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Collection: Books and Periodicals > Mining & Scientific Press
Volume 17 (1868) (428 pages)

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Page: of 428

The Mining and Scientific Press. 195
Mechanteal,
A New Dynamometer, or Force Measurer,
from Oregon.
A Dynamometeris an instrument for measuring force, in mechanics. Its usu is to
determine tho force uscd or necessary to be
used in driviug any given machiae or purt.
The want of au instruwont of this kind,
which would accurately registor power, has
hecn felt hy mechanics over since tho iuventiou of ninchiuery, and huudreds if not
thounuids of unsuccessfol attempts havo
heeu wado to construct such au uno. An
editorial writer iu the Scientific American
mentions some of the errors iuto which tho
best engiuecrs havo always fallen iu calculuting tho powers absorhed by veuted machiuery, aud deplores the fact that uo ac
curate method of measuring force has ever
been fouud. Itsays : ‘* Thorough method of
calculating the amount of power delivered
or trausmitted, by the width of the driveu
belt -a plau which was eommon enough a
few years ago aud may be uow—is as ridicnlons and as tar from the trnthas the formula
of the astronomical iustructor who taught
the pupils, iu estimating thedistance of the
fixed stars trom our planct, to guess at the
distance aud multiply by four.” A paper
by one of the most eminent English engiheers, ou this snhject, after mentiouing aud
desernbiug two of the best instrumouts ia
uso, says: ‘‘ We fiud ourself compelled in
the tace of those two hest indicators yet
made, to declare that an ahsolutely pertect
instrument of the kind remains yet to he
iuyouted.” There seems to be no dificulty
iu measuring force exerted in a straight
liue ; the trouble is to calculate power exorted iu a rotary direction, especially whero
it is irregular or eccoutric, as in cam movemeuts. We have some assurance that this
dificulty is about to be overcome hy an inveution of our fellow-townsman, John W.
Suttou. He has constructed an instrument
which, though notcomplete, isin operatiou
at the Willamette Iron Works, and promises
the most flattering and astonishing results.
A numher of mechanics who haye examined
it pronounce the most favorable opiniou of
its accuracy, and it would seem that it can
searccly fail to take the leading position
amoag all the rotary dynamometers known.
It would be useless to undertake an intelligible description of it without ample means
of illustration; hut we can give 2 general
idea of the principle upon which it works.
It eousists of two disks placed upon a shaft
and 2 hollow shaft so that they may move
relatively without appreeiable friction. One
of these disks is fastened to the driving pulley ; the other to the main shaft. ‘The two
disks are attached by means of spiral
springs. When the driving pulley starts, it
carries the attached disk and thatin turn, by
means of the spiral spring eonneetion, drags
after it the other disk which is attaehed to
and turns the shaft. ‘The springs, of eourse,
are drawn out by the advanee movement of
the tirst disk and the lagging movement ot
the other. Therelative movement or ehange
of position of the two disks, by meaus of
cog geariag within moves a eogged rack,
back and forth as the power is inereased or
diminished aud as the two disks ehange
their relative positions. The rack movesa
coliar along the shaft and hy an indicating
point registers the power. The spiral
springs are drawn or elongated, and contracted accordiug as the strain of the driving
power and the resisting machinery is
greater or less. The disks ehange relative
positions iu exact proportious, and every
change, however minute, is marked by the
indivator upon the gauge. Thusif it he
known how much power it requires to
elongate the springs a given distance, it beoomes a simple mathematical ealeulation involving only rules well known to engineers,
to determine the force applied, or what is
equivalent, the resistaneeof the machinery.
Mr. Sutton’s instrument has a gange based
upon these ealculations, which may he
made to show at auy instant the number of
horse powers, or thousands of pounds, or
even pounds, of force exerted. He has
filed a caveat tor a patent and taken all the
necessary steps to procure it. The model
muy be seen for a few days at the Willamette Iron Works, where it is now being finished. AJl the mechanics who have seen it
say that Mr. Sutton has eertainly made au
important and valuable discovery.—/ortland Oregonian.
Srezn Bormers.—Boile’ plates made of
cast steel havo recently been suhjeeted to a
series of practical experiments, in order to
test their value as eompared with those
made of wrought iron. The trials were
made at Harkett’s Ironworks, in Westphalia, and the results are reportod to have
been decidcdly in favor of steel.
CiearSream Excixes,—An English manufacturiug firm has recently brought out a
novelty in steain engines, as far as relates
to the price, in n two-horse power horizontal engiue, of good construction, which is
sold for the sum of eighteenpounds. Considerable credit isdue to the manufacturers
of such an eagine, for the skill required in
desiguing it to meet such conditions. ‘This
is tho liae of march that Progress must take
in regard to the steam engine.
Bripeine tue Mississipri ar St, Lovts.
The construction of a bridge across the
Mississippi has been commenced under the
engineering of Capt. J. B. Hads, who has se.
lected a spot whore the river is 1,500 feet
wide, and proposes three spans, the ceuter
of which is 515 feet, and the two side ones
497 feot each, The bed of tho river is a
shifting mass of saud overlyiag a hed of rock
to a considerable depth, involving tho construction of a pier 145 feet in height from
the rock to the lower roadway.
Tron SamevtinG Orrrations In Mexico.—
An euterprisiag Eaglish company, after
overcoming almost insurmountable difficulties, have established two extensive ironworks at Zimapan, in Mexico. In these
works steady employment is given to hetween 500 and 600 native laborers, aud over
600 tons of irou are annually manufactured
into bars or other varieties of merchantable
iron, and sent to the City of Mexico ever a
difficult mountain road, built and kept in
condition hy this company, at their own
expense, the Government never contributing in labor or money to its construction.
North of China Gold Mines.
Dr. Macgowan, who is occupied in preparing a work in Chinese on ‘‘ Mining and
Metallurgical Opperations for the Govornment of China,” sends us tho following
information respecting the newly discovered
gold mines in the north of China:
The intelligence of tho discoveries of
gold iu the Promoutory of Shantung will
have reached San Francisco by precoding
mails, and have occasioned, I apprehend,
some excitement among the hardy, restless
and adventurous miners of California aud
adjacent miuiug regions. I shall not say
that reports have been transniitted to Californiaand Australia with the design of creating an excitement amongst their nomadic
inhabitants, but Tean affirm that there is
no eoneealment on the part of many here
of the desire they entertain for an arrival}
of Californian and Australian fillihnsters ;
nor is the object of that desire eoneealed,
that objeet being the employment of miners
to revolutionize the eountry at least to the
extent of overthrowing Chinese exclusiveness; in other words, to render nugatory
such treaty obligations as are distasteful to
foreigners. The well-heing of those who
are to bring ahout those ehanges is as little
eonsidered as the feelings of Chinameu in
the matter.
Considerations of this uature, and the
requirements of good faith, have induced
the Consuls of the various treaty powers
to notify their nationals that until the
Imperial Goverument sees fit to ehange
its poliey, they will aid the Chinese in
enforcing the laws. As these laws prohihit the working of the mines alike to
natives and foreigners, our mining friends
should eousider well the situation before
expatriating themselves.
There is another consideration which deserves attention, and which many miners
can appreciate even in California and Australia: Chinamen can afford to work cheaper
than white men, and it is likely that with
the additional advantage of being at home,
ho ean so eompete with the foreigner as to
impoverish the latter.
It has been predicted that within a few
months we shall havearush of miners here,
numhering some two thousand. The prophesy was to effeet that immigration, and if
the mines should prove nuproduetive the}
men thus allured are likely to he great suf-}
ferers. With regard to the produetiveness
of the diggings, nothing can be positively
affirmed. It is almost demonstrated that
rich auviferous quartz is ahundant; also;
silver, eopper and coal. But whether or
uot the miner, whose capital is his hands,
ean delve and live, is more than any man
ean say at present.
On these grounds I counsel American
. miners to stay at home. .
Setentific Miscellany.
Familiarity With and Uses.
Magnetism.
of ElectroWere it uot for the two great discoveries
of telegraphy and olectro-metallurgy the
greater portion of our knowledge of electricity would be contined to scieutific men. .
From unnumbered experiments that have
hecn made, it seems the generation of electricity is n pheuomenon generally attcudant
upou the contact or conjunction of two
materials of different natnres; thns, not
only may it be derived from the decomposition of zino in an ordiuary gulvanio battery, but also by the simple contact of the
zine with anothor metal, as with iron,
the tension of the electrical current, being
in either case proportioned to the rapidity
with which tho zine is oxidized. In like
manner experimental batteries have been
made simply of alternate layers or slices of
two different kinds of vegetables, and also
of alternate disks of two different varieties
of wood. Pins or bolts of one variety of
wood driven into the hulls of ships formed
ot another variety, have been found to produce currents of appreciahle strength, and
sufficient to affect the adjacent metallic
sheathing.
Amongst the later applications of electricity to utilitarian purposes are the Saxby
method of detectiag flawsiniron, by which
the deflection of the needle when passed
along an iron bar or shaft indicates the
want of homogenconsness in the metal,
and the resulting unreliability of the same;
the electric test for the detection of adulteration in oils, devised some years ago hy
a French savant, and since extended hy an
English experiment founded upon the discovery that the number of vibrations and
the degree of resistance of the magnetic
needle, when made to form part of an electric eurrent, are affected by a given oil to
a greater or less degree, according as the
latter is more or less pure; and the experiments made hy M. Duchemiu, under the
authority of the Freuch Governmeat, relative to the practical use of the electricity
generated by the destruction of zinc in seawater, in which he has suceeeded in ringing an electrical bell for two months eontinnously, the suecess thus far attained
encouraging the projector to propose other
uses by similar means, as the proteetion
from rust of the bottoms of iron-elads, by
insuring communieation between the armor
and a powerful pile placed in the sea-water.
‘Tan JAPANESE Earraquaku ALARM NoT
Rew1aBte.—The following experiment was
made by Mr. Henry G. Hanks, of this city,
for the purpose of testing the reliability of
the “Japanese Earthquake Alarm.” We
give his own words:
“Having heard the Japanese instrument
deserihed, I made an experiment to satisfy
myself whether it was true or otherwise.
I proeured a small but powerful magnet
which I suspended from the eeiling of my
bed-room over my table. To the keeper I
hung a small tin pan, like the pan of a balance. This I loaded eontinuonsly with
weights until I had aseertained the full
power of the magnet. I then hung a bar
of irou of equal weight to the maguet without any other support than the attraction.
It is evident that the slightest decrease of
attractive power on the part of the magnet
would have allowed the pan to fall. The
weight of the bar was 2,578 kilogrammes—
over five and a half pounds avoirdupois.
This arrangement remained suspended for
several months, the bar pointing steadily
to the magnetie north. During this time
we had several earthquakes. Even the motion did not shake down the suspended har.
From this experiment I am led to helieve
that the Japanese indicator is a myth, or
that the earthquakes are governed hy different laws in Japan than they are on this
side of the Pacific. Ihave since conversed
with parties who have resided some timein
Japan, upon the snbject. They have all
heard of it, but Ihave failed to find any
one who has seen it. Iwish the “story”
could he traeed to its source, for such a
statement should not go withont eontradieAxTIFICIAL Mixeratoay.—The following
receipt for a foundation glass to make artificial precious stoncs, and the mineral coloring matter to beadded to make imitations
of particular minerals, aro instructive to the
student of mineralogy: M. Elsner recommeads tho taking of 45:7 grammes of pure
quartz, 22°8 grammes of pure and dry carbonato of soda, 7°6 grammes of borax, 3-4
grammes of uiter, and 11-8 grammes of minium. Theso ingredients, reduced to a fine
powder and well mixed, are bronght to perfect fusion in a Hessian crucible over a
charcoal fire. To color this mass add, for
sapphires, 0-106 grammes of carbonate of
cobalt; for emeralds, 0-53 grammes of oxide
of iron; for amethysts, 0-265 grammes of
carhonate of manganese; for topaz, 1:59
grammes of oxide of uranium. Inall cases
the fusion must be porfect, or a clear glass
will not be ohtained. Cutting greatly improves these imitations.
CarnonizatTion OF Woop.—M. Gillot, in
his memoir to the French Academy of Sciences on this subject, says the only condition essential for the production of good
charcoal, is that the operation shall proceed
slowly. The decomposition of wood commences at ahout the hoiling point of water.
In this way a given amount of wood will
yield about two-thirds its weight of charcon and seven or eight per cent. of acetic
acid,
Manvracture or Sunpuurio Actp.—A
new process for the production of sulphnrie acid has been patented in Franco by
MM. Tardani and De Susini. Its great
recommendation is that it dispenses with
the large leaden chambers. The sulphur
or pyrites is burned in compressed air, and
the sulphurous acid is first washed to free
it from arsenic, ete., and is then brought
into contact with the nitric vapors in a
small leaden chamber of peculiar constructiou.—Gas Light Journal.
Cuarcoan Dust or Lame-Buack AS A
Dismvrectant.—The disagreeable smell peculiar to india-rnbher may be got rid of hy
means of charcoal and, better still, by lampblack, which, as is well known, has the
property of shsorbing gaseous suhstauces.
The articles to he disiafected are put into a
close vessel, covered over with charcoaldust, aud theu exposed for a few hours to
a temperature of from 60 to 70 degrees
Ceutigrade, by means of a water bath.
When the articles aro taken out the chareoal-dust is brushed off, and it will then he
found that they have lost every trace of
had smell.
CaLIFoRNIA AND Nevapa Dryine up.—At
the recent meeting of the Seientifie Association at Chicago, Prot. W. P. Blake read
a short paper ‘‘ on the gradual desiccation
of the western portion of North America.”
He said that the interior lakes in the chain
of the Sierra Nevada were giving ample
evidence of wasting away, heing surrounded by water-lines, old beaches and terraces.
Some of the existing lakes had broad tracts
of lacustrine clay, extending a considerable
distance from their present shores. The
lakes of Mexico have also mueh narrower
beds than formerly, and there were evidences
of the decrease of water in them within
historie times. There were no traees of
volcanic action or any paroxysmal movement to produee so great a ehange. It was
impossible to avoid the eonclusion that the
gradual disappearance of these vast lakes
was due not to ehanges of level but to
grand climatic ehanges,—to a gradual deerease of precipitation whieh not only appeared to be continental but to be worldwide, iaasmuch as similar conditions were
found in Central Asia and elsewhere. He
referred to the gradual extinction of glaciers from the sonth northward, and regarded this as eonnected with the deerease
of precipitation.
Wiruin the last year business in Fol
som has increased to a eonsiderable extent;
new buildings have been erected, and real
estate has taken an upward tendeney, and
there has been a steady increase in popnilation, and eonfidenco in the future growth
and prosperity of the town has heen fully
tion. Ido uot know what sueh an earthquake as that lately experienced in South
America might do, but my own experiwents have proved to me that our ordinary
California earthquakes do not effect the
attractive power of the magnet in the
slightest degree.” .
estahlished.
Turre are 13 steam threshers now at work
in Salinas Valley, Santa Cruz eonnty, threshing out an average of 500 hushels per day,
and there is a demand for at least eight
more.