LOCOMOTIVE ENGINE.
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about a ton and a quarter, when the engine is empty; and when filled for working,
the weight is about two tons, making the total weight of the engine twelve tons
when full. The weight of the engine when empty is ten tons; and that of the
driving wheels and axle is about a ton and three quarters, of which the cranked
axle has nearly a quarter of a ton.
When an engine is required for heavy work, as for carrying goods, and the
adhesion of four wheels must be made use of for propelling it, the front wheels, L',
are made of the same size as the driving wheels, and coupled with them. The
cylinders have then to be placed lower, and inclined upwards towards the cranked
axle, in order that the piston rods and guides may clear the front axle, L", as that
is raised up to a level with the cranked axle C' and the former position of the
piston rod, by the wheels D' and L' being of equal size. The driving wheels are
in this case sometimes made less than five feet, in order to increase the power of the
engine, as the diminishing of the diameter of the wheels diminishes the leverage of
the load upon the engine, or increases the leverage of the engine in moving the
load. But the speed of the engine is diminished in the same proportion, as
the smaller wheels will advance a less distance than the larger ones in the same
number of revolutions; but this is not material in the carrying of heavy goods, as so
great a speed is not required for them. In order to enable the engines to run faster
without having to make more strokes in the same time, the size of the wheels has
been increased, and a great many are now making with six feet driving wheels; the
size of the cylinders has also to be increased to supply the increased power that is
required, and they are made 13 inches diameter with the same stroke, 18 inches.
Wheels have been tried lately of double the size, or ten feet diameter, and even
larger in some instances, for the purpose of still more reducing the velocity of the
piston, and diminishing the loss of power from the resistance of the waste steam,
which is the great difficulty in locomotive engines. But it appears very question
able, whether the disadvantages arising from the use of such large wheels do not
more than compensate for their advantages in diminishing the velocity of the piston;
as there is a serious objection to them in their great weight, which, together with
that of the cranked axle, also proportionally increased, is necessarily unsupported by
the springs, and therefore the violent shocks produced by the rapid motion cannot
be eased by them. A certain velocity of the piston is also required for the effective
operation of the blast, and the velocity should for this reason be, probably, not less
than 300 feet per minute. Cog wheels, worked by the connecting rods, have also
been tried, doubling or trebling the velocity of the driving wheels; but they are
objectionable, from their jarring action with so rapid a motion.
Outside Framing, &c.—The principal or outside frame, N'O'P', (Plates LXXXIX.,
XC., XCI., and XCII.,) is placed along the sides of the engine outside the wheels, and