Domestic Sanitary Drainage and Plumbing: Lectures on Practical Sanitation Delivered to Plumbers, Engineers, and Others in the Central Technical Institution, South Kensington, LondonK. Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1903 - 506 pages |
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Page 16
... rising generation in taking full advantage of them , than perhaps any one of us yet fully comprehends . One of the most valuable endowments for a plumber is the power of drawing , and this faculty should be educed prominently in all ...
... rising generation in taking full advantage of them , than perhaps any one of us yet fully comprehends . One of the most valuable endowments for a plumber is the power of drawing , and this faculty should be educed prominently in all ...
Page 28
... rise until it arrives at the boiling point of 212 ° F. , and there it will remain because the added heat is all expended in separating the particles of water into steam . The comparative dimensions of this one sub- stance under the ...
... rise until it arrives at the boiling point of 212 ° F. , and there it will remain because the added heat is all expended in separating the particles of water into steam . The comparative dimensions of this one sub- stance under the ...
Page 36
... rise to the top , because the lead , owing to its greater specific gravity , will sink to the bottom ; he knows that if accident or mischief brings zinc into his solder he can purify the solder by melting , until the zinc is driven to ...
... rise to the top , because the lead , owing to its greater specific gravity , will sink to the bottom ; he knows that if accident or mischief brings zinc into his solder he can purify the solder by melting , until the zinc is driven to ...
Page 41
... rise in the tube to a higher level than the water in the vessel , and so remain in equilibrium , apparently in opposition to the law by which all liquids are stated to seek one level . If the same tube be dipped in liquid mercury , we ...
... rise in the tube to a higher level than the water in the vessel , and so remain in equilibrium , apparently in opposition to the law by which all liquids are stated to seek one level . If the same tube be dipped in liquid mercury , we ...
Page 42
... rise to a considerable height between the two sheets , and cause serious injury , by soaking the underlying plaster and woodwork , which the lead is intended to protect . In water - traps , placed under troughs and sinks to pro- tect ...
... rise to a considerable height between the two sheets , and cause serious injury , by soaking the underlying plaster and woodwork , which the lead is intended to protect . In water - traps , placed under troughs and sinks to pro- tect ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid aerometry alloy antimony appliances arrangement basin bath bend boiler bottom brass carbonic carbonic acid cast-iron cause cesspool cistern clean closet cold connected constant number copper cubic feet cylinder dangerous diameter discharge drainage earthenware Fahrenheit fall feet per second fixed floor flow flushing foot force foul gallons gallons per minute gravity hard water head of water heat hot water house drains hydraulic inches of mercury inlet interceptor iron joint lavatory lead pipes length liquid manhole chamber matter mercury metal multiply number of gallons orifice overflow particles piston plumbers plumbing pounds practical pressure pump safety-valve sal ammoniac sanitary sanitary appliances screwed scullery sewage sewer slop-sink socket soil soil-pipe solder solid specific gravity square inch square root steam supply surface syphon tank temperature trap trough tube urinal valve velocity ventilation walls waste waste-pipe water in feet weight zinc
Popular passages
Page 15 - For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass : for he beholdeth himself, and goeth his way, and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was.
Page 48 - The pressure of a liquid on any surface immersed in it is equal to the weight of a column of the liquid whose base is the...
Page 495 - Square Measure. 144 square inches 1 square foot, 9 square feet 1 square yard, 30J square yards 1 square rod, 40 square rods 1 rood, 4 roods 1 acre.
Page 117 - ... in suspension more than three parts by weight of dry mineral matter, or one part by weight of dry organic matter in 100,000 parts by weight of the liquid.
Page 375 - Rain-water (softest). 2. Upland surface water. 3. Surface water from cultivated land. 4. Polluted river water. 5. Spring water. 6. Deep-well water. 7. Shallow-well water (hardest).
Page 483 - Cube the diameter and multiply by '5236. To find the solid contents of any cone or pyramid — Multiply the area of the base by one-third of the perpendicular height. To find...
Page 18 - ... they leave the room, but by drawing on the blackboard before their eyes, or by setting the students themselves to draw, the geometric figures which they may hereafter need to construct in real work. Neatness and care in drawing geometrical figures- should be impressed upon the students;, the object c of such practice is to secure accuracy, which can only be attained by precision in practice. Take one easy problem, viz. to bisect a straight line. Here we have a diagram, and the directions : "...
Page 141 - Weisbach's formula, of 298 feet per minute in 4-inch diameter pipe flowing full or half full ; 1 in 60 = 279 feet, in 6-inch pipe; 1 in 100 = 264 feet, in 9-inch pipe; 1 in 250 = 213 feet, in 15-inch pipe; 1 in 300 = 213 feet, in 18-inch pipe. To obtain a velocity of three feet per second in circular sewers the following falls should be given, according to the same formula : — 15 in. 18 in. 21 in. 24 in. 30 in. 36 in.
Page 84 - ... particles or atoms of any substance are caused to move round and round each other,' or backwards and forwards with increased velocity, heat increases in proportion to the velocity of the movement and impact of the atoms. Heat is measured in this country by a standard unit, viz. the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a pound of water at 32° one degree Fahrenheit. The standard English unit for the measurement of work is the work done in raising one pound weight vertically one...
Page 451 - It is also contained in small quantities in galena (p. 210), and it can be extracted with profit from the lead prepared from this ore, even when the lead contains only two or three ounces of silver to the ton. The method thus adopted for the extraction of the silver depends upon the fact that the whole of the silver can be concentrated into a small portion of lead, by crystallization; metallic lead free from silver separates out in crystals, and a rich alloy is left. When this reaches the concentration...