Full text: The steam engine: its invention and progressive improvement, an investigation of its principles, and its application to navigation, manufactures, and railways (Vol. 1)

472 
EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. 
fires. The wheels, which are of the common kind, are about 22 or 23 feet in dia 
meter, and the boards 9 feet wide. The cylinder is 56 inches, and the stroke 5 feet 
6 inches. 
Plate XCV. presents a view of the vessel at sea, off Bombay; and Plate XCVI. 
shews the sheer draught, lines of bottom, &c. 
GENERAL OBSERVATIONS UPON THE CONSTRUCTION OF STEAMERS. 
The construction of the draught should be made with very strict attention to the 
weight of the hull, fittings, stores, engines, coals and cargo, (if required to take goods,) 
reducing as much as possible the component parts of the hull, and giving that form 
which is best adapted for velocity. 
It should be particularly considered, as stated by Sir Robert Seppings, that the 
strength of any fabric consists in the disposition of the materials, (in the connection and 
security of its several parts,) and that “ the strength of a vessel?Jet its construction he what 
it may, can never exceed that of its weakest partor that “ union is strength,” i. e. 
giving the required strength with the least quantity of wood, copper, iron, &c.; 
keeping every part of the fabric as tight as is consistent with safety, equal to contend 
with the violent action and impulse it will be subject to at sea. The fastenings 
recommended, (and which have been so extensively introduced,) are those laid 
down in “ The New Principle of Ship Building,” by Sir Robert Seppings; a system of 
trussing and diagonal ties of iron. (Vide the Philosophical Transactions.) 
The form should be, in midships, nearly a square with the corners rounded off, 
or “ a long, flat floor” gradually rising to an acute angle at the extremes, or fore and 
after bodies, similar to the water lines or horizontal sections of those renowned and 
celebrated schooners of America called “ Clippers.” The dead wood or extreme 
fineness abaft being done away, as shewn in the following diagram: 
A, The water or horizontal load line. 
B, The new line of keel, the dead wood shewn by the shaded part to be done 
away with. 
C, The old line of keek
	        
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