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BEAM ENGINE

  • Beam engine
  • Early configuration of the steam engine

    A beam engine is a type of steam engine where a pivoted overhead beam is used to apply the force from a vertical piston to a vertical connecting rod.

    Beam engine

    Beam engine

    Beam_engine

  • Marine steam engine
  • Steam engine that is used to power a ship or boat

    the earliest form of steam engine, the beam engine. The typical side-lever engine had a pair of heavy horizontal iron beams, known as side-levers, each

    Marine steam engine

    Marine steam engine

    Marine_steam_engine

  • Newcomen atmospheric engine
  • Early steam engine invented by Thomas Newcomen

    engine was invented by Thomas Newcomen in 1712, and is sometimes referred to as the Newcomen fire engine (see below) or Newcomen engine. The engine was

    Newcomen atmospheric engine

    Newcomen atmospheric engine

    Newcomen_atmospheric_engine

  • Levant Mine and Beam Engine
  • British mine

    Levant Mine and Beam Engine is a National Trust property at Trewellard, Pendeen, near St Just, Cornwall, England, UK. Its main attraction is that it has

    Levant Mine and Beam Engine

    Levant Mine and Beam Engine

    Levant_Mine_and_Beam_Engine

  • Grasshopper beam engine
  • Beam engines that are pivoted at one end, rather than in the centre

    Grasshopper beam engines are beam engines that are pivoted at one end, rather than in the centre. Usually the connecting rod to the crankshaft is placed

    Grasshopper beam engine

    Grasshopper beam engine

    Grasshopper_beam_engine

  • Watt steam engine
  • Pioneering machine of the Industrial Revolution

    2 kW engine is under preparation. Carnot cycle Corliss steam engine Heat engine Thermodynamics Preserved beam engines Ivan Polzunov "Watt steam engine |

    Watt steam engine

    Watt steam engine

    Watt_steam_engine

  • Old Bess (beam engine)
  • 1777 steam engine

    is an early beam engine built by the partnership of Boulton and Watt. The engine was constructed in 1777 and worked until 1848. The engine is most obviously

    Old Bess (beam engine)

    Old Bess (beam engine)

    Old_Bess_(beam_engine)

  • Markfield Beam Engine and Museum
  • Historic site in London, England

    Markfield Beam Engine and Museum or sometimes just as Markfield Beam Engine is a Grade II listed building containing a 100 horsepower (75 kW) beam engine, originally

    Markfield Beam Engine and Museum

    Markfield Beam Engine and Museum

    Markfield_Beam_Engine_and_Museum

  • Garlogie Beam Engine
  • Scottish steam engine, built in 1833

    The Garlogie Beam Engine is a steam powered beam engine, built in 1833, that once powered a woollen mill at Garlogie, Aberdeenshire. It is a rare survivor

    Garlogie Beam Engine

    Garlogie_Beam_Engine

  • Cornish engine
  • Type of steam beam engine

    A Cornish engine is a type of steam engine developed in Cornwall, England, mainly for pumping water from a mine. It is a form of beam engine that uses

    Cornish engine

    Cornish engine

    Cornish_engine

  • Cataract (beam engine)
  • Speed governing device for steam engines

    device used for single-acting beam engines, particularly (though not exclusively) Cornish engines. The earlier atmospheric engines also used cataracts, but

    Cataract (beam engine)

    Cataract (beam engine)

    Cataract_(beam_engine)

  • Wanlockhead
  • Village in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland

    opened burial site. The beam engine and water bucket pumps were introduced into Wanlockhead in 1745. The history on the beam engine is not certain, but accounts

    Wanlockhead

    Wanlockhead

    Wanlockhead

  • Steam engine
  • Engine that uses steam to perform mechanical work

    refer to the piston or turbine machinery alone, as in the beam engine and stationary steam engine. Steam-driven devices such as the aeolipile were known

    Steam engine

    Steam engine

    Steam_engine

  • Newcomen Memorial Engine
  • Preserved beam engine in Devon, England

    The Newcomen Memorial Engine (sometimes called the Coventry Canal Engine) is a preserved beam engine in Dartmouth, Devon. It was preserved as a memorial

    Newcomen Memorial Engine

    Newcomen Memorial Engine

    Newcomen_Memorial_Engine

  • New Bedford River
  • Watercourse in Cambridgeshire, England

    in the intake needing to be lowered. The beam engine was replaced by a 400 hp (300 kW) vertical steam engine manufactured by Gwynnes in 1914, linked to

    New Bedford River

    New Bedford River

    New_Bedford_River

  • Compound steam engine
  • Steam engine where steam is expanded in stages

    1781, this technique was first employed on a Cornish beam engine in 1804. Around 1850, compound engines were introduced into Lancashire textile mills. There

    Compound steam engine

    Compound steam engine

    Compound_steam_engine

  • History of the steam engine
  • Heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid

    Lap Engine. In early steam engines the piston is usually connected by a rod to a balanced beam, rather than directly to a flywheel, and these engines are

    History of the steam engine

    History of the steam engine

    History_of_the_steam_engine

  • Wanlockhead beam engine
  • The Wanlockhead beam engine (also known as the Wanlockhead water-bucket pumping-engine or Straitsteps beam engine) is located close to the Wanlock Water

    Wanlockhead beam engine

    Wanlockhead beam engine

    Wanlockhead_beam_engine

  • Beam (structure)
  • Structural element capable of withstanding loads by resisting bending

    A beam is a structural element designed to carry loads perpendicular to its longitude (an element designed to carry a load pushing perpendicular to its

    Beam (structure)

    Beam (structure)

    Beam_(structure)

  • Copper Mine, Virgin Gorda
  • National park in the British Virgin Islands

    the sea. The beam engine at the Virgin Gorda copper mine is the oldest surviving Cornish beam engine in the world. The engine and beam were manufactured

    Copper Mine, Virgin Gorda

    Copper Mine, Virgin Gorda

    Copper_Mine,_Virgin_Gorda

  • Stationary steam engine
  • Fixed steam engine for pumping or power generation

    engine (1812) McNaught'ed compound beam engines (1845) Corliss engine(1859) Porter-Allen engine (1862) Uniflow engine Todd's (1885) Steam turbine (1889)

    Stationary steam engine

    Stationary steam engine

    Stationary_steam_engine

  • Six-column beam engine
  • Six-column beam engines are a type of beam engine, where the beam's central pivot is supported on a cast-iron frame or 'bedstead', supported on six iron

    Six-column beam engine

    Six-column beam engine

    Six-column_beam_engine

  • Resolution (beam engine)
  • Resolution was an early beam engine, installed between 1781 and 1782 at Coalbrookdale as a water-returning engine to power the blast furnaces and ironworks

    Resolution (beam engine)

    Resolution_(beam_engine)

  • Grasshopper
  • Common name for a group of insects

    Crowley, T.E. (1982). The Beam Engine. Senecio. pp. 95–96. ISBN 0-906831-02-4. "Grasshopper Beam Engine". Animated Engines. Archived from the original

    Grasshopper

    Grasshopper

    Grasshopper

  • Thomas Newcomen
  • English inventor, preacher and ironmonger

    This was used to work a beam engine, in which a large wooden beam rocked upon a central fulcrum. On the other side of the beam was a chain attached to

    Thomas Newcomen

    Thomas Newcomen

    Thomas_Newcomen

  • Eastney Beam Engine House
  • Building in Portsmouth, England

    50.7889°N 1.0457°W / 50.7889; -1.0457 Eastney Beam Engine House is a Grade II -listed Victorian engine house in Portsmouth, Hampshire, England. Dating

    Eastney Beam Engine House

    Eastney Beam Engine House

    Eastney_Beam_Engine_House

  • Winding engine
  • winding engines were stationary steam engines. The demand for winding engines was one factor that drove James Watt to develop his rotative beam engine, with

    Winding engine

    Winding engine

    Winding_engine

  • Single- and double-acting cylinders
  • Classification of reciprocating engine cylinders

    travel. Steam engines normally use double-acting cylinders. However, early steam engines, such as atmospheric engines and some beam engines, were single-acting

    Single- and double-acting cylinders

    Single- and double-acting cylinders

    Single-_and_double-acting_cylinders

  • Lap Engine
  • Beam engine designed by James Watt

    The Lap Engine is a beam engine designed by James Watt, built by Boulton and Watt in 1788. It is now preserved at the Science Museum, London. It is important

    Lap Engine

    Lap Engine

    Lap_Engine

  • Richard Trevithick
  • British inventor and mining engineer (1771–1833)

    of pump—with a beam engine—used widely in Cornwall's tin mines, in which he reversed the plunger to change it into a water-power engine. As his experience

    Richard Trevithick

    Richard Trevithick

    Richard_Trevithick

  • BeamNG.drive
  • 2013 video game

    engine calculates physics equations and problems in real-time during gameplay.[citation needed] Vehicles in the game consist of a soft-body node-beam

    BeamNG.drive

    BeamNG.drive

  • London Museum of Water & Steam
  • Museum in Brentford, London

    time the world's largest working beam engine) and the 100 inch engine, the largest surviving single-cylinder beam engine in the world. The museum is an

    London Museum of Water & Steam

    London Museum of Water & Steam

    London_Museum_of_Water_&_Steam

  • Blowing engine
  • Device which provides forced air to smelters

    open-air museum, Ironbridge Gorge. The beam engines "David & Sampson" are scheduled monuments. An 1817 beam blowing engine by Boulton & Watt, formerly used

    Blowing engine

    Blowing engine

    Blowing_engine

  • Cornish engine valve gear
  • engines valve timings can be driven by eccentrics or cranks, but in non-rotative beam engines these options are not available. In the Cornish engine valves

    Cornish engine valve gear

    Cornish engine valve gear

    Cornish_engine_valve_gear

  • Temple Works
  • Former flax mill and listed building in Holbeck, West Yorkshire, England

    John Marshall between 1836 and 1840 to contain a 240 horsepower double-beam engine by Benjamin Hick (B. Hick & Sons). Temple Works is the only Grade I listed

    Temple Works

    Temple Works

    Temple_Works

  • Watt's linkage
  • Four-bar straight-line mechanism

    rotary beam engines was called the parallel motion linkage, a development of "Watt's linkage", but using the same principle. The piston of the engine is attached

    Watt's linkage

    Watt's linkage

    Watt's_linkage

  • Grazebrook beam engine
  • 1817 large blower engine

    52.49258°N 1.88818°W / 52.49258; -1.88818 The Grazebrook Engine is an 1817 beam engine that was used for blowing air over the hot coals of a blast

    Grazebrook beam engine

    Grazebrook beam engine

    Grazebrook_beam_engine

  • House-built engine
  • support of the engine. Most house-built engines were early beam engines. A 'bob wall' in the engine house supported the pivot axle of the beam or 'bob'. This

    House-built engine

    House-built engine

    House-built_engine

  • Single-cylinder engine
  • Piston engine with one cylinder

    single-cylinder engines since the class replaced 125 cc (7.6 cu in) two-strokes in 2012. Engines of other sorts, like the beam engine and certain types

    Single-cylinder engine

    Single-cylinder engine

    Single-cylinder_engine

  • Old Bedford River
  • Watercourse in Cambridgeshire, England

    & 8 Vict. c. cvi), as they had installed a pumping engine in 1842. This was a Butterley beam engine, rated at 60 hp (45 kW), which replaced several wind

    Old Bedford River

    Old Bedford River

    Old_Bedford_River

  • Prestongrange Museum
  • Industry museum in Prestongrange, Scotland

    and the first shaft of Prestongrange's last mine was sunk in 1830. A beam engine, modified by Harvey and Company of Hoyle in Cornwall and shipped to Scotland

    Prestongrange Museum

    Prestongrange Museum

    Prestongrange_Museum

  • Whitbread Engine
  • and is the oldest surviving. A rotative engine is a type of beam engine where the reciprocating motion of the beam is converted to rotary motion, producing

    Whitbread Engine

    Whitbread Engine

    Whitbread_Engine

  • Poppet valve
  • Type of valve

    flow of steam into the cylinders of his beam engines in the 1770s. A sectional illustration of Watt's beam engine of 1774 using the device is found in Thurston

    Poppet valve

    Poppet valve

    Poppet_valve

  • Abbey Pumping Station
  • Science and Technology Museum in Leicester, United Kingdom

    next to the National Space Centre. With four working steam-powered beam engines from its time as a sewage pumping station, it also houses exhibits for

    Abbey Pumping Station

    Abbey Pumping Station

    Abbey_Pumping_Station

  • Crossness Pumping Station
  • Sewage pumping station in London

    remaining rotative beam engines in the world, with 52-ton flywheels and 47-ton beams. As Prince Consort was the last steam engine decommissioned, in 1953

    Crossness Pumping Station

    Crossness Pumping Station

    Crossness_Pumping_Station

  • Quarry Bank Mill
  • Preserved textile mill in Cheshire, England

    the motion moved the belt and powered the machinery. A beam engine and a horizontal steam engine were subsequently installed to supplement the power. The

    Quarry Bank Mill

    Quarry Bank Mill

    Quarry_Bank_Mill

  • Connecting rod
  • Piston engine component which connects the piston to the crankshaft

    A connecting rod, also called a 'con rod', is the part of a piston engine which connects the piston to the crankshaft. Together with the crank, the connecting

    Connecting rod

    Connecting rod

    Connecting_rod

  • Tees Cottage Pumping Station
  • monument housing two completely original pumping engines in fully working order: a 1904 beam engine, built by Teasdale Brothers of Darlington, which is

    Tees Cottage Pumping Station

    Tees Cottage Pumping Station

    Tees_Cottage_Pumping_Station

  • Blacksyke Tower
  • Beam engine now housed in the National Museum of Scotland originally came was the 'Caprington Colliery' with its numerous pits and the pumping engine

    Blacksyke Tower

    Blacksyke Tower

    Blacksyke_Tower

  • Internal combustion engine
  • Engine in which fuel combusts with an oxidizer

    An internal combustion engine (ICE or IC engine) is a heat engine in which the combustion of a fuel occurs with an oxidizer (usually air) in a combustion

    Internal combustion engine

    Internal combustion engine

    Internal_combustion_engine

  • Pumping station
  • Facilities including pumps and equipment for pumping fluids from one place to another

    Pinchbeck Engine, near Spalding (preserved beam engine and scoop wheel) Pode Hole pumping station, near Spalding, Lincolnshire (formerly steam beam engines, no

    Pumping station

    Pumping station

    Pumping_station

  • Brayton cycle
  • Thermodynamic cycle

    Brayton engines Brayton gas engine 1872 Brayton walking beam engine 1872 Brayton engine 1875 Brayton double-acting constant-pressure engine cut away

    Brayton cycle

    Brayton cycle

    Brayton_cycle

  • Pinchbeck Engine
  • 1833 beam engine, Lincolnshire, England

    The Pinchbeck Engine is a drainage engine, a rotative beam engine built in 1833 to drain Pinchbeck Marsh, to the north of Spalding, Lincolnshire, in England

    Pinchbeck Engine

    Pinchbeck Engine

    Pinchbeck_Engine

  • Tappet
  • Internal combustion engine part

    repetitive task had been automated through the use of tappets. The beam of the engine had a vertical 'plug rod' hung from it, alongside the cylinder. Adjustable

    Tappet

    Tappet

    Tappet

  • William McNaught (Glasgow)
  • Scottish engineer

    compound steam engine in 1845. This was a technique of improving the efficiency of a standard simple Boulton & Watt beam engine. The engine was compounded

    William McNaught (Glasgow)

    William_McNaught_(Glasgow)

  • Bredgar and Wormshill Light Railway
  • Heritage railway in Kent, England

    including a model railway, a Dutch street organ, a traction engine a steam roller, a Victorian beam engine, an American fire department Ladder truck and a range

    Bredgar and Wormshill Light Railway

    Bredgar and Wormshill Light Railway

    Bredgar_and_Wormshill_Light_Railway

  • Smethwick Engine
  • Watt steam engine

    of the British canal system Old Bess (beam engine) – the oldest surviving Watt steam engine "Oldest steam engine". guinnessworldrecords.com. Retrieved

    Smethwick Engine

    Smethwick Engine

    Smethwick_Engine

  • Parallel motion linkage
  • Six-bar straight-line mechanism

    the double-acting Watt steam engine. It allows a rod moving practically straight up and down to transmit motion to a beam moving in an arc, without putting

    Parallel motion linkage

    Parallel motion linkage

    Parallel_motion_linkage

  • Sowerby Bridge
  • Market town in West Yorkshire, England

    engineering and millwright company, also produced engines from its Valley Iron Works. The Markfield Beam Engine in north London is an example of its work. In

    Sowerby Bridge

    Sowerby Bridge

    Sowerby_Bridge

  • Stretham Old Engine
  • Historic site in Stretham

    flywheel The beam in the beam room. The beam room also acts as a museum. View of the engine 1925 Mirrlees diesel Butterley Co. boilers Pinchbeck Engine Dogdyke

    Stretham Old Engine

    Stretham Old Engine

    Stretham_Old_Engine

  • Arthur Woolf
  • Cornish engineer (1766-1837)

    Michael Loam, who introduced the man engine to the UK, was trained by him. When he returned to Cornwall, beam engine designs were crude, shackled by outdated

    Arthur Woolf

    Arthur Woolf

    Arthur_Woolf

  • Papplewick Pumping Station
  • Historic site in Nottinghamshire, England

    engines. One of the beam engines was operated in 1975, using the only boiler that was certified to be safe at the time. Since then, the second engine

    Papplewick Pumping Station

    Papplewick Pumping Station

    Papplewick_Pumping_Station

  • Crank (mechanism)
  • Arm attached to a rotating shaft for circular motion

    used on steam locomotives with inside cylinders. Beam engine – Early configuration of the steam engine Crankshaft – Mechanism for converting reciprocating

    Crank (mechanism)

    Crank (mechanism)

    Crank_(mechanism)

  • Sandfields Pumping Station
  • Disused pumping station in Lichfield, in Staffordshire, England

    community space and an enbryonic museum. The engine house was built in 1873 and contains the original Cornish beam engine installed at that time. It is a Grade

    Sandfields Pumping Station

    Sandfields Pumping Station

    Sandfields_Pumping_Station

  • Calvert's Engine
  • Calvert's Engine or the Newbridge Colliery Engine is a beam engine of 1845, now preserved on the campus of the University of Glamorgan, South Wales. Newbridge

    Calvert's Engine

    Calvert's Engine

    Calvert's_Engine

  • Textile manufacture during the British Industrial Revolution
  • Early textile production via automated means

    more power stimulated the production of steam-powered beam engines, and rotative mill engines transmitting the power to line shafts on each floor of

    Textile manufacture during the British Industrial Revolution

    Textile manufacture during the British Industrial Revolution

    Textile_manufacture_during_the_British_Industrial_Revolution

  • James Watt
  • Scottish inventor, engineer and chemist (1736–1819)

    double-acting engines as it produced the straight line motion required for the cylinder rod and pump, from the connected rocking beam, whose end moves

    James Watt

    James Watt

    James_Watt

  • Corliss steam engine
  • Type of steam engine using rotary steam valves

    8253. In this engine, the wrist plate was moved to the center of the cylinder side, as on later Corliss engines. This was still a beam engine, however, and

    Corliss steam engine

    Corliss steam engine

    Corliss_steam_engine

  • Crofton Pumping Station
  • Grade I listed pumping station in Great Bedwyn, United Kingdom

    operational Boulton & Watt steam engine dating from 1812, making it the oldest working beam engine in the world in its original engine house and capable of doing

    Crofton Pumping Station

    Crofton Pumping Station

    Crofton_Pumping_Station

  • John Harvey (ironfounder)
  • world class stationary beam engines designed to pump water out of the deep Cornish tin and copper mines. The Cornish beam engine became world-famous and

    John Harvey (ironfounder)

    John Harvey (ironfounder)

    John_Harvey_(ironfounder)

  • Sun and planet gear
  • Type of gear used in early beam engines

    reciprocating motion to rotary motion and was used in the first rotative beam engines. It was invented by the Scottish engineer William Murdoch, an employee

    Sun and planet gear

    Sun and planet gear

    Sun_and_planet_gear

  • Cataract (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Cataract, any large, powerful waterfall Cataract (beam engine), governor used for early steam engines Jehu (or John) O'Cataract, two pen names for John

    Cataract (disambiguation)

    Cataract_(disambiguation)

  • Western Springs Pumping Station
  • Historic waterworks of Auckland, New Zealand

    the beam engine began in 1964 and continued in stages over the following 44 years, returning it to an operational state. The restored beam engine was

    Western Springs Pumping Station

    Western Springs Pumping Station

    Western_Springs_Pumping_Station

  • Dorothea quarry
  • Former slate quarry near Nantlle, in Carnarvonshire, Wales

    water table they needed to be constantly pumped to stay dry. A Cornish beam engine was installed in 1904 to pump the pits; it stayed in use until 1951 when

    Dorothea quarry

    Dorothea quarry

    Dorothea_quarry

  • Water-returning engine
  • Early steam engine

    the Industrial Revolution in the middle of the 18th century. The first beam engines did not generate power by rotating a shaft but were developed as water

    Water-returning engine

    Water-returning_engine

  • Goulburn Pumping Station
  • Historic site in New South Wales, Australia

    historic Appleby Steam Engine, which is contained in the pumping station. The facility is the only complete, workable beam engine powered municipal water

    Goulburn Pumping Station

    Goulburn Pumping Station

    Goulburn_Pumping_Station

  • Heritage and Communities Trust
  • Museum in London, England

    Waltham Forest. It is the parent organisation of two museums; Markfield Beam Engine and Museum, and Walthamstow Pumphouse Museum. Both museums were previously

    Heritage and Communities Trust

    Heritage_and_Communities_Trust

  • McNaught
  • Surname list

    McNaught William McNaught (Glasgow) (1813–1881), engineer who compounded a beam engine William McNaught (Rochdale), (flourished 1840s-1870s), engineer of Petrie

    McNaught

    McNaught

  • Ryhope Engines Museum
  • Museum in Sunderland, England

    the finest pair of compound beam engines in Great Britain'. Each beam weighs 22 tons and each flywheel 18 tons. Both engines can be seen fully operational

    Ryhope Engines Museum

    Ryhope Engines Museum

    Ryhope_Engines_Museum

  • José Ramon Fernández (businessman)
  • Puerto Rican sugar baron

    Landmark, the steam engine is the "only West Point Foundry beam engine known to survive. It is also the only known 6-column beam engine by any American manufacturer

    José Ramon Fernández (businessman)

    José Ramon Fernández (businessman)

    José_Ramon_Fernández_(businessman)

  • Resolution
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    the reciprocal of the unit in the last place Resolution (beam engine), an early steam engine at Coalbrookdale Chiral resolution, a process in stereochemistry

    Resolution

    Resolution

  • Engine house
  • pumping engine for an atmospheric railway House-built engines, where the engine is the house. A house-built engine is a large beam engine where the engine house

    Engine house

    Engine house

    Engine_house

  • Solano (ferry)
  • Railroad ferry

    She was powered by two 2,000 horsepower (1,500 kW) walking beam steam engines. Each engine, with a 5-foot bore and 11-foot stroke cylinder, drove a paddle

    Solano (ferry)

    Solano (ferry)

    Solano_(ferry)

  • Land Rover Defender (L663)
  • Land Rover Defender model

    cross-car beam, while Keswick Green models are available with Ebony or Light Cloud Windsor Leather interior trim, and a Keswick Green cross-car beam. Engine choices

    Land Rover Defender (L663)

    Land Rover Defender (L663)

    Land_Rover_Defender_(L663)

  • Crankshaft
  • Mechanism for converting reciprocating motion to rotation

    A crankshaft is a mechanical component used in a piston engine to convert the reciprocating motion into rotational motion. The crankshaft is a rotating

    Crankshaft

    Crankshaft

    Crankshaft

  • Tom Walshaw
  • English mechanical engineer and author (1912–1998)

    a four-column beam engine (serialised in 1977) Lady Stephanie, six-column tank-bed beam engine Georgina, a 19th-century overcrank engine (serialised in

    Tom Walshaw

    Tom_Walshaw

  • Dalton Old Pump House
  • Building in County Durham, England

    Revival style, it is a grade II* listed building. Inside, a pair of beam engines (dating from 1873-79, when the complex was built) remain preserved in

    Dalton Old Pump House

    Dalton Old Pump House

    Dalton_Old_Pump_House

  • Basset Mines
  • Mining company in Cornwall, England

    the pumping engine house, which held the only inverted beam engine in Cornwall, the houses for the winding, compressor and crusher engines, and the miners'

    Basset Mines

    Basset Mines

    Basset_Mines

  • Piston
  • Machine component used to compress or contain expanding fluids in a cylinder

    A piston is a component of reciprocating engines, reciprocating pumps, gas compressors, hydraulic cylinders and pneumatic cylinders, among other similar

    Piston

    Piston

    Piston

  • Pumpjack
  • Drive for a reciprocating piston pump in an oil well

    term for this type of mechanism is a walking beam. It was often employed in stationary and marine steam engine designs in the 18th and 19th centuries. In

    Pumpjack

    Pumpjack

    Pumpjack

  • Hartley Colliery disaster
  • 1862 mining disaster in England

    1862 and resulted in the deaths of 204 men and children. The beam of the pit's pumping engine broke and fell down the shaft, trapping the men below. The

    Hartley Colliery disaster

    Hartley Colliery disaster

    Hartley_Colliery_disaster

  • Murray's Hypocycloidal Engine
  • Trust Rotative beam engine Smethwick Engine – the oldest working engine in the world, also at Thinktank Sun and planet gear Whitbread Engine – the second-oldest

    Murray's Hypocycloidal Engine

    Murray's Hypocycloidal Engine

    Murray's_Hypocycloidal_Engine

  • Mason Motor Car Company
  • Defunct United States motor vehicle manufacturer

    2-cylinder Duesenberg engine of 20-hp was introduced. This is the first version of the famous Duesenberg" walking beam" engine. In 1913, the $3,000 (equivalent

    Mason Motor Car Company

    Mason Motor Car Company

    Mason_Motor_Car_Company

  • General Motors LS-based small-block engine
  • Family of V8 and V6 engines

    forged steel crankshaft, forged powdered metal I-beam rods (both the crankshaft and rods from the LSA engine), forged aluminum pistons (9.0:1 compression)

    General Motors LS-based small-block engine

    General Motors LS-based small-block engine

    General_Motors_LS-based_small-block_engine

  • Return connecting rod engine
  • operate at a higher speed than beam engines. Like the smaller grasshopper beam engines, an advantage for Maudslay's table engines was that they could be made

    Return connecting rod engine

    Return connecting rod engine

    Return_connecting_rod_engine

  • Abbey Mills Pumping Station
  • Pumping station in London, England

    Joseph Bazalgette and was built between 1865 and 1868, housing eight beam engines by Rothwell & Co. of Bolton, two on each arm of a cruciform plan. The

    Abbey Mills Pumping Station

    Abbey Mills Pumping Station

    Abbey_Mills_Pumping_Station

  • Coultershaw Wharf and Beam Pump
  • Rural community in West Sussex, England

    Navigation. Until the 1970s, a water mill stood on the river housing a beam engine which was originally installed in 1782 by the 3rd Earl of Egremont to

    Coultershaw Wharf and Beam Pump

    Coultershaw Wharf and Beam Pump

    Coultershaw_Wharf_and_Beam_Pump

  • BEAM robotics
  • Robotics with analogue circuits

    power) There are a large number of BEAM robots designed to use solar power from small solar arrays to power a "Solar Engine" which creates autonomous robots

    BEAM robotics

    BEAM_robotics

  • Piston rod
  • Link connecting the piston to the crank in a reciprocating piston mechanism

    depending on the stress levels and gas compression. The first single-acting beam engines, such as Newcomen's, had a single power stroke acting downwards. Rather

    Piston rod

    Piston rod

    Piston_rod

  • Cornelius V. S. Roosevelt
  • Central Intelligence Agency officer

    Westview. ISBN 9780813340593. Roosevelt, Cornelius Van S. (1976). "1818 Beam Engine and Sugar Mill in Haiti". IA, the Journal of the Society for Industrial

    Cornelius V. S. Roosevelt

    Cornelius_V._S._Roosevelt

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BEAM ENGINE

  • Bream
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bream

    English : habitational name from Bream in Worcestershire, which is probably named in Old English as ‘the place where broom grows’, from brēme, an unattested dialect variant of brōm ‘broom’.English : nickname for a fierce or energetic person, from Middle English brem(e), brim(me) ‘fierce’, ‘vigorous’ (from Old English brēme ‘famous’, ‘noble’).English : variant of Braham.

    Bream

  • Bear
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bear

    English : from the Middle English nickname Bere meaning ‘bear’ (Old English bera, which is also found as a byname), or possibly from a personal name derived from a short form of the various Germanic compound names with this first element. Compare for example Bernhard. The bear has generally been regarded with a mixture of fear and amusement because of its strength and unpredictable temper on the one hand and its clumsy gait on the other, and in the medieval period it was also thought to typify the sins of sloth and gluttony. All these characteristics are no doubt reflected in the nickname. Throughout the Middle Ages the bear was a familiar figure in popular entertainments such as bear baiting and dancing bears.English : variant spelling of the habitational name Beer.Probably a translation of cognates of 1 in other languages, for example German Baer, and also an Americanized spelling of German Bahr.

    Bear

  • Bem
  • Boy/Male

    African, German

    Bem

    Peace; Bear

    Bem

  • Bean
  • Boy/Male

    Scottish

    Bean

    Fair skinned.

    Bean

  • BEAU
  • Male

    English

    BEAU

    Originally an English pet name BEAU means "handsome," derived from the French word, beau, meaning "beautiful." Later, in the 19th century, it was used as a word meaning "admirer" or "sweetheart." Its use as a forename seems to have been due to Wren's novel Beau Geste (1924) and the character Beau Wilkes in Mitchell's Gone With the Wind (1936). 

    BEAU

  • Beau
  • Boy/Male

    French American

    Beau

    Handsome. Famous namesakes: 19th-century British dandy Beau Brummell, AKA George Bryan Brummell;...

    Beau

  • Beram |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Beram |

    Fun, Eid, Enjoyment

    Beram |

  • Beal
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (of Norman origin)

    Beal

    English (of Norman origin) : from Old French bel(e) ‘fair’, ‘lovely’ (see Beau), either a nickname for a handsome man or a metronymic from this word used as a female personal name.English : habitational name from places so named in Northumberland and West Yorkshire. The former of these (Behil in early records) comes from Old English bēo ‘bee’ + hyll ‘hill’; the latter (Begale in Domesday Book) is from Old English bēag ‘ring’, here probably used in the sense ‘river bend’, or an unattested personal name Bēaga derived from this word + halh ‘nook’, ‘recess’.French (Béal) : topographic name for someone who lived by a mill race, from the Lyonnaise dialect term béal, bezale, bedale (of Gaulish origin).Americanized spelling of German Biehl or Bühl (see Buehl).Lt. Col. Thomas Beal(e) (c.1621–c.1676) of London settled in York Co., VA, about 1650.

    Beal

  • Byam
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Byam

    English : probably a habitational name from Bytham in Lincolnshire, so named with Old English bythme ‘valley bottom’ + hām ‘homestead’.

    Byam

  • BEA
  • Female

    English

    BEA

    Short form of English Beatrix, BEA means "voyager (through life)." 

    BEA

  • Bem
  • Boy/Male

    German African

    Bem

    Bear.

    Bem

  • Beam
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Beam

    English : from Old English bēam ‘beam’, ‘post’, a term with various applications. It denoted the beam of a loom and was therefore in some cases a metonymic occupational name for a weaver. In others it was a topographic name for someone who lived by a post or tree, or by a footbridge made from a tree trunk.Americanized form of German Boehm, or sometimes of Baum.

    Beam

  • Beat
  • Boy/Male

    Latin

    Beat

    F: Ameaning bringer of joy. In the Divine Comedy, Beatrice was Dante's guide through Paradise,...

    Beat

  • Bram
  • Boy/Male

    Irish Hebrew Dutch English Scottish Gaelic

    Bram

    Bram

  • Beat
  • Girl/Female

    Latin

    Beat

    andmeaning bringer of joy.

    Beat

  • Beag
  • Boy/Male

    Irish

    Beag

    Small.

    Beag

  • Beal
  • Boy/Male

    American, British, English, French

    Beal

    Handsome

    Beal

  • Bean
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bean

    English : metonymic occupational name for a grower or seller of beans, from Old English bēan ‘beans’ (a collective singular). Occasionally it may have been applied as a nickname for a someone considered of little importance.English : nickname for a pleasant person, from Middle English bēne ‘friendly’, ‘amiable’ (of unknown origin; there is apparently no connection with Bain or Bon).Scottish : Anglicized form of the Gaelic personal name Beathán, a diminutive of beatha ‘life’.Translation of German Bohne, or an altered spelling of Biehn. See also Bihn.Mistranslation of French Lefevre. As the vocabulary word fèvre ‘smith’ was replaced by forgeron, the meaning of the old word became opaque, and the surname was reinterpreted as if it were La fève, from fève ‘(fava) bean’. Lefevre is the most common name in French Canada; great numbers of them migrated to the US, where many adopted the name Bean, in the belief that it was a translation of Lefèvre. See also Lafave.

    Bean

  • Beat
  • Surname or Lastname

    Scottish

    Beat

    Scottish : variant of Bate or Beath.English and Scottish : from a short form of the female personal name Beton (see Beaton 2).

    Beat

  • Bear
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, German

    Bear

    Bear; Courageous

    Bear

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Online names & meanings

  • Agalvili
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Tamil

    Agalvili

    Broad Eye; Wide Eye

  • Lamees
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim/Islamic

    Lamees

    Pure silk

  • Janardana | ஜநார்தந
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Janardana | ஜநார்தந

    Lord Krishna, One who helps people, Liberator from the cycle of birth and death

  • Anerae
  • Boy/Male

    French

    Anerae

    Masculine; manly; brave.

  • Georgiana
  • Girl/Female

    Latin American Greek

    Georgiana

  • Carvell
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Irish (of Norman origin)

    Carvell

    English and Irish (of Norman origin) : habitational name from either of two places called Carville (see Carville) in Calvados and Seine-Maritime, France.Irish : variant of Carroll.

  • Mesh
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Mesh

    Loved by Many; A Zodiac Sign

  • Nejat
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Australian, Muslim

    Nejat

    Freedom; Stress Free

  • Lamees | لامیس
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim

    Lamees | لامیس

    Soft to the touch, Pure silk, Tender woman

  • Olen
  • Boy/Male

    American, British, English, German, Norse

    Olen

    Holy; Ancestor; Relic

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Other words and meanings similar to

BEAM ENGINE

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing BEAM ENGINE

BEAM ENGINE

  • Beat
  • n.

    A recurring stroke; a throb; a pulsation; as, a beat of the heart; the beat of the pulse.

  • Belam
  • v. t.

    To beat or bang.

  • Bear
  • n.

    An animal which has some resemblance to a bear in form or habits, but no real affinity; as, the woolly bear; ant bear; water bear; sea bear.

  • Beat
  • v. t.

    To give the signal for, by beat of drum; to sound by beat of drum; as, to beat an alarm, a charge, a parley, a retreat; to beat the general, the reveille, the tattoo. See Alarm, Charge, Parley, etc.

  • Team
  • v. t.

    To convey or haul with a team; as, to team lumber.

  • Beat
  • imp.

    of Beat

  • Beam
  • n.

    The width of a vessel; as, one vessel is said to have more beam than another.

  • Beam
  • v. i.

    To emit beams of light.

  • Beam
  • n.

    A ray or collection of parallel rays emitted from the sun or other luminous body; as, a beam of light, or of heat.

  • Beat
  • p. p.

    of Beat

  • Beam
  • n.

    Fig.: A ray; a gleam; as, a beam of comfort.

  • Beam
  • n.

    A cylinder of wood, making part of a loom, on which weavers wind the warp before weaving; also, the cylinder on which the cloth is rolled, as it is woven; one being called the fore beam, the other the back beam.

  • Beam
  • n.

    A heavy iron lever having an oscillating motion on a central axis, one end of which is connected with the piston rod from which it receives motion, and the other with the crank of the wheel shaft; -- called also working beam or walking beam.

  • Beam
  • v. t.

    To send forth; to emit; -- followed ordinarily by forth; as, to beam forth light.

  • Beamy
  • a.

    Resembling a beam in size and weight; massy.

  • Beam
  • n.

    One of the long feathers in the wing of a hawk; -- called also beam feather.

  • Beamy
  • a.

    Emitting beams of light; radiant; shining.

  • Beat
  • v. t.

    To strike repeatedly; to lay repeated blows upon; as, to beat one's breast; to beat iron so as to shape it; to beat grain, in order to force out the seeds; to beat eggs and sugar; to beat a drum.

  • Bear
  • v. t.

    To bring forth or produce; to yield; as, to bear apples; to bear children; to bear interest.

  • Bear
  • v. t.

    To endeavor to depress the price of, or prices in; as, to bear a railroad stock; to bear the market.