from a Celtic river name meaning ‘marshy river’. Under Norman influence Granta- became Cam-. It seems likely, therefore, that the surname derives mainly from the much smaller place in Gloucestershire, recorded as Cambrigga (1200–10), and named for the Cam, a Celtic river name meaning ‘crooked’, ‘winding’.

  • Smitraj
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Smitraj

    Smile

  • Masterman
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Masterman

    English : occupational name for the servant of a master craftsman, or a man known as Master.

  • Coshel
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian

    Coshel

    Perfect in Any Task

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COMPOUND ENGINE

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COMPOUND ENGINE

  • Compound
  • v. i.

    To effect a composition; to come to terms of agreement; to agree; to settle by a compromise; -- usually followed by with before the person participating, and for before the thing compounded or the consideration.

  • Compound
  • v. t.

    To compose; to constitute.

  • Compound
  • v. t.

    To modify or change by combination with some other thing or part; to mingle with something else.

  • Counter-compony
  • a.

    See Compony.

  • Compound
  • v. t.

    To settle amicably; to adjust by agreement; to compromise; to discharge from obligation upon terms different from those which were stipulated; as, to compound a debt.

  • Compound
  • v. t.

    To put together, as elements, ingredients, or parts, in order to form a whole; to combine, mix, or unite.

  • Compone
  • a.

    See Compony.

  • Decompound
  • a.

    Compound of what is already compounded; compounded a second time.

  • Decompound
  • a.

    Several times compounded or divided, as a leaf or stem; decomposite.

  • Compound
  • v. t.

    Composed of two or more elements, ingredients, parts; produced by the union of several ingredients, parts, or things; composite; as, a compound word.

  • Compound
  • v. t.

    To form or make by combining different elements, ingredients, or parts; as, to compound a medicine.

  • Impound
  • v. t.

    To shut up or place in an inclosure called a pound; hence, to hold in the custody of a court; as, to impound stray cattle; to impound a document for safe keeping.

  • Compound
  • n.

    A union of two or more ingredients in definite proportions by weight, so combined as to form a distinct substance; as, water is a compound of oxygen and hydrogen.

  • Compound
  • n.

    That which is compounded or formed by the union or mixture of elements ingredients, or parts; a combination of simples; a compound word; the result of composition.

  • Decompound
  • v. t.

    To compound or mix with that is already compound; to compound a second time.

  • Compounder
  • n.

    One who, or that which, compounds or mixes; as, a compounder of medicines.

  • Compony
  • a.

    Alt. of Compone

  • Compounded
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Compound

  • Compounder
  • n.

    One who compounds a debt, obligation, or crime.