This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1840 edition. Excerpt: ...to the opposite, and the more irregularity in the make of the vessel, the more dips are requisite."--Gutteridge's Ganger. To tabulate the cooler, we have only to add the area at one-tenth of an inch deep continually to itself for every additional tenth of the depth from the bottom, thus, 25-957 Area at ...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1840 edition. Excerpt: ...to the opposite, and the more irregularity in the make of the vessel, the more dips are requisite."--Gutteridge's Ganger. To tabulate the cooler, we have only to add the area at one-tenth of an inch deep continually to itself for every additional tenth of the depth from the bottom, thus, 25-957 Area at 0-1 inches deep. 25-9U7 51-931 Area at 0-2 inches deep. And so on for three or four inches of the depth. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 3. Of Irregular Vessels. Irreoular Vessels are such as cannot be co veniently reduced to the usual forms of solids, and inclu' various large distillery vessels, whose hases approach the elliptical form, and whose sides hulge out either in tl middle or otherwise. Under this head may also he classi coppers with rising and falling crowns; vessels fixed very inclined positions, and vessels with internal incut brances. To GAUGE AND TABULATE AN IRREGULAR ELLIPTICi Vessel.--With a chalk-line divide the bottom of tl vessel into quarters, and afterwards draw 7, 9 or any oth odd number of perpendicular ordinates, according to t1 rules already laid down, (see page 105, ) and mark t1 ends of the ordinates with particular numbers, as 1 2 2, &c. In order to draw lines from the extremities of the ore nates up the sides of the vessel, so that ordinates may taken in any part of its depth at the same equal distanc from each other, as those at the bottom are from ea other, proceed in the following manner: --Hold a chalk plumb-line at the top of the vessel, so that the plumn falls on the ordinate I 1; then removing the plummet to t extremity 1, while the other end of the line is conthvu stationary, strike a line against the side of the vessel, fn the bottom to the top; proceed in like manner to stri lines from the extremities of...
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