GB Patent: GB-179,301,943
|
Steam engine
|
Patentee:
|
|
Matthew Pitts (exact or similar names) - Abinger, county Surrey, England |
Manufacturer: |
Not known to have been produced |
|
Patent Dates:
|
Granted: |
Mar. 25, 1793 |
Espacenet patent
Report data errors or omissions to steward
Joel Havens
|
Description: |
According to the article on boilers in the 1921 edition of Winston's Cumulative Loose-leaf Encyclopedia, "One idea which hindered advancement in boiler design for many years was that in order to generate a large quantity of steam the boiler should contain a large and compact volume of boiling water. Matthew Pitts (1793) seems to have been the first to definitely recognize the error of this belief. He found that the quantity of steam was proportional to the surface exposed to the heat. This truth indicates that as a steam generator the spherical form is the poorest, as it has the least exposed surface for a given volume. The plain cylindrical or tank boiler is the best of the early forms." |
|