<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<h3>ARTIFICIAL POWER.</h3>
<p>The steam-turbine is the most clearly visible
of the revolutionary agencies in motors using
the artificial sources of power. In the first
attempts to introduce the principle the false
analogy of the water-turbine gave rise to much
waste of inventive energy and of money; but
the more recent and more distinctly successful
types of machine have been constructed with
a clear understanding that the windmill is the
true precursor of the steam-turbine. It is
clearly perceived that, although it may be
convenient and even essential to reduce the
arms to pigmy dimensions and to enclose them
in a tube, still the general principle of the
machine must resemble that of a number of
wind motors all running on the same shaft.</p>
<p>It has been proved, moreover, that this
multiplicity of minute wheels and arms has a
very distinct advantage in that it renders
possible the utilisation of the expansive power
of steam. The first impact is small in area
but intense in force, while those arms which
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></SPAN></span>
receive the expanded steam further on are
larger in size as suited to making the best use
of a weaker force distributed over a greater
amount of space.</p>
<p>The enormous speed at which steam under
heavy pressure rushes out of an orifice was
not duly appreciated by the first experimenters
in this direction. To obtain the best results
in utilising the power from escaping steam
there must be a certain definite proportion
between the speed of the vapour and that of
the vane or arm against which it strikes. In
other words, the latter must not "smash" the
jet, but must run along with it. In the case
of the windmill the ratio has been stated approximately
by the generalisation that the
velocity of the tips of the sails is about two
and a half times that of the wind. This refers
to the old style of windmill as used for grinding
corn.</p>
<p>The steam turbine must, therefore, be
essentially a motor of very great initial speed;
and the efforts of recent inventors have been
wisely directed in the first instance to the
object of applying it to those purposes for
which machinery could be coupled up to the
motor with little, if any, necessity for slowing
down the motion through such appliances as
belting, toothed wheels, or other forms of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></SPAN></span>
intermediate gearing. The dynamo for electric
lighting naturally first suggested itself; but
even in this application it was found necessary
to adopt a rate of speed considerably lower
than that which the steam imparts to the
turbine; and, unfortunately, it is exactly in
the arrangement of the gear for the first slowing-down
that the main difficulty comes in.</p>
<p>Nearly parallel is the case of the cream
separator, to which the steam-turbine principle
has been applied with a certain degree of
success. By means of fine flexible steel shafts
running in bearings swathed in oil it has been
found possible to utilise the comparatively
feeble force of a small steam jet operating at
immense speed to produce one of much slower
rate but enormously greater strength. Some
success has been achieved also in using the
principle not only for cream separators, which
require a comparatively high velocity, but for
other purposes connected with the rural and
manufacturing industries.</p>
<p>An immense forward stride, however, was
made when the idea was first conceived of a
steam-turbine and a water-turbine being fixed
on the same shaft and the latter being used
for the propulsion of a vessel at sea. In this
case it is obvious that, by a suitable adjustment
of the pitch of screw adopted in both
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></SPAN></span>
cases, a nice mathematical agreement between
the vapour power and the liquid application
of that power can be ensured.</p>
<p>All previous records of speed have been
eclipsed by the turbine-driven steamers engined
on this principle. Through the abolition of
the principal causes of excessive vibration—which
renders dangerous the enlargement of
marine reciprocating engines beyond a certain
size—the final limit of possible speed has been
indefinitely extended. The comfort of the
passenger, equally with the safety of the hull,
demands the diminution of the vibration nuisance
in modern steamships, and whether the
first attempts to cater for the need by turbine-engines
be fully successful or not, there is no
doubt whatever that the fast mail packets of
the future will be driven by steam-engines
constructed on a system in which the turbine
principle will form an important part.</p>
<p>Further applications will soon follow. It is clear that if the
steam-turbine can be advantageously used for the driving of a vessel
through the water, then, conversely, it can be similarly applied to
the creation of a current of water or of any other suitable liquid.
This liquid-current, again, is applicable to the driving of machinery
at any rate that may be desired. In this view the slowing-down
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span>
process, which involves elaborate and delicate machinery when
accomplished in the purely mechanical method, can be much more
economically effected through the friction of fluid particles.</p>
<p>One method of achieving this object is an
arrangement in which the escaping steam
drives a turbine-shaft running through a long
tube and passing into the water in a circular
tank, in which, again, the shaft carries a spiral
or turbine screw for propelling the water.
The arrangement, it will be seen, is strictly
analogous to that of the steam-turbine as
used in marine propulsion, the shaft passing
through the side of the tank just as it does
through the stern of the vessel.</p>
<p>One essential point, however, is that the
line of the shaft must not pass through the
centre of the circular tank, but must form the
chord of an arc, so that when the water is
driven against the side by the revolution of
the screw it acts like a tangential jet. Practically
the water is thus kept in motion just as
it would be if a hose with a strong jet of
water were inserted and caused to play at an
obtuse angle against the inner side.</p>
<p>Motion having been imparted to the fluid in
the tank, a simple device such as a paddle-wheel
immersed at its lower end, may be
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span>
adopted for taking up the power and passing
it on to the machinery required to be actuated.
By setting both the shaft carrying the vanes
for the steam-turbine and the screw for the
propulsion of the water at a downward inclination
it becomes practicable to drive the fluid
without requiring any hole in the tank; and
in this case the latter may be shaped in annular
form and pivoted so that it becomes a
horizontal fly-wheel. Obstructing projections
on the inside periphery of the annular tank
assist the water to carry the latter along with
it in its circular motion.</p>
<p>For small steam motors, particularly for
agricultural and domestic purposes, the turbine
principle is destined to render services of
the utmost importance. The prospect of its
extremely economical construction depends
largely upon the fact that, with the exception
of two or three very small bearings carrying
narrow shafts, it contains no parts demanding
the same fine finish as does the cylinder of
a reciprocating engine. It solves in a very
simple manner the much-vexed problem of the
rotary engine, upon which so much ingenuity
has been fruitlessly exercised. The steam-turbine
also has shown that, for taking advantage
of the generation and the expansive power
of steam, there is no absolute necessity for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span>
including a steam-tight chamber with moving
parts in the machine.</p>
<p>For very small motors suitable for working
fans and working other household appliances,
the use of a jet of steam, applied directly to
drive a small annular fly-wheel filled with
mercury—without the intervention of any
turbine—will no doubt prove handy. But in
the economy of the future such appliances
will take the place of electrical machinery
only in exceptional situations.</p>
<p>One promising use of the turbine or steam-jet—used
to propel a fly-wheel filled with
liquid as described—has for its object the
supply of the electric light in country houses.
In this case the fly-wheel is fitted, on its
lower side, to act as the armature of a
dynamo, and the magnets are placed horizontally
around it.</p>
<p>The full effective power from a jet of steam
is not communicated to a dynamo for electric
lighting or other purposes unless there be a
definite ratio between the speeds of the turbine
and of the armature respectively. This may
be conveniently provided for, with more precision
and in a less elaborate way than that
which has just been described, if the steam
jet be made to drive a vertically pendant
turbine, the lower extremity of which, carrying
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span>
very small horizontal paddles, must be
inserted into the centre of a circular tank.</p>
<p>The principle upon which the reduction of
speed necessary for the dynamo is then effected
depends upon the fact that in a whirlpool the
liquid near the centre runs nearly as fast as
that on the outer periphery, and therefore—the
circles being so very much smaller—the number
of revolutions effected in a given time is much
greater. Thus a steam jet turning a pendant
turbine—dipping into the middle of the whirlpool
and carrying paddles—at an enormously
high speed may be made to impart motion to
the water in a circular tank (or, if desired, to
the tank itself) at a very much slower rate;
the amount of the reduction, of course, depending
mainly on the ratio between the diameter
of the tank and the length of the small paddles
at the centre setting the liquid in motion.</p>
<p>For special purposes it is best to substitute
a spherical for an ordinary circular tank and
the size may be greatly diminished by using
mercury instead of water. The sphere is complete,
excepting for a small aperture at the
top for the admission of the steel shaft of the
steam-driven turbine. No matter how high
may be the speed, the liquid cannot be thrown
out from a spherical revolving receptacle constructed
in this way. Moreover, the mercury
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span>
acts not only as a transmitter of the power
from the turbine to the purpose for which it
is wanted, but also as a governor. Whenever
the speed becomes so great as to throw the
liquid entirely into the sides of the sphere—so
that the shaft and paddles are running free
of contact with it in the middle—the machine
slows down, and it cannot again attain full
speed until the same conditions recur.</p>
<p>The rate of speed which may be worked up
to as a maximum is determined by the position
of the paddle-wheel, which is adjustable and
floats upon the liquid although controlled in
its circular motion by the shaft which passes
through a square aperture in it and also a
sleeve extending upward from it. The duty
of the latter is to economise steam by cutting
off the jet as soon as, by its rapidity of motion,
the paddle-wheel has thrown the mercury to
the sides to such an extent as to sink to a
certain level in the centre.</p>
<p>Cheap motors coupled with cheap dynamos
will, in the twentieth century, go far towards
lightening the labours of millions whose toil is
at present far too much of a mere mechanical
nature. The dynamo itself, however, requires
to be greatly reduced in first cost. Particularly
it is necessary that the expense involved in
drawing the wire, insulating it, and winding
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></SPAN></span>
machines with it, should be diminished. This
will no doubt be partly accomplished by the
electrolytic producers of copper when once
they get properly started on methods of depositing
thin strips or wires of tough copper on
to sheets of insulating material for wrapping
round the magnets and other effective parts
intended for dynamos. There is no fundamental
reason which forbids that when electro
deposition is resorted to for the recovery of
a metal from its ore it should be straightway
converted to the shape and to the purpose for
which it is ultimately intended. This consideration
has presented itself to the minds of
some of the manufacturers of aluminium, who
make many articles intended for household
use electrolytically; and it must affect many
other trades which are concerned in the output
and in the working-up of metals readily
susceptible of deposition—more particularly
such as copper.</p>
<p>The familiar aneroid barometer furnishes a
hint for another convenient form of small
steam-engine. In seeking to cheapen machinery
of this class it is of the utmost importance
that the necessity for boring out cylinders
and for planing and other expensive work
should be avoided. In the aneroid barometer
a shallow circular box is fitted with a cover,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></SPAN></span>
which is corrugated in concentric circles, and
the pressure of the superincumbent air is
caused to depress the centre of this cover
through the device of partially exhausting the
box of air and thus diminishing the internal
resistance. To the slightly moving middle
part of the cover is affixed a lever which
actuates, after some intermediate action, the
hand which moves on the dial to indicate, by
its record of variations in the weight of the
atmosphere, what the prospect of the weather
may be.</p>
<p>In the aneroid form of the steam-engine the cylinder is immensely
widened and flattened, and the broad circular lid, with its spiral
corrugations, takes the place of the piston. The rod, which acts
virtually as a piston-rod, is hollow, and it works into a bearing
which permits the steam to escape when the extreme point of the stroke
has been reached into a separate condensing chamber kept cool with
water. The boiler itself, with corrugated top, may take the place of
the cylinder.</p>
<p>In some respects this little machine represents
a retrograde movement, even from Watt's
original engine with its separate condenser;
but its extreme economy of first cost recommends
it to poor producers. In the near
future no country homestead will be without
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></SPAN></span>
its power installation of one kind or another,
and there is room for many types of cheap
motors.</p>
<p>A motor like the steam-turbine is evidently
the forerunner of other engines designed to
utilise the force of an emission jet of vapour
or gas. There are very many processes in
which gases generated by chemical combinations
are permitted to escape without performing
any services, not even that of giving up
the energy which they may be made to store
up when held in compression in a closed vessel.</p>
<p>The reciprocating forms found suitable for
steam and gas engines are hardly adaptable for
experiments in the direction of economising
this source of power, one fatal objection in
the majority of cases being the corrosive
effects of the gases generated upon the insides
of cylinders and other working parts. As
soon as the force of the emission jet can be
applied as a factor in giving motive power,
the fact that no close-fitting parts are required
for the places upon which the line of force
impinges will alter the conditions of the whole
problem. In the centrifugal sand pump, as
now largely used for raising silt from rivers
and harbours, the serious corrosive action of
the jet of sand and water upon the inside of
the pump has been successfully overcome by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></SPAN></span>
facing the metal with indiarubber; but nothing
of the kind could have been done if the working
of the apparatus had depended on the motion
of close-fitting parts, as in the ordinary suction
or lift pump.</p>
<p>As an instance of the class of work for
which gaseous jets, for driving turbines or
similar forms of motor, may perform useful
services the case of farm-made superphosphate
of lime may be cited. By subjecting bones
to the action of sulphuric acid the farmer may
manufacture his own phosphatic manures for
the enrichment of his land. But the carbonic
dioxide and other gases generated as the result
of the operation are wasted. Therefore it at
present pays better to carry the bones to the
sulphuric acid than to reverse the procedure
by conveying the acid to the farm, where the
bones are a by-product.</p>
<p>So bulky are the latter, however, that
serious waste of labour is involved in transporting
them for long distances. Calculations
made out by the experts of various state agricultural
stations show that, as a general rule,
it is now cheaper for the farmer to buy his
superphosphates ready made than to make
them on his farm. The difference in some
cases, however, is not great; and only a comparative
trifle would be needed in order to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></SPAN></span>
turn the balance. This may probably be found
in the economic value of the service rendered
by a turbine-engine or other device for utilising
the expansive power of the gases which are
driven from the constituents of the bones by
the action of the sulphuric acid.</p>
<p>For pumping water and other ordinary farm
operations the chemical gas-engine will prove
very handy; and the great point in its favour
will be that instead of useless cinders the
refuse from it will consist of the most valuable
compost with which the farmer can dress the
soil. Enamelled iron will be employed for
the troughs in which the bones and acid will
be mixed, and a cover similar to that placed
over a "Papin's digester" will be clamped to
the rim all round, the gases being liberated
only in the form of a jet used for driving
machinery.</p>
<p>For very small motors, applicable specially
to domestic purposes such as ventilation,
there is one source of power which, in all
places within the reticulation areas of waterworks,
may be had practically for nothing.
Probably when the owners of water-supply
works realise that they have command of
something which is of commercial value,
although hitherto unnoticed, they will arrange
to sell not only the water which they supply,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></SPAN></span>
but also the power which can be generated by
its escape when utilised and by the variations
in the pressure from hour to hour and even
from minute to minute.</p>
<p>The latter, for such purposes as ventilation,
for instance, will no doubt come to the front
sooner than the intermittent power now wasted
by the outflowing of water—a power which
is comparatively too small an item in most
cases to compensate for the outlay and trouble
of arranging for the storage of energy. But
in the case of the variation in the pressure,
without any escape of water at all, no such
disability appears. Experiments conducted
in several of the larger cities of England with
various types of water meters—which are
really motors on a small scale—have proved
the practicability of obtaining a source of
constant power from what may be termed the
ebb and the flow of pressure within the pipes
of a water supply system.</p>
<p>At every hour of the day there is a marked
variation in the quantity of water that is being
drawn away by consumers, and consequently
a rise and fall in the degree of pressure recorded
by the meter. In an apparatus for
converting the power derivable from this
source to useful purposes something on a very
small scale analogous to that which has already
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></SPAN></span>
been described in connection with utilising the
rise and fall of a wave will be found serviceable.
A small spur-wheel is gripped on two
sides by two metal laths, with edges serrated
like those of saws, and held against the wheel
by gentle pressure. Every movement of the
two saws—whether backwards or forwards—is
then responded to by a continuous circular
motion of the wheel, with the sole exception
of those movements which may be too small in
extent to include even as much as a single
tooth of the wheel. On this account it is important
that the teeth should be made as
numerous as possible consistently with the
amount of pressure which they may have to
bear.</p>
<p>Resort may be had to the principle of the
aneroid barometer in order to secure from
the water within the pipe-system the energy
by which these saw-like bands are driven up
and down with reciprocal motion. A very
shallow circular tank in the shape of a watch
is in communication with the water in the
pipes, and its top or covering is composed of
a concentrically-corrugated sheet of finely
tempered steel. At the centre of this is fixed
the guide which pushes and pulls the saw-like
laths. Every rise and fall in the pressure of
the water now effects a movement of the spur-wheel,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></SPAN></span>
and the latter may conveniently be connected
with the strong spring of a clockwork
attachment, so that the water pressure is
really used for winding up a clockwork ventilating-fan.</p>
<p>In the making of cheap steam and gas
engines, as well as in machine work generally,
rapid progress will be made when the possibilities
of producing hard and smooth wearing
surfaces without the need for cutting and
filing rough-cast metal have been fully investigated.
Many parts of machinery will be
electro-deposited—like the small articles
already mentioned—in aluminium or hard
copper at the metallurgical works where ore
is being treated for the recovery of metal, or
even at the mines themselves.</p>
<p>Side by side with this movement there will
be one for developing the system of stamping
mild steel and then tempering it. At the
same time also the behaviour of various metals
and alloys, not only in the cold state but also
at the critical point between melting and
solidification, will be much more carefully
studied so as to take advantage of every means
whereby accurately shaped articles may be
made and finished in the casting. It has been
found, for example, that certain kinds of type
metal, if placed under very heavy pressure
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></SPAN></span>
at the moment when passing from the liquid
to the solid condition, not only take the exact
form of the mould in which they are placed,
but become extremely hard by comparison
with the same alloy if permitted to solidify
without pressure.</p>
<p>The example of the cheap watch industry
may be cited to convey an idea of the immensely
important revolution which will take
place in the production of both small and
large prime-motors when all the possibilities
of electrotyping, casting, and stamping the
various wearing parts true to shape and size
have been fully exploited. An accurate timekeeper
is now practically within the reach of
all; and in the twentieth century no one who
requires a small prime motor to do the rough
work about home or farm will be compelled
to do without it by reason of poverty—unless,
perhaps, he is absolutely destitute and a fit
subject for public charity.</p>
<p>Many domestic industries which were
crushed out of existence during the early
part of the nineteenth century will therefore
be resuscitated. The dear steam-engine
created the factory system and brought the
operatives to live close together in long rows
of unsightly dwellings, but the cheap engine,
in conjunction with the motor driven by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></SPAN></span>
transmitted electricity, will give to the
working people comparative freedom again
to live where they please, and to enjoy the
legitimate pleasures both of town and of
country.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></SPAN></span></p>
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