Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,357 pages of information and 244,505 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Index: Miscellaneous

From Graces Guide
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Miscellaneous Index.

Note: This is a sub-section of The Engineer 1910 Jan-Jun: Index

View the Volumes that this Index refers to.

  • ABELL, T. B. on Modern Screw Propeller KeeulU, 208> 334 ; (Lotter), 443
  • Accelerometer and Speedometer, Elliott, 455

Accidents:

  • American Railway Accidents, 490
  • British Railway Accidents in 1909, 489
  • Canal Head Sluice in Egypt, Collapse, Sir Banbury Brown, 265
  • French Railway Accident, 637
  • Stent's Nest Railway. 118, 123, 357, 363; (Utters), 258, 380. 420. 443
  • ACCUMULATION of Shore Dotritos. &c., Proffessor A. H. Gibsen, 632

Aeronautics:

  • Aero and Motor Boat Show at Olympia, 270, 302, 326, 364
  • Aeronautics in 1009, 18
  • Acroplanes, The Construction of, 352
  • Army Dirigible Balloons, 259
  • Balloon Shed, Army, at Farnborough, Cleveland Bridge and Engineering Company, 4S6, 487, 488
  • Crystal Palace, Flight at, Grahame White, 596
  • Farman Biplane, 352
  • German Airship, M III., 387
  • Gnome Cylinders, 498
  • London to Manchester Flight, L. Paulhan and Grahame White, 443
  • AGRICULTURAL Machinery in Rusifia, 337
  • Air Compressors—Compressors
  • Alexander, J. T. Burton, on Nord of France Express Engines, 102
  • Aluminium—xry Alloys
  • Alloys, Aluminium and its, Dr. R. Seligman and F. J. Willott. 62, 97
  • of Copper, Aluminiom and Manganese, Dr. W. Rotenhain and F. C. bants* bury, 87, 103, 190
  • Copper-Arsenic, J. D. Bsngoogh and 6. P. Bill, 62
  • Industrial Gold, Assay of, E, A, Smith, 62
  • Non-ferrous Metals and, Failure io Practice, T. V, Hughes, 77,
  • Alumininm Conductors, Bare, British Aluminium Company, 490
  • Solder, Standard Alloy Company, 39 American Engineering News, 259
  • Marine Turbines and Gearing, Westinghouse Company, 178, 179
  • Auiineter—jw-r ^ectrical Matters
  • Angles and Circular Pitches for Spiral Gears, lable of, 608

Annual Article:

  • AERONAUTICS IM 1909, 18 JauHHftf 'ith, 1910)
  • Flying Events of 1909, 19
  • Flying Machines of 1909, 18
  • BRIDGES IN 1909,20
  • American Continents, 20
  • Australasia, 20
  • Europe, 20
  • India, 20 Sudan, The, 20
  • United Kingdom, 20
  • CHEMISTRY IN 1909, 19
  • Electro-Chemistry, 19
  • General and Physical, 19
  • Inorganic and Analytical, 19
  • Rusting, 20
  • ELECTICAL ENGINERRING in 1909, 5
  • Colliery Work, 5 Electro-Chemistry, 6
  • Generating Stations, 5
  • Lamps, 6 Railways, 5
  • Telegraphy and Telephony, 6
  • Tramways, 5
  • Vehicles, Ao., 5
  • Workshop Driving, 5
  • GAS SUPPLY IN 1909, 20
  • Gas Manufacture, 21
  • Meetings, 21 Metropolis, The, 20
  • Public Lighting, 20
  • Residual Products, 21
  • Tanks and Holders, 21
  • GAS AND OIL ENGINBS IN 1909, 17
  • Engines for Textile Factories, 18 Gas Engines, Largo, 17 Producers, 17 Pump, 18 General Progress, 18
  • Oil Engine, 18
  • Vertical Engines, 17
  • HARBOURS AND WATERWAYS IN 1909, (Supplemmtt January Tth, 1910) Belginm, 31 Blyth, 30 Buenoe Ayres, 31 Canada,
  • Fishguard Barbour, 4 (Supplement. Jannaru 7M, 1910)
  • France, 31
  • Germany, 31 Humber, The, 5 Liverpool, 4 London, Port of, 4 Manchester Ship Canal, 5
  • Naval Harbours, 4 (Supplnnetd, January "ttk. 1910)
  • Panama Canal, 31
  • Rangoon, 80
  • Ribble, The, 4
  • Scotland, 30 Simon's Bay, 30 Singapore. 30 SoutbamptoQ, 4 South Wales, 4 Sudan, 30
  • Hnez Canal, 30 HniUd States, Wear, River, 30
  • LEGISLATION IN 1909, 21
  • LOCOMOTIVE ENOINEERING IN 1909, 17 Accideuta,
  • Experimeot in Engine Comparison, 17 Foreign Iz)coniotiv©«, 17
  • Superheaters and Feed-water Iloaters, 1/ ; , (Lefor), 101 ‘
  • MARINE ENGINEERING IN 1909, 16
  • Boiler Trouble, Curious, 16 Conden'iers, Necessity for Perfect, 16 Driving, Proposed New Methods, 16 Engines, Better, 16 ; (Letter). 101 Four-crank, 16 Reciprocating, and Turb’nes, 16 Propeller Ethoiency, 16 Superheating, 16
  • Turbine Ships, High-speed, 16 Turbines, Upkeep of, 16
  • MERCANTILEK SHIP'S IN 1909, 18 (Suft/thttuni, January Ilk, 1910)
  • MOTOR CARS IN 1909, 18
  • RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS IN 1909, 22, 32 Contiuent of Europe,22 January
  • Hk, 1910)
  • Greater Britain, 23 Other Railways, 32 Tramways, 3o United Kingdom, 22
  • SANITARY ENGINEERING IN 1909, 9 Belfast and Ulva l.AiUMima, 10 Bradford's Eiholt Siwage Disposal Works, 10 Cardiff Western Dl^it^ict Mnin Sewer, 10 Distillery Refuse, 9
  • Glasgow Main Drainage, 10 (Supplfmrtit, January llh^ 1910)
  • London Maio Draiosge. 9 Southern Low-level Sewer, 9 Manchester Drainage, 10 Monmouthshire Lirge Sewerage Works. 10 Sea Water, Action on Sewage, 10 Sewage Treatment and Disposal, 9 Sheffield Disposal Works Extension, 10 Warsop New Disposal Works, 10
  • THE STRAW ENGINE IN 1909. 16
  • WAR MATERIAL IN 1909, 3
  • Airships, 3 Ainmunitioo, 3 Artillery : Organisation, 3 Automatic Rille, 4 Communications, 3
  • Far East, 4 FortiHcation, 3 Guns for Airships, 3 Machine Guns, 4 Motor Transport, 3 South America, 4 Teobnical Progress, 3
  • WATER SUPPLY IN 1909, 8 Aqueduct Proposed for Aberdeen, 9 Burv Distriet, Scout Moor Reservoir, 9 (zarfisle's Castle Carrock Reservoir, 9 Derwent Valley Water Board, 8 Dunfermline District Water Supply, 9 Glasgow, Increased Supply for, 9 Honor Oak, Covered Filter Water ReserroT,
  • 8 {Supplement^ Jamtary Ith^ 1910)
  • Ijarge Water Towers, 9 Llandudno Water Scheme, Completion, 9 Mechanical Filtration. 9
  • Metropolitan Water Board, 8 Mohno Valley Dam, 9 Penrith, New Works for, 9 Storage of Raw River Water, 8 Swansea, Shortage of Water, 9 Thirlmere Pipe Line, The Third, 8 Troon Waterworks, Loch Brandan Scheme, 9
  • Water Tank for Calcutta, 9,(X)0,000 Gallon, 9
  • ENGINEERING IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1909, 71. 86, 123. 139, 166
  • Buildings, 140
  • Canals and Waterways, 85
  • Electrical, 166
  • Fire Protection Service, 124
  • Harbours, 86
  • Hydro-electric Plants, 166
  • Iron and Steel, 71
  • Irrigation and Drainage, 86
  • Marine and Naval Engineering. 85
  • Mining. 167
  • Sewerage and Sewage Purilication, 139
  • Streets and Roads. 140
  • Water Purification, 123
  • - Supply, 123
  • ANSLOW. F., on Installation of Power at Collieries, 611
  • Anstcy, *Eogineor-Lieutenant H. C., R.N., Ap- puintment as InB|x>otor General of Machinery, Chilian Navy, 573
  • Apprentices, The Law Affeoting, 117 Aqueduct, Derwent, Grindleford to Howsley
  • Section, Alex. H. Jameson. 216. 243, 252, 296; ^Letter), 304 (Ttro-paye Supplntirnl^ Mareh 4zA,
  • Architectore as a Profession, 593
  • Armour, Armoured Cars, &c.—War Material Plate, Production of, 265
  • Arnold, Professor, and A. A. Read on Iron, Manganese. and Carbon, 4^ on Uniform Nomenclature of Iron and Steel, 485
  • Artesian Wells for Metropolitan Water Supply, E. Bailey-Denton, 610
  • Ash Conveyor, Pneumatic, Darley Engineering Company, ^24
  • Association of Engineers, Manchester:
  • Steam Turbines for Driving Textile Mills, G. B. Stone, 100
  • Steel Foundry Practice. Percy Longmuir, 2<0 Weaving Appliances, F. Nasmith, 50
  • Association, Incorporated Municipal Electrical:
  • Air Leakage into Flues, 64M Annual Conference, 626, 618
  • [ Commercial Advancement of Klootric Supply,
  • (I) A. C. Cramb, (2) H. C. Bishop. 626
  • 1 Costs and Steam Consumption, Continuous Records of, 618
  • Exhaust Steam and Mixed Pressure Turbines for Electric Stations, F. A. Newington and Ashton Bromnor, 626, 648
  • Kinetic Ejector, Richardsons, Westgarth, 618
  • Presidential Address, 626
  • Association of Mechanical Engineers, Birmingham:
  • Development and Use of the New High-speed Steels, Walter Carter, 154
  • Institute of Chemistry:
  • Report, Building, 2^13, 417
  • Institute, Iron and Steel:
  • A2 Critical Point in Chromium Steel, Harold Moore, 485
  • Annual Meeting, 437, 484
  • Carnegie KoAoarch Scholarships wards, 484
  • Chemical and Meohmica) Relations of Iron, Manganese and C«irboQ, Professor Arnold and A. A. Road, 484
  • Constitution of Cast Irons and Carbon Steels, Ac., D. M. Lovy, 485
  • Crystallography of the Iron Carbon System, V. ) A. Kroll, 485 I
  • Cutting Properties of Tool Steel, Edward G. . Herbert, 473. 485, 500
  • Development in the Produotion of Electric I Power, Ac., D. Selby Bigge, 458, 484 i
  • Duke of Devonshire's Presidential Address, 457
  • Economy and Design of Modern Reversing
  • Rolling Mill Steam Engines, E. G. Sebmer < and Dr. R. Drawe, 458, 484
  • Elastic Breakdown of Ceitain Steels, Prof. C. I A. M. Smith, 485
  • Girud Furnace, W. Borchers, 458, 470, 484 ,
  • Homogeneity of Metals, O. Tagayetf, 485 Physical Properties of Two per Cent. Chromium Steels, Prof. A. MoWillium, 485
  • Recent Investigation in Caao-bardoning,Sydney A. Grayson, 485
  • Uniform Nomenclature of Iron and Steel, Prof. I Arnold, 485 ,
  • Institute of Marine Engineers:
  • Cylinder l/oeses, >J. Clark, 175
  • Marine Boilers on Long Voyages, Treatment of, M. Ruck-Keene, 66
  • Institute of Metals:
  • Aluminium and its Alloys, Dr. R. Soligmann I and F. J. Willott, 62, 97
  • Analyses, Suggested Record of, C. A. Klein, 97 i
  • Annual Meeting, Election of President and Officer". Dinner, 61, 97
  • Art of Working Metals in Japan. Prof. W. i Gowland, 539
  • Copper-arsenic Alloys, J. D. Bengough and B. P. Hill, 62
  • Corrosion Committee Appointed, 574
  • Gold Alloys, Industrial, Assay of, E. A. Smith, 62
  • Non-ferrous Metals and Alloys, Failure in Practice of, T. Vaughan Hughes, 77, 97
  • Phosphor Bronze, Contribution to the Study of, O. F. Hudson and E. F. Law, 97
  • Presidential Address, 62
  • Use of Carbonaceous Filters io the Smelting of Zinc, Ac., C. 0. Bannister, 98
  • Visits to the Royal Mint and Sir John Cass Technical Institute, 63
  • Institute of Scotland, Mining
  • Meeting, 611
  • Power at Collieries, Installation of, F. Anslow. 611
  • Production at Collieries, R. Crawford and H. Moores, 611
  • Institution of Civil Engineers:
  • Annual Dinner, 314
  • Design of Rolling Stock for Smooth Rail Working on Heavy Gradients, F. W. Baoh, 130
  • Filtration, Data on, W, R, Baldwin-Wiseman, 155
  • Hudson River Tunnels, C. M. Jacobs, 232
  • James Forrest Lecture, Sir J. Gavoy, 648
  • New Building, 538 ; (Letters), 673, 690
  • Pass List, February Examinations, 1910, 314
  • Sheffield Water Supply, L. 8. M. Marsh, 155
  • Telegraphy and Telephony, Developments, Sir John Gavev, 648
  • STUDENTS’ MEETINGS :
  • Construction and betting-out of the L.C.C. I Low-level Sewer, L. T, Wilson, 155
  • Constnietioo of Warships, N. Maas, 314
  • Institution of Electrical Engineers:
  • Earthed r. Insulated Neutrals in Colliery Installations, W. Wellesley Wood, 446
  • Short-circuiting Large Electric Goneratzors. Miles Walker, 365
  • Turbo Field Magnets for Alternate Current Generators, Miles Walker, 366
  • GLASGOW LOCAL SECTION :
  • Electric Braking on Glasgow Tramway Cars, R. Nelson, 414
  • Institution of Engineers and Ship, builders in Scotland:
  • Steamship Repairs by Electric and Autogenous Welding, A. Scott Younger, 220
  • Institution, Junior, of Engineers :
  • Annual Dinner, 172
  • Creation and Development of a Successful Commercial Port, R. Ii. H. Heenan, 172
  • Visit to Westminster Elecinc Supply Corporation Station, 98
  • Institution of Mechanical Engineers :
  • Alloys of Copper, Aluminium, and Manganese, Dr. W. Rosenbaioani Mr. E. C. A. H. LanU* berry, 87, 103, 190
  • Annual Meeting and Report, 190
  • Application of the Pitot Tube to the Testing of Impulse Water Wheels, W. R. Eckart, 34, 44
  • Comparison of the Tensile, Ac., Methods of Testing Steel, Captain R. Sankey. Messrs. B. Blount and Kitkaldy, .5*59, 575, 598
  • Compounding and Superheating in Horwich IxMorootivoa, G. Hughes, 287, 309, 315, 333, 338, 405, 411
  • Dinner, Anniversary, 405
  • Ewing Extensometer, 87
  • Hardening of Carbon and IJOW Tungsten Tool Steels, 8. N. Brayshaw, 405, 569
  • Meetings, 34, 87, >309, 405, 569
  • Visit to the Power Plant of the Ontario Power Company at Niagara Falls, C. W. Jordan, 35, 44
  • Institution of Naval Architects:
  • Annual Meeting, 231, 271, 298, 322
  • Application of Internal Comhusdon Engine to Fishing and Connneroial Vessels, binton Hope, 300
  • Battleship of the Future, Admiral Bacon, 273, 284
  • Bnuleness of Mild Steel due to Nitrogen, C. £. Stroroeyer, 321
  • Cargoes on Board Ship, Ascertaining the Weight, A. Murray, 299
  • Charter to be Applied for, 298
  • Elections ; Presidential Address, Earl Cawdor ; Programme of Jubilee Meetings ; Awards ; Dinner, 271
  • Electric Motor for Marino Propulsion, W. P. Durtnall, 300
  • Experimental Investigation on Wake and Thrust Deduction Values, W. J. Luke, 298
  • Marine Steam Turbine and Mechanical Gearing, Application of, to Merchant Ships, Hon. C. A. Parsons, 322
  • Modern Screw Propeller Results, Ac., T. B. Abell, 298
  • Motor Lifeboats of the Royal N.L. Institution, J. R. Barnett, 299
  • Naval Architecture, Account of the Society for the Improvement of, A. W. Johns, 274
  • Phenomena of Propulsion, Professor J. B. Henderson, 298
  • Shaft Horse-power, Measurement, Relation between Twist and Torque, Professor B. Hopkinson, 324
  • Tank, National Experimental, Progrens Report, Dr. R. T. Glazebrook, 274, 280
  • Institution, North-East Coast, of Engineers and Shipbuilders:
  • New Buildings, 548
  • Society of Engineers and Civil and Mechanical Engineers Society: Amalgamation Dinner, 76
  • Society, Liverpool Engineering:
  • Annual Dinner, 98
  • Society, Royal Meteorological:
  • Monthly Meeting and Report, 202
  • North Atlantic Anti-cyclone, Colonel H. E. Rawson, 202
  • BACH, F. W,, Design of Rolling Stock for Smooth Rail Working on Heavy (Jradiente, 130
  • Bacon, Admiral, on Battleship of the Future, 273, 284, 307
  • Bailey-Denton, E., on the Metropolitan Water Supply, 610
  • Baldwin-Wtseman, W. R., on Filtration Date, 155
  • Balloons—xrr Aeronautics
  • Carbonaceous Filters in the Smelting of Zinc, Ac., 98
  • Barnett, J. R., on Motor Lifeboats of the R.N. Insittutioo, 299
  • Hengougb, J. D., .nd H. |>. ||i|| on Copper- arsenic Alloys, 62
  • Berlin and its Educational Edabliahments Im- ^isit, Sir George Groen- nill, 187
  • Materialprufungsamt, 39, .586
  • Bigge, D. Selby, on Development in the Production of Electric Power, Ao,, 458, 484
  • Blackpool Sea Water Suppiy Works 46 Blast Furnace No. V. ot tho Alexandrovsky
  • Works, M. A. Pavloff, 64, 65 Slag, Manufacture of Cement
  • Hon Company, Blount, Bertram, and Other, on Ten.ile and Ri of iMtIng Steel, 589, 575, .598
  • Blow-off Cock, James Baldwin and Co., 76

Boilers:

  • Aero-vapour Boiler, Schmidt, 268 kLn* «*>dwin and Co., 76
  • Boiler Blow off Valve, Hoyles’, 526
  • Boilers and Economisers at Horseferry-road Electric Station, 535, 560 of the White Star Line(xi., xiii., xiv., Supplement. Junx 1910)
  • Curved and Straight Boiler Tubes, 494
  • Erosive Effect of a Steam Jet, 416
  • Marine Boilers on Long Voyages, Treatment of, U. Ruck-Koene, 66
  • Superheating, 70
  • Warship Machinery, Increasing Cost of, 243
  • Yarrow Boilers for Warships, 39’2
  • BORCHERS, W.. on the Girod Furnace, 458,470, 484
  • Boring Machines—are Machine Tools and Woodworking Machines
  • Box Factory—aee Tin
  • Brayshaw, 8. N., on Hardening of Carbon and Low Tungsten Tool Steels, 405, 569 Furnace, 403

Bridges:

  • American Bridges, Recent, 651
  • Atbara Bridge, 247
  • Bascule Bridge at Copenhagen, 116, 117, 120
  • Blackwells Island Bridge, 617
  • Bridge Floors, The Cost of, 83
  • Bridges in 1909, 20
  • on the Enfield and Stevenage New Loop Line, 328, 332
  • Costa Rica Railways, Bridges on, 581 {Ttec^puge Supplmixnt^JnnrXQUc, 1910)
  • Decay of Railway Briches, 122, 462
  • Demolition of Great Western Railway Bridge, 330
  • Fosdyke, Old and New Bridges, over the Welland, 141
  • Guatemala Railway Bridges, 371
  • Nami-Ti Gorge, Ubioa, Railway Bridge over, 281
  • Quebec Bridge, The Now, 203
  • J^building of the Lachine Bridge, 614
  • Waterfora Bridge, 408, 462
  • Wide Span Ferro-Concrete Bridge, Auckland, N.Z., 614
  • BROWN, Sir Hanbury, on Collapse of Canal Head Sluice in Egypt, 265 ; (Letter), 337
  • Browne, Sir Benjamin C., on Insurance against Unemployment, 295, 412
  • Buildings in the United States in 1909, 140 Bullet Velocity—War Material
  • Burge, C. O., on Pioposed Suburban Railways of Sidney, 425
  • CALENDARS, Diaries, Year-books, &c., for 1910,
  • 27, 52, 80, 106, 292, 340, 363
  • Cam Grinding—Machine Tools Cambridge Graduates in Engineerinr, 236
  • Camp Fireplace, C. D. H. Braino, 224
  • Canadian Hydraulic Lift Locks, \V. J. Francis, 427, 482, 511, 588
  • Iron and Steel Bounties, 438
  • Canal, Austria’s Black Sea-Baltio, 386
  • Head Sluice in Egypt, Collapse of, Sir Han bury Brown, 265; (Letter), 337 Manchester Ship, 171
  • Panama, 533, 558 (TwO’ptjtge Suppiementf Man 1910)
  • Proposed Forth and Clyde Ship, 118 Canals and Waterways, Royal Commission on, 58, 114, 189
  • in the United States in 1909, 85
  • Carbon Grinding and Mixing Mill, Sutcliffe, Speakman and Co., 206
  • Carbonaceous Filters. Use of, in the Smelting of Zinc, C. 0. Bannister, 98
  • Castings, Iron Moulds for Making, 606, 633

Catalogues:

  • 52, 80. 106, 160, 240, 264, 340, 417, 446, 474, 502, 550, 626
  • CEMENT, German Portland, Reports on, 586 Mills, American, Electric Motors in, 436, 442
  • Portland, Production of, from Slag at Newmains, 60, 68
  • Testing, by the Brinell Ball Method, 218
  • Census of Production—Production Characteri-stio Curves of Petrol Engines, 455 Chemistry in 1909, 19
  • Circulating Water for Surface Condensers, R. M. Neilson, 609
  • Clyde Wages—Labour

Coal, Coke, and Collieries:

  • Carrying Coal in Water, 224
  • Coal Conveyor for Loading Ships, C. A. Musker, 102
  • Dispute in the North, 176 Production of, 358
  • Purchase by CaloriBc Test, Professors B. Heyn and F. W. Hinrichsen, 586 Colliers, Labour Questions—xee Labour Collieries, Installation of Power at, F. Anslow, 611
  • Power Production at, R. Crawford and H. Moores, 611
  • Earthed v. Insnlaied Neutrals in Colliery Installations, W. W, Wood, 445
  • Eight Hours’ Act in the North, 45, 412
  • Electric Winding Plant at the Barton Colliery, 620, 621
  • Maltby Maio Colliery, 652
  • Washery Bonkers, Armoured Concrete, Heenan and Froude, 65
  • Welsh Miners, 309
  • COCK, Blow off, James Baldwin and Co., 76
  • Coignet System in Concrete Work, 65
  • Collapse of Canal Head Sluice io Egypt, Sir
  • Hanbnry Brown, 265; (Letter), 337
  • College Workshops, 384
  • Compression Tests of Heated Chamotte Stones, Professor M. Gary, 586
  • Compressor, Horizontal Compound Air, Walker Brothers, 406, 407, 410 for Lighthouse—see Lighthouse Small Air, Gabriel, 443 Taylor Air, 588
  • Compressors, Air, for Japan, Lacy-Hulbert, 98
  • Concrete Cubes, Macadam Paving made with, 441
  • Mixer, T. and R, Lees, 128 Protection for Railway Bridges, 462 Wasbery Bunkers, Heenan and Froude, 65
  • Condensation in Steam Whistle Pipes, Preventing, J. H. Yates, 441
  • Condenser Tubes, Diameter of, R. M. Neilson, 57
  • Condensers, Cost of a Vacuum, 96
  • Surface, Quantity of Circulating Water Required, R. M. Neilson, 609
  • Cone and All-gear Drives, 618
  • Consulting Engineer, 150; (Letters), 49, 75, 101, 127, 168, 172

Contracts:

  • 26, 54. 80, 106. 132, 160, 210, 238, 262, 292, 318, 342, 368, 394, 422, 448, 604, 528, 552, 578, 602, 628, 654
  • CONTRACTS for Service Abroad, 247
  • Conveyauce of Machiuery in South Africa, 622
  • Co-Partnership- Sff Labour
  • Copper Alloys—Alloys
  • Cotton Mill, A Modem. 346, 372, 398
  • SupplApril 15</t, 1910) Crane, 100-Ton, at George Clark's Works, Sunderland, Applebys Limited, 156, 157
  • Portable Window, Patent Portable Crane Company, 203
  • 15-Ton Steam Cantilever, Cowans, Sheldon and Company, 76
  • Three-Motor Electric Single • Rail, T. Smith and Sons, 72
  • Cranes in German Shipyards, 188, 583 at Harland and Wolff’s Works, Belfast {Si-xUen-ixige SupplemmUf Juiu 1910)
  • for Ore Discharging, 278, 283
  • Crantz, Professor, Method of Measuring Velocity of Bullets, 619
  • Crawford, R. and H. Moores, on Power Production at Collieries, 611
  • Cupolas, Spark Arrester for, S. Osborn and D. Camogie, 613
  • Cylinder LOS.M6B, J. Clark, 175, 199; (f/etter), 233
  • DAMS with Overhung Batter, R. H. Smith, 544
  • Darling, C. R., on Kucent Progress in Indnstrial Pyrometry, 137
  • Delay—the Peace-Maker, 200
  • Derwent Aqueduct—tee Aqueduct

Docks:

  • Dover, Graving Dock, 23
  • Progress of New Docks, 597
  • Scotland, Early Graving Docks in, 146
  • Smith’s Docks, Middlesbrough, Electrical Equipment of, 38

Dockyard Notes:

  • Acheron, H.M. Cruiser, Conversion to Coal Ship, 472
  • Admiralty Orders for Artificers and Stokers, 590
  • Tenders for New Ships, 446
  • Aerial Cruiser Station for Germany, 392
  • Argentine Battleships and Destroyers, Tenders and Delay, 40, 281
  • Argyll, H.M. Cruiser, Sent to Buenos Ayres, 392
  • Atlantic Fleet’s Trip round Norway, 446 Australian and New Zealand Cruisers, Tenders, 92
  • Austrian Battleships of the Hapsburg Class, 446 Erzherzog Franz Ferdinand, 503, 573 Need of a New Naval Port, 126 Scout-Cruiser Admiral Spaun, Trials, 573
  • Austro-Hungarian Battleships, Progress, 126, 418
  • Battle Practice, New Regulations, 392 Battleship Classification, 257
  • Battleships and Cruisers, British and German, 92
  • Ijengtb and Beam, International Comparisons, 573
  • Belfast New Graving Dock, 392 Blonde, H.M. Cruiser, 446
  • Boilers for Coal and for Oil : Mixed Batches on Small Vessels, 40
  • French and British Committee Reports, 573
  • Brazilian Battleship Minas Geraes’ Gun Trials and Speed, 126
  • Battleships Minas Goraes, Rio de Janeiro, and San Paolo, 92, 446
  • Destroyer Santa Catharina's Speed Trials, Yarrow, 126
  • Naval Floating Dock, 590 Scout Cruisers Bahia and Rio Grande, Speed Trials, 40, 348
  • Bristol, H.M. Second-class Cruiser, 196, 348
  • Britannia, H.M. Battleship, Record Coaling Average, 66
  • British Cruisers, H.M. Second-class Protected, Names, 223
  • Destroyers, Tenders for, Admiralty’s New Departure, 40
  • and German Dreadnought in 1912, List of Names, 92
  • Canada’s Naval Contribution, Divided Canadian Opinion, 391 ; Use of Oil Fuel, 590
  • Centurion and BarHeur Struck off the Navy List, 386
  • Chilian Battleship Capitan Prat, 257 Torpedo Craft, Enquiries in England, 66
  • Chinese Naval Programme and German Expectations, 92, 573
  • Coal for Navy, Heavy Shipments, 392
  • Coaling in the Mediterranean Fleet, 418
  • Speed of the Dreadnought, 418
  • Collingwood, H.M.S. Battleship, 92
  • Cressy, H.M. Armoured Cruiser, Refit, 392
  • Cruisers, H.M. City Class, Progress of New Vessels, 348
  • 18,000 Horse • power Improved Boadioea Class, Contract Award, 516
  • Danish Submarines Ordered, 392 Torpedo Boat Contracts, 281
  • Duntroyer Flotillas, Ke*arrangement and Num* boring, 446
  • Destroyers, British, Trials of New27-Knot, 446; Changes in Shape of Bows, 446 ; B'orther Orders, 590
  • Ten, Withdrawn from Active Service, 392
  • Displacement of British Battleships, 418
  • Dookyara Appointments, 472
  • Men, Increase in Numbers, 392; Also in Pay, 624
  • Regulations, Reduction of Red Tape, 446
  • Donegal, H.M. Cruiser, 446
  • Driver, New Steam Trawler for Defiance, 392
  • Elswick, Simultaneous Battleship Bui'ding, 391 Exe, H.M. Destroyer, 446
  • Ferret, H.M. Destroyer, For Sale, 418
  • Forth, H.M. Submarine, Refit, 472 French Battleship Vergniaud Launched, 418 Battleships Jean Bart and Courbet, 503
  • Transferred to the Second Division, 257
  • Danton Class, 418 Dreadnoughts, Mast and Funnels, 258 Navy Abandons Torpedo Boat Construction, 392
  • Fuel Question, Coal or Oil, 281
  • Funnel Markings and the Regulations, 257, 446
  • Funnels, Short, Disadvantages of, 92
  • Gas Engines of H.M. Gunboat Rattler, 446
  • German Battleship Westfalen, 223, 348, 590 Battleship’s Coaling Speed, 418 BattlesbipM Ersatz Hagen, Ersatz Aegir, and Ersatz Odin, 418
  • Cruiser Blucher, 446, “G," Launch and Progress, 196, 268
  • Von der Tann, Turbine Arrangement, 92; Delated Completion, 257 ; Trials, 573 Destroyer Fiotilla Accidents, 446 Destroyers, Speed Trials, 40 Turbine-driven Pumps for, 92
  • Dreadnought Hheinland, 66, 348, 590 Dreadnoughts' Bad Luck, 348 Propelling Machinery, 66 ; Size and Guns, 811, 690
  • Dreadnought Squadron, 590 Naval Base on the Elbe, 196 Estimates, 196 League, 392
  • Torpedo Boat Accidentally Rammed during Manoeuvres, 418
  • Turbine Torpedo Boat F, 166 ; Speed Trials, 503
  • Glasgow, H.M.S., Steam Trialsand Armament, 573
  • Gun Placing in the St. Vincent Class, 281 Guos, Three - pounder Quick - firing. Fresh Plans, 392
  • Hazard, H.M. Torpedo Ganl>oat, New Boilers, 472
  • Irresistible, Cost of Refit, 62^1 Italian Battle.sbips and Cruisers, Names, 66 Dante Aligberiand others, 311
  • Naval Constructor Invents Boat Engine, 196 Programme, 196 Torpedo Boats Removed from Japanese Battleship Reconstruction factory, 66 Cruiser Ikoma, 446 Models at the Exhibition, 573 Naval Construction, 92, 573 Lion and Unicorn, H.M.S., 66, 22^3
  • Mantcuvres io the North Sea, 392 Masts, Lattice-Work, Extended Adoption, 573
  • Minotaur, H.M. Armoured Cruiser, as Flagship for China Station, 92
  • Nautilus, H.M. Destroyer, (launched, 392
  • Naval Programme, 1910, 126
  • Works Completion at Simon’s Bay, Colombo, &c., 311
  • Neptune, H.M. Battleship. Progress, 257
  • Newcastle, H.M. Cruiser, Steam Trials, 392
  • Norwegian 60-Ton Torpedo Boat, 92
  • Oil Fuel for the Navy, 196
  • Oldknow, Reginald Charles, Fleet Engineer, Death, 418
  • Portsmouth Dockyard Telephones, Change of Control, 336
  • Proposed Floating Dock and Swing Bridge, 392, 472
  • Portuguese Naval Orders for British Builders, 590
  • Naval Reorganisation, 418 Professor Hovgaard and New Type of Battleship, 311
  • Racehorse and Ostrich, H.M. Destroyers, Refit after Collision, 392
  • Refits for the British Navy, 336 Rosyth and Scapa Flow, 446 Russian Battleships’ Armament, Tardy Construction, 92
  • Battleships, Sebastopol Class, 573 Destroyer to be Built by Voluntary Subscription, 446
  • Dredging of River Bug, 392 Naval Construction, Slow Rate of Progress, 66
  • Naval Construction, Huge Paper Estimates for Cost, 223
  • Naval Estimates and the Duma, 446 St. George, H.M. Cruiser, 392
  • St. Vincent, H.M. Battleship, Trials, 196; Alterations, 392
  • Salvage and Mooring Lighter, 392 Sharpshooter, H.M. Torpedo Gunboat, Wireless Equipment, 624
  • Signalling and Wireless Telegraphic Stations for Firth of Forth, 392
  • Skirmisher, H.M. Scout, Damaged Propeller, 446
  • Spanish Navy’s Slow Progress, 281 Stoker Petty Officers and Boy Artificers, 503 Swedish Dreadnought Projected, 258 Swift, H.M. Destroyer, 66, 281, 573 Swiftsure, H.M. Battleship, Coaling Speed, 624 Test and Stour, H.M. Destroyers, 281 Thames Shipbuilding and Engineering Com-
  • Thunderer, H.M. Battleship, 92, 418 Torpedo Bunt Destroyers, Stour and Test, 40 Firing Competition for Destroyers, 472
  • Firing Range Proposed at Bournemouth, 348
  • Turbine Driven Twin-Screw Installations, 40 Turkish Battleship for Sale, 257
  • Destroyers made in Germany, 257 Naval Officers to have English Training, 392
  • United States Battleship Arkansas, 196, 336
  • Construction Increasingly Rapid, 66, 336, 418, 624
  • M/iioe, Wreck to be Raised, 336, 503 Utah Launched, 66 Battleships, Armament of Arkansas and Wyoming, 336 Destroyers, 311 Destroyers’ Design, 446 Naval Programme, 22J1, 336, 418
  • Ships Delaware and Michigan ; Question of Masts, 66, also of i5oilers, 311
  • Sub-surface Torpedo Boat, 391 Warships Delaware and North Dakota, 348
  • Warship Gunnery Efficiency, Order of Ships' Scores, 223 Warships Scrapped, 503 Warship Speed Trials, 223 Warships to Visit Plymouth, 318
  • Vanguard, H.M.S., Displacement, 418 Ventilators, ’‘Mushroom” and “Flap” discussed. 348
  • Viking, H.M. Destroyer, 348
  • Vindictive, H.M. Cruiser, Gun-mounting Trials, 223
  • Warship Building, British, Great Increase in, 392
  • in England, Boom in, 336 Whistle and Syren for British Warships; Change of Position, 348
  • Wireless Apparatus iu the Navy, 624 Wolverine, H.M. Destroyer, Launched at Cammell Laird’s, 66 and other Destroyers’ Trials, 673 Zulu, Ocean-going Destroyer, 281
  • DRAFTING Machiue, Autoscaler Company, 651
  • Improved ’ ‘ U ni versa!. ” J. Davis and Son, 444
  • Drainage Scheme, Manchester, 154
  • Drawing-office Organisation, 254
  • ’Dreadnought" Rail Planer, Patent File and Tool Company, 152
  • Dredger Buckets, Edgar Allen, 460, 461
  • Sand Pump, Quorra, Lobnitz, 524, 525
  • Steam Grab Hopper, Priestman, Smith’s Dock Company, 575
  • Suction, for New Zealand, Fleming and Ferguson, 256
  • Drilling Machines—see Machine Tools and Rock Drills
  • Durtnall, W. P., on the Substitution of the Electric Motor for Marine Propulsion, 300 ; (Letter), 362
  • Dust Removal from Textile Factories, J. Gibbs’ System, 417
  • Dyestarts, Fastness of. Dr. P. Heerman, 586
  • ECKART, W. R., on Application of the Pitot Tube to the Testing of Impulse Water Wheels, 34, 44
  • Education of Boys for the Mercantile Marine (x., Supplmi^ntf 1910)
  • Efficiency ano Cose, 406

Electrical Matters:

  • Accuracy of Electric Meters, 441
  • American Cement Mills, Electric Motors in. 436, 442
  • Ammeter, Isentbal, 444
  • Bare Aluminium Conductors, British Aluminium Company, 490
  • Central Argentine Railway, Workshops’ Electrification, 538, 542
  • Commercial Advancement of Electric Supply (1) A. C. Crarab, (2) H. C. Bishop, 626
  • Development in the Production of Electrical Power, &c., D. Selby Bigge, 458, 484
  • Djinn Electric Lighting Plant, Brazil, Straker and Co., 230
  • Double Electricity Meter, Adnil Electrical Company, 48
  • Earthed v. Insulated Neutrals in Colliery Installations, W, W. Wood, 445
  • Electrical Machinery for Lighthouse—nee Lighthouse
  • Engineering in 1909, 5 Machinery at Brussels, 508 Matters in the United States in 1909, 166
  • Electric Motor for Marine Propulsion, W. P. Durtnall, 300; (Letters), 362, 380, 420
  • Production of Iron—see Iron and Steel Electrically Driven Tools—see Machine Tools, also Saws
  • Electricity v. Steam, 228 ; (Letter), 276
  • Electro-galvanising Works at Chelsea, Cowper- Coles Syndicate, 391
  • Electroetatic Charging of Telegraph Wires by Locomotives, R. W. Weightman, 406
  • Exhaust Steam and Mixed Pressure Turbines, (1) F. A. Newington, (2) Ashton Bremner, 626
  • Furnaces—see Furnace
  • Glasgow Sewage Works Equipment—see Sewage Harton Colliery Winding Plant, 620, 621 Horseferry Station, Westminster Supply, 535, 560, 566
  • Hydraulic Works for Costa Rica Electric Light and Traction Company, 453
  • Hydro-Electric Plants in the United States in 1909, 166
  • Power Works, Cassibili, 464, 468
  • Induction Motor’s Power Factor, Improvement of. 354
  • Lamps—see Lamps
  • Lift^ OQ tbe OlyoDpio and Titanic, Waygocd, 6t0
  • Loftus Ironstone Mines, Electric Haulage at, Ernest Scott and Mountain, 6, 11
  • Mmes, Electricity in, R. Nelson, 414
  • Modern Rower Stations, Continuity of Supply, H. I. Lewenz, 512, 566. 587, 605
  • Negligence, Electricity and the Law of, 586 Niagara Falls, Visit to Power Plant of Ontario Power Company, C. N. Jordan, 86, 44
  • Paraffin Electric Lighting Set, Charles Price and Son, 647
  • Phase Advancer, Westinghouse. 354
  • Power Factor Correction, 191, 218, 249, 354
  • Private Supply of Electricity, 369 Railways—Railways
  • K’Miucin^ the Fuel Consaoiption in Existing Electric Generating Stations, 429
  • Short-Circuiting Large Electric Generators, Milos Walker, 366
  • Smith's Docks, Middlesbrough, Electrical Equipment of, 38
  • Steelwork Towers for Electric Transmission Lines, John Spencer, Limited, 647 Synchronous Motor Condensers at Brixton and Sheffield, 219
  • Transformers for Metallic Filament Lamps, 401
  • Turbo Field Magnets for Alternate-current Generators, Miles Walker, ^6, 388
  • Valencia, Venezuela Light and Power Station, 187, 198
  • V^oltage Regulation of Alternators, 609 Walker Exciter, 260
  • Warships, Electricity on, 69 ; (Letter), 101 Welding, Electric and Autogenous, io Ship Repairs, A. Scott Younger, 220
  • Westminster Supply — tee Horseferry - road Scation
  • Works of the Jobnson-Lundell Company at Southall, 31

Engines and Motors:

  • For Electrical Motors—***< Electrical Matters

Engines and Motors: Internal Combustion Engines:

  • Aero Engines at Olympia Show : Aeromotors, Limited, 270 Aeroplane Engine Company, 270 Alvaston, 302
  • Anxiliary Power Company, 302 Green, 270 Humber, 270
  • Isaacson Aeroplane Supply Company, 302 J.A.P., 302 Lsmplougb, 270 Liscelles Raoial, 302 Phojoix Radial, 302
  • Star, 302 Thames, 302 Trier and Martin, 302 Wolseley, 270
  • Blowing Ecgine, Blast Furnace Gas, Cockerill, 608
  • Double-acting Two-cycle Internal Combustion Engine, Johnson's Motor Works, 181 Engines. Oil and Gas, at Liverpool Show, 137 Four-cylinder High-speed Gas Engines, Anderston Foundry Company, 440
  • Gas Engines and Utilisation of Waste Heat, 458
  • and Oil Engines in 1909, 17 Engine Combustion Spaces, J. N. Naylor, 499
  • Internal Combustion Engine and Dynamo, Brazil, Straker and Co., 230
  • Engine for Fishing and Commercial Vessels, Linton Hope, 300 Lloyd's Rules for Marine Gas Engines, 052 Marine Oil Engine Exhibition at Yarmouth, 125 Motor Boat Engines at Olympia Show : Ailsa Craig Motor Company, 303 Aster Engineering Company, 326 Auxiliary Power Company, 326, 364 Boulton and Paul, 326 British Buffalo Company, 303 Brooke and Co., 303
  • Drummond Launch Engine, J. Taylor, 326 Fairbanks Company, 303 Felix Engineering Company, 303 Macdonald, Alexander, 326, 364 Maudslay Motor Company, 326
  • Motor Boat Accessories, Langdon Clutch and Silencer, 326
  • New Engine Company, 327 Norris and Henty, 326 Paraffin Engine with Hot-bulb Ignition, J. King, 326
  • Parsons, 303 “ Primus,” 303
  • Seal Motor Company's Paraffin Engine, 826 Thornycroft Smack Type Engine, 826 Wolseley Company, 303
  • Oil Engine for Mining Locomotive, Ironside's “New Century,” 74
  • Petrol Engines, Characteristic Curves of, 466 Portable Oil Engine, Hornsby, 637 Water Cooler for Gas Engines, Test, 336; (Letter), 362

Engines and Motors: Steam Engines:

  • Compound Semi-stationary Superheated Steam Engine, Test of, R. Garrett and Sons, (HO) Economy of Steam Engines, 416
  • Engines for Electrical Equipment at Brussels, 508
  • of the White Star Line (xi.-xvi., NL- Supplement^ June 1910) Fire Engines for San Salvador, .Merryweather, 609
  • North-Eastern Railway Tug Boats, Engines for, Cox and Co., 194, 195
  • Paddle-steamer Mountaineer’s Engines, 624 Reversing Killing Mill Steam Engines, E. G. Sshmer snd Dr. R. Drawe, 468, 484
  • 400 H.P. Steam Ecgine for Ammonia Compression Plant at Grimsby, Cole, Marobent and Morley, 168. 169, 174
  • Steam Engine, The, in 1909, 16 Engines at Liverpool, Robey, 637
  • Stumpf '* Uniflow” Engine, 637
  • Superheating, 70
  • 1500 H.P. Triple-expansion for Cotton Mill, G. Saxon, 398
  • Van den Kerchove Drop Valve Engines at Brussels, 608
  • Warship Machinery, Increasing Cost cf, 243
  • ENGINEER, Consulting, 150; (Letters), 49, 75, 101. 127. 158, 172
  • Engineers, Preliminary Training of, R. H. Smith, Engineering in 1909—xr/' Annual Article
  • Cambridge Graduates io, 236
  • in the United States in 1909— Annual Article
  • Education, Naval—srz Ships, Naval Matters
  • Progress in Egypt and the Soudan. 507
  • in South and Central America, Progress of. 29, 135, 148, 187, 198, 201, 214, 226. 241, 268, 325, 345. 371, 453, 508. 581, 631 {Tirc-page lOfA. 1910) Erosive Effect of a Steam Jet, 416
  • Excavator, Large Steam Crane, Rubery, Owen
  • and Co., 382. 390
  • and Transporter. Combined, Whitaker. 522

Exhibitions and Shows

  • Aero and Motor Boat, at Olympia, 270, 302, 326, 864
  • Brussels, 481, 497, 507, 534, 582, 608, 634, 642, 644
  • Buenos Ayres, Railways and Land Transport, 129, 460
  • Manne Oil Engine, at Yarmouth, 125 Municipal and Health, 481
  • Omsk, 360
  • Royal Agricultural Society, at Liverpool, 51, 636
  • Winnipeg Industrial, 459
  • FAILURE in Practice of Non-Perrons Metals and Alloys, Ac., T. Vaughan Hughes, 77, 97
  • Feed-water Weigher, the “Sarco,” Sanders, Rehders and Co., 126
  • Ferro-Silicon, 136
  • Fire Engines—Engines place, Camp, C. D. H. Braine, 224 Protection in the United States in 1909, 123
  • Flour Mill, Armfield, 637
  • Milling Machinery at Liverpool, 637
  • Fog Signal, Unattended, and uightbouse at Guernsey, 390
  • Foundry Practice, Steel, Percy Ixmg^uir, 220
  • Francis, W. J., on Canadian Hydraulic Lift Locks, 427, 482, 511, 588
  • French Government Specification for Automatic Rilles, 301 ; (Erratum), 333
  • French Tariffs, 335
  • Fry, Lawford H., on The Books of the Locomotive, 295, 335, 372, 413
  • Fuel Consumption in Electric Generating Stations, ; Reducing 4*29
  • Furnace, Blast—Blast Brayshaw, 403 Capacity, 568 Electric Reduction, 206, 234
  • Gas Hardening, High - speed Steel, Churchill Machine Tool Company, 152
  • Tho Girod, W. Borchers on, 458, 470, 484
  • I5-Ton Heroult Electric Steel, 221 Furness, Sir C., Co-partnership, 358
  • GALVANISED Steel—Iron and Steel
  • Gantry and Crane Equipment for White Star lAner Olympic {Suppbmrnt^ Junt^ 1910)
  • Gavey, Sir John, on Developments in Telegraphy and Telephony, 648
  • Gas Producer, Oil, Darling, 47
  • Supply in 1909, 20 Turbine, 149
  • Gear Wheels, Concentric Spur Reduction, 469 Gears, Spiral, Table of Angles and Circular Pitches for, 608
  • German Shipyards, 188, 583
  • Gibson, Professor A. H., on Accumulation of Shore Detritus, &c., 632
  • Glasgow, SewRge Pumping Station at Kinniog Parle, 348, 349
  • —a* a/so Sewage
  • Glazebrook, Dr. R. T., Report on Experimental I Tank at Teddington, 274, 286
  • Gnome Cylinders, Machining, 498 I
  • Gold—iff Mining I
  • Gowland, Professor W., on Art of Working Metals in Japan, 539
  • Graphite as a Lubricant, 378
  • Grayson, Sydney A., on Case-hardening, 485
  • Greenhill, Sic G«« on Impressions of a Visit to Berlin and its Educational Establishments, 187
  • Grimsby, Ice-making Plant—Ice-making Grindleford—tu Aqueduct
  • Guernsey, Fog Signal and Lighthouse at, 360 Guos and Gunnery—9^^ Ships, Naval Matters and War Material
  • HAMMERS—«« Machine Tools
  • Hand Knotter for Tying Yarn, J. Stubbs, 130
  • Harbord, F. W., Report on the Manufacture of Iron and Steel in the Transvaal, 548, 574

Harbours and Waterways:

  • Dover, Port of, 378 Harbours and Waterways in 1909, 1, 30
  • in the United States in 1909, 86
  • Holyhead as a Port of Call. 37, 4*2 Rosyth as a Naval Base, 353
  • Tyne North Pier Reconstruction, 89 (Four- pfiQr Suftplemndt January 1910) Waterways in the United States—ate Canals
  • HARTON Colliery—tee Coal und Collieries Haulage System, Centrally-controlled Electric, 469
  • Haver, A. H., on Corrugated Sides of s.s. Moni* toria and their Ell oct, 204
  • Heat Transmission, 594
  • Henderson, Professor J. B., on Phenomena of Propulsion, 298, 334
  • Herbert, Edward G., on Catting Properties of Tool Steel, 473, 485, 500, 519
  • Holyhead as a Port of Cail, 37, 42 Home-office and Guarding of Machinery, 618 Homogeneity of Metals, G. Tagayeff, 485
  • Hope, Linton, on Application of Internal Combustion Engine to Fishing and Commercial Vessels, 300
  • Hopkinson, Professor B., on Measurement of Shaft Horse-power, Twist and Torque, 324
  • Horaeferry Station — Electrical Matters
  • Horsnaill, W. 0., on Tidal Power, 461; (Letters), 540. 690
  • Hose Fittings—xr/- Pneumatic Hose Howitzer—ir/r War Material
  • Hub, New Spring, A. E. Leek, 257
  • Hudson, 0. F., and E. F. Law, on Phosphor Bronze, 97
  • Hughes, George, on Compounding and Superheating in Horwicb Locomotives, 287, 315, 333, 338, 405, 411; (Letter), 459
  • Hughes, T. Vaughan, on Failure in Practice of Non-Ferrous Metals and Alloys, 77, 97
  • Humidifier, Drosopbore, 398 Hydro-electric Plant—set Electrical Matters
  • ICE-MAKING Plant. 200 - Ton, at Grimsby, Linde British Refrigeration Company, 168, 169, 174 (Tteo-pag^ Supplf-rntfUf 18M, 1910)
  • Impulse Marine Tnrbines in Germany, 266, 531, 668; (Letter), 590 (Tn^-ptigf Supple^ Marek 18M, 1910)
  • and Reaction Marine Steam Tarbines, SirW. H. White, 631, 568; (Letter), 590
  • lodicatiog Gear, Graham's Non-stop, Schaffer and Budenberg, 415 a Steam Pipe, 36; (Letter), 127 Indicator, Temperature, F. Mellin and Co., 77 Institution of Civil Eagineers, New Bnildings— Associations, &c.
  • Insurance against Unemployment, Sir B. C. Browne, 295, 412
  • Insurance against Unemployment, 368, 376 International Railway Congress—Railways Irish Road Congress, 389

Iron and Steel:

  • Anti-rust Iron, Manufacture of, American Rolling Company, 87
  • Attack on Iron by Water and Aqueous Solutions, Profs. £. Heyn and 0. Bauer, 686
  • Bounties, State or Private, on Steel Exports, 544
  • British Steel Industry, Foundations of, 397 Canadian Iron and Steel Bounties, 438 Case-hardening, Recent Investigation, Sydney A. Grayson, 485
  • Cost Irons and Carbon Steels, D. M. I/evy, 485 Chemical and Mechanical Relations of Iron, Manganese, and Carbon, Prof. Arnold and A. A. Read, 484
  • Chromium Steel, The A 2, Critical Point in, Harold Moore, 485
  • Crystallography of the Iron Carbon System, V. A. Kroll, 485
  • Elastic Breakdown of Certain Steels, Prof. C. A. M. Smith, 485
  • Electric Production of Iron from Iron Ore, 206. 234
  • Transmission Lines, Steel Work Towers for, John Spencer, Limited, 647 Firth’s Steels at Buenos Ayres, 460 Furnaces—set Furnace Galvanised Steel,231 German Steel Syndicate, 171 Hardening of Carbon and Low Tungsten Tool Steels, S. N. Braysbaw, 405, 569 High-speed Steel Gas Hardening Furnace, Churchill Machine Tool Com pany, 152
  • Steels, Development and Use of, Walter Carter, 154
  • “ Imperial” Managanese Steel, Edgar Allen, 460
  • Iron Moulds for Making Castings, 606, 633 and Steel Position. Statistics, 509 in the United States in 1909, 71 Trade, 594
  • Nomenclature, Unifirm, of Iron and Steel, Professor Arnold on, 485
  • Physical Properties of Two Per Cent. Chromium Steels, Professor A. McWilliam, 485
  • Pig Iron, Grading of, 167 Steel Exports, Supremacy io, 217
  • Foundry Practice, Percy I^nrauir, 220 Mild, Brittleness of, Due to Nitrogen, C. E. Stromeyer, 324
  • Tensile and other Methods of Testing Steel, Capt. Sankey, Messrs. Blount and Kirkaldy, 569, 676, 598
  • Tool Steel, Cutting Properties of, Edward G. Herbert, 473, 485, 600, 619
  • Transvaal, Manufacture of Iron and Steel, Report by F. W. Harbord, 548, 574
  • IRRIGATION and Drainage in the United States in 1909, 86
  • Steel Pipe Line for, 259
  • JAPAN, Art of Working Metals in, Pro*. W. Gowland, 539
  • Jobos, A. W., on ihe Society for the Improvement of Naval Architsctuio, 274
  • Jordan, C. W., on a \ ieit to Ontario Power Company’s Plant at Niagara, 36, 44
  • KING Edward VII., 493
  • Kroll, V, A., on Crystallography of the Iron
  • Carbon System. 485
  • Krupp Sights— set War Material
  • LABORATORY, Royal Prasaian, 39, 686

Labour News. Strikes, and Wages Questions:

  • Clyde Wages Agitation, 622 Coal Dispute in the North, 176
  • Colliers, New Agreement with, 66 Co-partnership, dir C. Furness' Scheme, 358 Eight Hoars’ Act in the North, 45, 412 Latx)ur Exchanges, 122
  • and Government, 412
  • Legislation, The Remoter Consequences of, 70 Newport Dispute, 644
  • Premium Bonus System, 308 Profit Sharing, 617, 650
  • Unemployment Insurance, 358, 376, 412 Unemployment, Insurance. Sir B. C. Browne. 296, 412
  • Welsh Miners, 309
  • Work and Wages, Particulars of, 104
  • LAMPS, Drawn Tui^sten Filaments for, 329
  • Metallic Filament, 280
  • Metallic Filament, Transformers for, 401 Lantsberry, F. C. A, H., on Alloys of Copper, Aluminium and Manganese, 87, 103, 190 Lathes—Kfr Machine Tools

Launches and Trial Trips:

  • 56, 104, 132, 236, 320, 392, 446, 504, 623, 600, 623
  • LAUNDRY of the White Star Line at Bootle (ix.. XL, Sapplem^nL June
  • 1910) ’
  • Law Affecting Apprentices, 117
  • Lead in Drinking Water, 423

Leaders:

  • Architecture as a Profession, 593
  • Area of Contact between Tire acd Rail, 308 Austrian Naval Programme, 494
  • Blackwells Island Bridge, 617
  • Boiler Tubes, Curved and Straight, 494 Brighton Express Derailment, 123, 3o7 Canadian Iron and St*el Bounties, 438
  • Coal Disputes io ihe North, 176 Production of, 368
  • College Workshops, 384
  • Commercial Motor Vessels, 384
  • Compound and Superheater Locomotives, 333
  • Cone and All-gear Drives, 618
  • Consulting Engineer, 150
  • Co-partnership, 358
  • Cylinder Losses, 176, 199
  • Delay—The Peacemaker, 200
  • Drawing-office Organisation, 254 Dreadnought Controversv, 307 Efficiency and Cost, 466 ’
  • Eight Hours’ Act io the North, 45. 412 Electricity w. Steam, 228 on Warships, 69
  • Engine-rooms, Ancient and Modern, 279 First Lord’s Statement, 279
  • French Destroyers, 96 Naval Programme, 334
  • Furnace Capacity, 568
  • Gas Turbine, 149
  • Goods Train Resistance, 520
  • Heat Tiansmission, 694
  • Homo-ofBce and tbe Guarding of Machinery, 618
  • Iron Trade, 594
  • King Edward VIL, 493
  • Labour Exchanges, 122 and Government, 412
  • Lamps, Metallic Filament, 280
  • Legend of Fair Hooses, 200
  • Legislation, Remoter Consequences of, 66 Locomotive Adhesion, 383
  • Proportions, 44
  • Locomotives at the Brussels Exhibition, 644 Compound and Superheater, 333, 411
  • Enormous 176 Standard, for Indian Railways, 254
  • London Traffic, 466
  • Measurement of Resistance, 543 Mechanicals, Tbe, 44 Mine*, Safety of, 643
  • Naval Estimates, 253, 279
  • Experiments, 227
  • Newport Dispute, 644
  • Paris Floods, 121
  • Patent Case, Curious, 618
  • Patents, Compulsory Working of, 385
  • Premium Bonus System, 308
  • Private Bill Legislation, Decline of, 96 Production, Census of, 95
  • Profit Sharing, 617
  • Railway Bridge*, Decay of, 122
  • Wheels, Independent, 150
  • Risistance of Goods Trains, 467
  • Rest Cure, The, 544
  • Scientific Guesswork, 228
  • Screw Propeller Problems, 334
  • State and Inland Transport, 199 Light Railways, 667
  • Steam Turbine Rotor Construction 494 steel Exports, State or Private Bounties on. 544 ’
  • Stoat’s Nest Accident, 123, 357
  • Superheating, 70 at Sea, 437
  • Thames Dreadnought, 308
  • Tool Steels, 519
  • Trade Improvement, 46 in 1909, 15
  • Turbine Systems, Impulse and Reaction, 568 lurbines and Piston Engines, Combined, 465 and Propellers, 438
  • io Warsoips. Present Status of. 43 Vacuum. Cost of a, 96 Welsh Miners, 309
  • LEGAL Contracts—Contracts

Legal Intelllgence:

  • Boyd and Forrest t>. Glasgow and South-
  • Western Railway Comnanv. 158
  • LEGEND of Fair Houses, 200
  • Legislation in 1909, 21
  • Private Bill, 96
  • The Rimoter Consequences of, 70

Letters from Our Own Correspondents:

  • America, 26, 80, ,
  • 6?1:6o1; lit-
  • Australia, 62, 368, 602
  • England, North of, 26, 63, 78, 105, 131, 159, 183, 209, 237, 261, 291, 317, 341.’ 367 393 421, 447, 475, 503, 627, 551, 677, 601, 627, 653
  • Germany, Franco, Belgiom, 27 , 54. 80. 106. 132, 160, 185, 210, 238, 252, 292, 318, 342, 369, 395, 423, 449, 476, 505, 528, 553, 5/9, 603, 629, 654
  • Iron, Coal, and Genera) Trades of Birmingham, Wolverhampton and other Districts. 25. 53 78. 104, 180, 158. 183, 208, 235, 260, 290. 316. 341, 366, 393, 421, 447, 475, 503, 527, 551, 577, 601, 627, 653 ’
  • Lancashire, 25, 53, 78, 104, 130, 159. 183. 209, 236, 260, 290, 316, 341, 366, 393. 421, 447 475, 503, 527. 551, 577. 601, 627. 653
  • Scotland. 25, 54, 79, 105, 131, 160, 184, 209, 237, 261, 291, 317, 341, 367, 394, 422, 448, 476, 504, 528, 552, 578, 601, 628, 654
  • Sheffield. 25, 53, 78, 106, 131. 159, 183. 209, 237, 261, 291, 317, 341. 387, 393, 421. 447, 475, 503, 527, 551, 577, 601, 627, 653
  • Wales and Adjoining Counties, 25, 64. 79. 106. 132, 160. 184, 210, 238, 262, 292, 818, 342 368, 394, 422, 448, 476, 504, 528, 552, 578. 602, 628, 654 * ' ’

Letters to the Editor:

  • Argentine Dreadnoughts, Blohm and Voss, 193 B*con, Roger, H. W. L, Hime, 127
  • British and French Train Services, H. E. Margrie, 23
  • Colour Blindness, Mechanical, A. R., 268, 304, 420; A Teacher of Mechanics, 49, 158. 193. 233, 276, 362; Pater, 76, 127, 172, 193, 258, 276, 337 ; PaUr Mark II., 101,172 ; Stephen Eddy, 168 ; W. J. T., 276
  • Crampton Locomotives, J. H. Knight, 23
  • Cylinder Losses, A Tyro, 233
  • Derwent Aqueduct, G. E. Bell, 304
  • Diamond Crossings io America, Railways, 268 Electric V, Steam Traction, G. R. Sisterson, 172 Electricity v. Steam, G. R. Sisterson, 276 Electricity on Warships, W. P. Durtnall, 101 Eo^ne, Two-stroke, Possible Developments,
  • J. S. V. Bickford, 49; V’auxhall Motors, Limited, 101
  • Engines, Marine, Amphibious, 101
  • Engineers, Status of. Consulting Eogineer, 101; H. T. B., 101 ; Spectator, 168 ; E. A. Thomas, 75 ; Tweeds, 172; Hal Williams, 127
  • Flight and Traction, C. R. Enock, 387
  • Forging Pressures, Forging, 127
  • French Torpedo-boat Destroyers, P. J. Mitchell. 304
  • Friezland Derailment, F. W. Brewer, 23
  • Great^ Possible Power for Least Possible Weight, Aguas Corrientes, 232
  • Growth of Cast Iron, Mystified, 528
  • Gyroscopes, P. Valter, 573
  • Heavy Marine Excentric Sheaves, Ex-P. and 0. Engineer, 127
  • Hiila Branch on the Euphrates, W. Willcocks. 420
  • Indicating a Steam Pipe, F. E. Robinson, 127 Inventors, A Warning, Chartered Patent Agent, 276; Once Bitten Twice Shy, 258
  • Local Government Board and Reinforced Concrete, An Engineering Firm, 443; Patent Indented Steel Bar Company, 172
  • Locomotive Boiler Fire-^xes, W. Sisson, 101 Crank Axle, Built-up, H. A. Ivatt, 258
  • Manometer, Sensitive Two-flaid, C. H. Wingfield, 380
  • Marine Turbines, W. P. Durtnall. 380 ; Helix, 380 ; Marine, 420 ; Perplexed, 362
  • Mechanical Problem, F., 127
  • MenufiaHead, Failure of, and Egyptian Cotton. 337
  • Model Locomotive inSouth Kensington Museum, 526
  • New Home of the “Civile,” F. Hudleston, 590: M. Inst C.E., 673
  • Petrol Burners, Starting, W. H. Dines, 23 Pressure io Pomp Suction Pipes, J. T., 420 Rails, Expansion and Contraction of, Britan- nicus, 74
  • Railway Travelling in 1837, R. B, P., 622
  • Rating of Machinery, W. R. Buckingham, 193 Safety Valve Bolti in the Tuiret Lathe, H. Maplethorpe, 276
  • Screw Propulsion, R. M. S., 443
  • Stoat’s Nest Derailment, J. Armer, 380; F. W. Brewer, 443 ; W, S. Busby, 420; C. D. S., 390
  • Superheater Locomotives. P. J. Cowan, 459 Superheating at Sea, A. F. White, 628 Technical location. Failure of, China, 337;
  • William Marriott 75
  • Testing of Steel Joists at Makers' Works, Pertwee and Back, 23
  • Tidal Power, Hans Hanseng, 540; W. O. Horsnaill, 590; Arthur O^tes, 590
  • Train Resistance, W. Y. Lewis, 690 Tripod Masts, G. T. Simmons, 49
  • Turbines, Impulse and Reaction Steam, W’. P. Durtuall, 590
  • and Propellers, F. J'. Wolseley-
  • Turning Crank Pin, S. A. Ward, 193
  • Tyne and Solway Canal, J. W. Sandeman, 690 ;
  • C. L. A. Smith, 623
  • Vacuum Cylinder Jackets, J. Seabrook, 233 Water Cooler for Gas Engines, Balcke and Co., 382
  • LEVY, D. M., on Cast Irons and Carbon Steels, 485
  • Lewenz, H. I., on Continuity of Supply iu
  • Modern Power Stations, 512, 556, ^7, 605 Licences to Work Patents, 605
  • Lifts. Electric, on the Olympic and Titanic, Waygood, 640
  • Lighthouse at Guernsey, 360
  • Tyne North Pier, 89 {Euur-fjag^ Sup- January 28/A, 1910)
  • Lighting Set, Paraffin Electric, Charles Price and ^D, 647
  • Lightning Protection, Percy H. Thomas, 647

Literature: Reviews:

  • Alternating Current Commutator Motor and Leakage of Induction Motors, Dr. R. G^^ld- Fchmidt, 33
  • Machines, S. Sheldon, 645
  • Theory, Foundation of, C. V. Drysdale, 520 Electric Cables: Their Construction and Cos**,
  • D. Coyle and F. J. 0. Howe, 467 Power Plant Engineering, J. Wein* green, 439
  • Traction on Railways, P. Dawson, 402 Electrical Distributing Networks and Trans* mission Lines, Alfred Hay, 645
  • Energy: Work, Heat, and Transformations, Sidney A. Reeve, 33
  • Fifty Years of New Japan, Count Shigenobu Okuma, 71
  • Flottes de Combat, Lea, Commandant de Balin- court, 151
  • Gas Turbine: Progress, &c., H. H. Saplee, 255
  • Hydraulic Mining, C. 0. Longridge, 203, 385 “Naval Annual, 1910," T. A. Brassey, 569, 694 Patents, Compulsory Working and Revocation of, Ernest Lunge, 645
  • Thornton on, 203, 229
  • Petroleum Mining and Oil Field Development, A. B. Thompson, 177
  • Tascbenbuch der KriegsBotten, Captain-Lieutenant B. Weyer, 151
  • Vehicles of the Air, Victor Lmgheed, 619

Literature: Short Notices:

  • Blast Furnace Practice, J. J. Morgan, 385 Commercial Peat, Its Uses, Ac., F. T. Gissing, 439
  • Concrete, Reinforced, F. Rings, 595 Dictionary of Shop Tools, English-German, Hill Publishing Company, 595
  • Differential and Integral Calculus, A. £. H. Love, 72
  • Elevators, Hydraulic, Wni. Baxter, 595 Enamelling on Iron and Steel, Tneory and Practice of, Julius Grunwald, 439
  • Encycloptvdia of Practical Engineering and Allied Trades. J. Horner, 439
  • Erosion of the Coast and its Protection, F. W. S, Stanton, 255
  • Gas Engine, The Modern, and Gas Producer, A. M. I^vin, 439
  • Hydrographic Surveying, Commander Stuart, 695
  • Internal Combustion Engines, Design and Construction of, H. Giildner, 439
  • Inventions and Designs (India) in 1909, 439 Iron and Steel, Tabulated Weights of, C. H. Jordan, 439
  • Locomotive Management from Cleaning to Driving, J. T. Hodgson and J. Williams, 177 London Post-office Directory, Ac., 1910, 33 Lubrication of Stoam Engines, Internal, T. C. Thomsen, 467
  • Machine Design, Elements of, D. S. Kimball and J. H. Barr, 151
  • Mechanics, Applied, D. A. Low, 152 of Materials, Elements of, C. E. Houghton, 177
  • Metallography Applied to Siderurgic Products, Humbert Savoia, 439
  • Modern Coking Practice, T. H. Byrom and J. E. Christopher, 385
  • Practical Curve Tracing, R. H. Duncan, 467 Railway Signalling, First Principles of, C. B. Byles, 403
  • Transport, The Economics of, S. C. William, 177
  • Railways, British, Safety of, H. Raynar Wilson, 255
  • Science Year-book, 1910, 439
  • Sewage Disposal, Modern Methods of, W. H. Trentham and J. Saunders, 177
  • Street-cleaning, Modern Methods of, G. Soper, 177
  • Stresses in Masonry, H. Chatley, 177 Structural Details or Elements of Design Heavy Framing, H. S. Jaooby, 151

Literature: Booke Received

  • (missing lines)
  • Chaudi^res et Condenseurs. F. Cordier, ]52 Chemical Appointments, OiBcial, E. B. Pilcbor, 255
  • Civil EngineerioR as Applird in Conatniction, b« F» VerQoa Harcourt, 203
  • Colliery Accounts, J. Maun and H. G. Judd, 229
  • Computation of Area, F. J. Gray, 203 Concrete, J. C. Trantwine, 152
  • Plain and Reinforced, F. W. Taylor and S. E. Thompson, 152
  • Reinforced, Concise Treatise on, C. F. Marsh, 46Z
  • Inspector's Handbook of, w. F. Ballinger and E. G. Perrot, 403 Deinhardt Scblomann Series of Technical Dictionaries in Six Languages, KiiJway Construe* tion, 152
  • Depreciation of Factories, Ewing Matheson, 385 Dictionary, Technical, in Six Languages, A. Schlomann, 569
  • Domestic Sanitation and Plumbing, A. Herring Shaw, 152
  • Electrical Engineering, General Lectures on, C. P. Steinmetz, 152
  • Engineering Construction in Steel and Timber, W. H. Warren, 467
  • Engineers’ and Erectors' Pocket Dictionary— English, German, and Dutch, W. H. Steen*
  • *' Express ” Profit Reckoner. J. G, Inglis, 229 Forensic Chemistry, Manual of, William Jago, 152
  • Books Received {continutdy.
  • F'owler’s Mechanics’ and Machinists’ Pocketbook and Diary, 1910, Wro. H. Fowler, 152 Fuel and Refractory Materials, A. Humboldt Sexton
  • (xasworks Directory and Statistics, 1909-1910 Geometry, the Public Schools, F. J. W. Whipple, 669
  • G. W. R. Mechanics' Institution, Transactions,” 1908-9, 229
  • Guns, A Century of, H. J. Blanch, 467 Uandbuch des Eiseobahnmascbinenwesens, L. R. von Stockert, 255
  • ' “ HaaeU’s Annual,” 229
  • Illumination and Photometry, W. £. Wicken- den,467
  • Incorporated Institution of Automobile Engineers, ** Proceedings,” 1908-1909, 255
  • India and the Tariff Problem, II. B. Lees Smith, 229
  • Indicator Handbook, Part II., C. N. Pickworth, 229
  • Institution of Mechanical Engineers, ** Proceedings,” Parts I. and II.. 1909, 203 Ironfounding, The Principles and Practice of, E. L. Rhead,569
  • Irrigauoa Engineering, H. M. Wilson, 203 Jack Carstairs of the Power-house, Sydney Sandys, 152
  • Jordan's Tabulated Weights of Iron and Steel, C. H. Jordan, 162
  • Kempthorne's Railway Stores Price Book, W. O. Kempthome, 203
  • Law and Practice of Rating and Assessment, C. A. Webb, 467
  • Leather, The Manufacture of, H. G. B')nnett, 385
  • Linseed Oil and Other Seed Oils, W. D. Ennis, 203
  • Liverpool Engineering Society, Transactions,” 229
  • Machines Marines, P. Drosne, 229 Magnets and Magnetism, A. W. Marshall, 229 Marine Engineering Rules and Tables, A Pocket-book of, A. £. Seaton and H. M. Rounthwaite, 403
  • Masonry Construction, Treatise on, Ira Osborn Baker, 152
  • Matricnlation, Magnetism, and Electricity, R. H. Jude and J. Satterly, 229 "Mechanical World” Electrical Pocket-book for 1910,152
  • Pocket Diary and Yearbook for 1910, 152 Motor Accountant, G. H. Mansfield and N, A. Pearce, 152
  • Navy League Annual, 1909, A. H. Burgoyne, 229
  • Neue Versuche an Eisenbeton-Balkeo, &c., Dr. Ing. R. Muller, 255
  • Practical Hints to Young Engineers on Indian Railways, A. W. C. Addis, 467
  • Practical Mechanic's Workshop Companion, W. Templeton, 162
  • Promoter's Pilgrimage, or the Engineer's Revenge. C. R. Eoock, 385
  • Railway, The Book of the, G. E. Mitton, 229 ' Rose's Universal Code Economiser, Sydney A. M. Rose, 162
  • Sanitary Engineering, Col. £. C. S. Moore and E. J. Silcock, 203
  • Sea-Water Distillation,' Practical Manual of, F. Normandy, 467
  • Sewage, Bacterial Treatment of. Methods and Devices, W. M. Venable, 203 Disposal Works, H. P. Raikes, 203 Sheldrake's key to Business Knowledge, T. S.
  • Sheldrake and R. Westwood, 203 Shot-firer's Guide, W. Maurice, 229 Social Calendar, 1910, 569 Spon's Architects and Builders' Pocket Pricebook, C. Young, 385
  • Steamships, The New Examiner in, T. L. Ainsley, 385
  • "The Fleet” Annual, 1910. L. Yexley, 229 Throne des Dispositifs de Vis^e Moderne de I’Artillerie de Terre, R. von Everhard, 229 Topography, Practical, Studies in, H. T. Crook, 152
  • " PransactioDs ” of the Institution of Naval Architects, R. W. Dana, 162
  • Westinghouse, E. J., Air Brake Instruction Pock-it-book, W. W. Wood, 162
  • Wireless Telegraphy for the Use of Naval Electricians. Manual of, 162 |
  • Wireless Telephones, J. Erskine-Murray, 467 Workmen's Compensation Cases, Judge Ruegg and Douglas Knocker, 265
  • LIVERPOOL, Royal Agricultural Show, 636 Town Planning io, 171 Lloyd's Rules for Marine Gas Engines, 662 Locks, Canadian Hydraulic Lift, W. J. Francis, 427, 482, 511, 588
  • Locomotive, Mining, with Oil Engine, Ironside's “ New Century,” 74
  • Locomotives—nee. aha Railway Locomotives London Connty Hall, 430
  • Traffic, 35 Longmuir, Percy, on Steel Foundry Practice, 220 Lubricant, Graphite as a, 378 Lubricating Ring, Improved, G. Goucher, 600 "Lucas” Sounding Machine for Marine Survey, 638
  • Luke, W. J., on Wake and Thrust Deduction Values, 298, 334 ; (Letter), 443
  • MACADAM Paving made with Concrete Cubes, 441

Machine Tools:

  • Boring Machine, Early Cylinder, Smeaton, 217 Lathe and Universal Facing and Boring Machine, George Richards, 550
  • Cam Grinding Machine, Landis Tool Company, 596
  • Cone and AlLgear Drives, 618
  • Drill Jig, Selson Engineering Company, 364
  • Drilling Machine, Iligh-spo^, Archdale, 259 Vertical, T. Shanks, 202, 203
  • Hammer, Compressed Air, B. and S. Massey, 523
  • Steam, Self > acting and Handing, Davy, 128
  • Hammers, Electrically-driven Drop, Brett, 311, 313
  • Lithe, 8|in. All geared Screw-cutting, Thomas Ryder, 414
  • lOiin. Centre Turret, with Ball Bearings, Kendall and Gent, 337
  • 1210. High-speed, Dean, Smith and Grace, Limited, 230
  • High-speed, Dron and Lawson, 144 Large Boring, Tangyes, 444 for Machining Gnome Cylinders, Alfred Herbert, 498
  • Semi-all-gear Head, Colchester Lathe Company, 500
  • Sliding, SuHacing and Boring, Loudon, 379
  • Locomotive Stay Bolt Lath^ A. Herbert, 40 Machine Tools at Brussels, 508
  • Milling Machine for Locomotive Frame Platea, Kendall and Gent, 73
  • Planing Machine, Electrically-driven, Lancashire Dynamo and Motor Company, 182
  • Railway Sleeper Adzing and Boring Machine, Thomas Robinson, 463, 469
  • Saw, High-speed Circular, Clifton and Baird, 417
  • Saws, Wood—see Saws
  • Turret Tool Post, Lodge and Shipley Company, 650
  • Wagon Underframe Milling Machine, Eclipae Tool Company, 50
  • MACHINERY, Guarding of. Home-office Committee, 613
  • Rating of, 138 ; (Letter), 193 in South Africa, Conveyance of, 622
  • McWilHam, Professor, on Physical Properties of 2 per cent. Chromium Steels, 485
  • Manchester's Drainage Scheme, 164 Manchester Ship Canal, 171
  • Manometer, Sensitive Two-ffnid, J. A. Smith, 386; (Letter), 380
  • Marine Engineering—see Ships
  • Marino Turbines—see Turbines
  • Marsh, L. S. M., on Sheffield Water Supply, 166 Measuring and Mixing Machine for Powders, “The Apportioner," Davis Brothers, 414
  • Metals, Art of Working, in Japan, Professor W. Gowland, 539
  • Homogeneity of, G. Tagayeff, 435 Non-ferrous, and Alloys, Failure in Practice, T. V. Hughes, 77, 97
  • Corrosion Committee, 574 Milling Machines—see Machine Tools

Mines and Mining News:

  • Armoured Concrete in Mines. Heenan and Fronde’s Washery Bankers, 65
  • Colorado, Mine Disaster, 126
  • Electric Haulage at Loftus Mines, Ernest Scott and Mountain, 6, 11
  • Electricity in Mines, R. Nelson, 414 Gold Mining in Colombia, 135, 143
  • Internal Combustion Locomotive, Mining, Ironside’s “New Century,” 74
  • Mining in the United States in 1909, 166
  • Safety of Mines, 643
  • MIXING and Measuring Machine, “The Appor- tioner,” Davis Brothers, 414
  • Moore, Harold, on The A2 Critical Point in Chromium Steel, 435
  • Motor Vehicles and all Matters Relating thereto:
  • Armoured Cars—see War Material Hub, New Spring, A. E. J>eek, 267
  • Motor Cars in 1909, 18
  • Sleigh for the British Antarctic Expedition, The “Hamilton,” Wolseley Tool and Motor Car Company, 336; (Correction), 418
  • Paris Motor Omnibuses, 573
  • Petrol-electric Motor Omnibus, Daimler Company, 639
  • Wheels, Cast Steel, Atlas Resilient Road Wheels, 365
  • MOULDS—see Iron Monlds
  • Murray, A., on Ascertaining the Weight of Cargoes on Board Ship, 299
  • NAPHTHA Oils, Dr. J. Marcusson, 686 Nasmith, F., on Weaving Appliances, 50 National Physical Laboratory, 429 Navy—sfifi Ships, Naval Matters
  • Naylor, J. W., on Gas and Od Engine Combos- lion Spaces, 499
  • Neilson, K. M., on the Diameter of Condenser Tobes, 67
  • Neilson, R M., on Quantity of Circulating Water Required for Surface Condensers, 609 Newport Dispute, 644

Obituary :

  • Armit, Thomas Napier, 216
  • du Bmsquet, Gaston, 330
  • Bollivant, William Pelham, 330 Colson, Alfred, 569 Cudworth, W. J., 12 Bobbie, John Clark, 181 Eoimott, Charles, 202 (/reen, William Robert, 202 Greenwood. Arthur, 88 Hart, W. A., 380
  • Hickman, Sir Alfred, 276
  • Hornsby, James, 275
  • Hosgood, T. H. and HowsHa, E. D., 12 Hoy, Henry Albert, 540
  • Huntsman, Francis, 126
  • Locher-Freuler, Dr. Edward, 619
  • Pollock, James, 223
  • Richards, Edward, 88
  • Simpson, John Harwood, 640
  • Tennant, Henry, 540
  • Walker, James, 63
  • Whale, GeoiT^e, 246
  • Williams, Sir Edward Leader, 12
  • Wise, Sir William Lloyd, 37
  • OIL Gas for Power and Lighting, Mansfield, 99 Producer, Darling, 47
  • Separator and Steam Dryer, Kater and Anker- smit, 472
  • Omnibus, Petrol-electric, Daimler Company, 639 Ordnance—rc« War Material
  • Ore Crusher, Edgar Allen's “ Stag,” 460
  • Loading Berths, Cranes and Steamship for Norway, 278, 282
  • PANAMA, Present Conditions—rrr Canal Papermaking Machine at Brussels, Thiry, 508 Paper Manufacture, Swedish Standards, Professor W. Herzberg, 586
  • Paraffin Electric Lighting Set, Charles Price and Soo, 647
  • Paris, Floods in, 121, 229 . v
  • Parsons, Hon. C. A., on Geared Turbine Machinery for Merchant Ships, 322 j (Letters), 362, 380, 420 -
  • Patent Caso, Curious, Fiat Motors v. Mercedes Daimler, 618
  • Patents, Compulsory Working of, 386 Licences to Work 605

Patents, Selected American:

  • Apparatus for Discharging Excess Exhaust Gases from Motors Working on a Closed Cycle, G. F. Jaubert, 450
  • Making Sound Metal Ingots, R. A. Hadfield, 478
  • Minimising the Oscillatory Movements of Ships, Ac., E. O. Schlick, 32
  • Arch, Sectional, W. Gossett, 478 Armour-plate, Ac., F. Giolitti, 212 Bearing Roll with Angular Interspace, C. S. Lock wood, 320
  • Bench Vice, J. R. Long, 630
  • Blast-furnace Gas, Apparatus for Purifying, H. Savage, 294
  • Boiler for Articulated Locomotives, H. b. Vincent, 630
  • Watcr-tnbe, J. P- Sneddon, 66 Boilers, Water-tube, Casing for, J. Suck, 131 Bottle-stopper, M. L. Orr and F. C, Orr, 162 Capped Armour-piercing Projectile, C. V. C.
  • Wheeler and A. G. McKenna, 344 Car Truck, C. H. Knobbs, 554
  • Chain Conveyor, T. A. Coleman, 108 Chain-grate Furnace, L. H. Maxfield, 162 Coal Dust, Coal Slack, Ac., Method of Semicoking, 506
  • Compressed Air Engines, Method of Operating, C. B. Hodges, 41^
  • Compressor, D. Warren, 580 Condenser, Counter-current, O. H. Mueller, 396
  • Pump, P. J. Pennings, 162 Steam, R. D. Tomlinson, 28 Surface, Y. Wadagaki. 56 Connecting Pipe, Flexible, G. W, Henry, 294 Crane, Floating, A. Bode, 294 Dam and Apparatus for Construciion, H. L.
  • Cooper, 630
  • Electric Furnace and Method for Operating | Same, J. F. Shawhan, 370
  • Engine, Combustion, C. E. Henriod, 370 Installation, Combined Reciprocating and Turbine, J. Irving, 530
  • Internal Combustion, C. W. Higgs, 680 J. H. Hopkins, 680
  • H. L. Jones, 56 R. Lucas, 396 Steam, J. Stumpf, 396 Two-cycle Internal Combustion, E. A. Meyer, 564
  • Expansion Joint for Pipe Lines, E. F. Osborne, 82
  • Flexible Driving Connection, S. M. Vandam, 680
  • Friction Coupling, H. Baumgartner- Mica, 108
  • Forging Press, T. F. Baily, 506 Fuel, Process of Treating, A. G. Maul, 320 Furnace, Regenerative Reversing, L, L. Knox, 530
  • Gas Discharging Devices for Retort Coke Ovens, W. H. Allen, 240
  • Furnace, Regenerative, G. H. Benjamin, 294
  • Method of and Apparatus for Producing, E. E. Slick, 554
  • Producer, G, C. Stone, 506
  • Retorts, Lid for, H. J. Toogood, 108 Grinding Machine, Universal, H. B. Nicholls, 82
  • Gons, Ramming Apparatus for, E. S. Schneider, 240
  • Helical Rolle, Process of Making, C. S. Lockwood, 630
  • Hydraulic Wheel Presses, Attachment for, M. M. Moran, 344
  • Incinerating Plant, E. F. Price, 630 Ingot Turning Device, F. B. Carraher, 82 Injector Condenser, W, M. Fleming, 320 Liquid Hydrocarbon Fuels, Method of Making Fixed Gas from, H. A. Grine, 424
  • Locomotive, Articulated Compound, C. J. Mellin and J. J. Jones, 604
  • Boiler Furnace, F. F. Gaines, 108 Electric, E. F. W. Alexandersoo, 320
  • Engine, H. D. Taylor, 294 Internal Combnstion, A. H. Eble, 370
  • Spark Extinguisher, J. Player, 370
  • Locomotives, Swing Truck for, W. L. Austen, 370
  • Lubrication of Thrust Bearings, C. A. Parsons, 604
  • Metol Ingots, Process and Apparatus for Making, J. F. Mounot, 82
  • Power Distribution, System of, W. L. R. Emmet, 212
  • Projectile, F. Ziegenfuss, 162 Pulveriser, H. A. Goetz, 134 Railroad Motor Car, S. D. Reynolds, 344 Reduction Gearing, G. W. Melville and J. H.
  • Macalpine, 212
  • Rolling Slill, J. Fawell, 162, 186
  • Wheels, Means for, A. R. Andrews, 478
  • Safety Valve, H. C. McCarty, 424
  • Skeleton Post or Tower, E. E. Newman, 530 Snow Plough, E. K. McLain. 186
  • Steam CondensiDg Plant and Air Pump, W. Weir, 604
  • Stone*Cru8hing Machine, I. L. Mitchell, 240 Storage Battery Cells, Mechanical Construction of, P. Kennedy, 134
  • Sab-Aqueous Kock Breaker, B. H. Coffey, 320 Superheating Steam, Apparatus for, H. Cruse, 604
  • Surface Condenser, C. G; Curtis, 396 'Pin from Scrap, Process of Removing, C. J.
  • Reed, 320 Tire, L. M. Nelson, 506 Track Sander, J. H. Walters, 580 Transmission Device, Variable Speed, F. A.
  • Moore, 506 Gear, Major J. Robinson, 450
  • Turbine Blading, J. £. Snyder, 28 Driving Auxiliary Apparatus, A. M.
  • Krueai, 212 Elastic Fluid, C. J. Curtis, 212
  • R. N. Ehrhart, 424
  • W. J. A. JjoudoD, 28
  • G. Westinghouse, 450 Goveroiog Mechanism, E. E. Arnold, 450
  • Marine, G. Westiogbouse, 28 Vacuum-producing Apparatus, L. W. Serrell 344
  • Valve Gear, H. Forbes, 450 Warship, N. Soliani, 530 Wire-drawing Machinery, A. Rathbone, 554

Patent Specifications, British:

  • Aeronautic, 161, 314, 604, 630 Batteries and Accumulators, 424
  • Condensers and Feed-water Heaters, 239 Cranes and Conveyors 162, 554, 630
  • Dynamos and Motors, 55, 81, 107, 161, 185, 211, 239, 293, 319, 343, 395, 424, 449, 477, 505, 529. 553, 579. 629
  • Engines, Internal Combustion, 28, 55, 81, 133, 161, 185, 211, 264, 293, 319, 343, 395, 423, 477. 553, 579
  • Steam, 27, 107, 161, 263, 369, {553, 57^
  • Gas Producers, 293, 423, 478, 529
  • Lighting and Heating, 81, 554, 604 Locomotives, 239, 344, 553
  • Machine Tools and Shop Appliances, 212, 370, 529, 580, 604
  • Marine Propulsion, 319
  • Measuring and Testing Instruments, 28, 56, 107, 134, 212, 240, 320, 424, 450, 506, 530, 554, 604, 629
  • Mines and Metals, 320, 344, 370, 449, 478 Miscellaneous, 82. 108, 134, 1^2, 186, 240, 264, 294, 344, 370. 396, 478, 506, 530, 580, 630
  • Motor Cars and Road Traffic, 161, 239, 294, 553 Ordnance and Armour, 212, 240, 319, 450 Pumping and Blowing Machinery, 211, 293, 423, I 478, ^5
  • Ships and Boats, 82, 370, 449, 478 Steam Generators, 27, 55, 81, 107,133, 263,293, 369, 395, 423. 477, 603, 629
  • Switch Gear, 239, 264, 369, 424, 603, 629 Telegraphs and Telephones, 134, 369, 529, 603 Tramways and Railways, 186, 211, 3^, 396, 424, 450, 604
  • Transformers, 185, 293, 344 Transmission of Power, 211, 294, 505, 654, 580 Turbine Machinery, 55, 107, 263, 396, 423, 505, 529, 679, 603
  • Water Purification, 369 Wireless Telegraphy, 629
  • PAVLOFF, M. A., on Blast Furnace No. V. of the Alexandrovsky Works, 64, 65

Personal and Business Announcements

  • (missing lines)
  • RAIL Planer—see Dreadnought

Railways and Railway Matters, General:

  • Bridges—see Bridges
  • British Railway Coaches for South America. Birminghaoi Railway Carriage Company, 285 Cleansing of Railway Carriages, 337 Continuous Current 1200-volt Railway, 526 Design of Rolling Stock for Smooth Rail Working on Heavy Gradients, F. W. Bach. 130 High Speed E ectric Railway, Kearney, 238 loternationsl Railway Congress, 625 Railway Accounts, 614
  • Cross-over, Built Up, Edgar Allen, 460 Tools—see Machine Tools Railways and Tramways in 1909, 22. 32 Resistance of Goods Trains, 467, 520 State Light Railways, 567
  • T-re and Rail, Area of Contact between, 308 Wheels, Independent, 150

Railways and Railway Matters, British, Colonial and Indian:

  • Accidents, British Railway, in 1909, 489
  • Stoat’s Nest, 118. 123, 357, 363 ; (Letters), 258, 380, 420, 443
  • Australian Trans-continental Railway, Gauge of the, 48 ; Survey of, 115
  • Bwry Railway, Light Train on, 146
  • Caledonian Railway Abandons Branch Lines, 381
  • Canadian Pacific Railway Bridge at Lachino, Rebuilding, 614
  • Enfield and Stevenage New Loop Line, 328, 332
  • London, Brighton, and South Coast, Accident at Stoat’s Nest, 118, 123, 357, 363 ; (Letters), 258, 380, 420. 443
  • Railway Electrification, 146 North-Eastern Railway Steamers—Ships Railway Demurrage Dispute in Scotland, 49 Position, 521
  • Sydney, Proposed Suburban Railways, C. 0. Burge, 425

Railways and Railway Matters, Foreign :

  • American Railway Accidents, 490
  • Central Argentine Railway, Workshops Electrification, 538, 542
  • Colombia. Great Northern Central Railway of, 215, 226
  • Colombian National Railway, 241 Continental Railway Investigations, 442, 640 Costa Rica Railways, 531 (Tufo-page Supplement^ June 1910)
  • French Railway Accident, 637 French-Swiss-Italian Railway Communication, 24
  • Guatemala Railway, 371
  • Hudson and Manhattan Railroad, Hudson
  • River Tunnels, C. M. Jacobs, 232
  • Salvador Railway, 631

Railway Locomotives: General:

  • Links in the History of the Locomotive, 432 Locomotive Adhesion, 383
  • Engineering in 1909, 17 ; (Letter), 101
  • Proportions, 44 the Book? of the, Lawford H. Fry, 295, 335, 372. 413, 454
  • Locomotives, Eoormous, 176
  • Model Locomotive, New, at South Kensington, 434 ; (Letter), 5^
  • Superheaters—see Superheaters
  • Tank Engines for Fast Passenger Traffics, 327, 457, 521
  • Tools—see Machine Tools

Railway Locomotives: British, Colonial and Indian:

  • Compounding and Superheating in Horwich Locomotives, G. liogbes, 287, 309, 315, 333, 338, 405,411
  • Great Central Four-coupled Tank Eogine, 521 {TfeO'j)age Supplement^ Afay 1910) Wesceru Express Locomotives and their Work, 142
  • Indian Railways, Standard Locomotives for, 254
  • Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, Compounding and Superheating in Locomotives, G. Hughes, 287, 309, 315, 333, 338, 405, 411; (Letter^, 459
  • London, orightonand South Coast Superheater Tank En^ne, 327
  • Midland Six-coupled Passenger Tank Engine, 456, 457
  • North-Eastern Railway, Eight Wheels Coupled, Three-cylinder Tank, 63 {Ttea-page Supplement^ January 21xL 1910)

Railway Locomotives: Foreign:

  • American Electric Locomotives, 73 Four-cylinder Superheater Locomotive, 419
  • L'^corootives, Recent Developments io, 480
  • Bavarian State Railways Locomotive, 635 Bel^an State Railways Locomotives, 634, 642, 644
  • Brussels Exhibition, Locomotives at, 634, 642, 644
  • Nord of France Express Engines, J. T. Burton Alexander, 102
  • Paris, Lyons and Mediterranean Pacific Type Locomotives, 94, 98
  • Petrol Locomotive for the Argentine, Brooke and Co., 204
  • Rock Island Railway Locomotive—sf-e American Four-cylinder
  • Roumanian Locomotive Competition, 621
  • RATING of Machinery, 138 ; (Letter), 193 Refrigerating Machine, “Arktos,” Werner
  • PKeiderer and Perkins, 636 Refrigeration Plant~x«/ Ice-making Re-saw, Large Band, A. Ransome, 51 Resistance, Measurement of, 543 Rest Cure, The, 544 Rifles—War Material Rock-boring Drill, Hydraulic, Waclaw Wobki, 24 Rolling Stock, Railway—®see Railways Rosenhain, Dr. W., on Alloys of Copper, Alumi
  • nium, and Manganese, 87, 103, 190
  • Rosyth—see Harbours
  • Roumanian Locomotives—Railways, Locomotives
  • Royal Agricultural Society—see Exhibitions
  • Commission on Sewage Disposal, 399 Ruck-Keene. H., on Treatment of Marine Boilers on Long Voyages, 66
  • SALT Works— See Works
  • Sanitary Engineering in 1909, 9
  • Sankey, Captain, and Others on Steel Testing, 569, 575, 598
  • Sarco Feed-water Weigher, Sandors, Rehders and Co., 126
  • Saw Bench, Portable, Electrieally Driven, Jos. C. Nicholson Tool Co , 196
  • Larcfe Band, A. Ransome 51
  • Saws, Two Electrically Driven Wood, John Pickles, 472
  • Scientific Guesswork, 228
  • Scntt Younger, A., on Electric and Autogenous Welding, 220
  • Screw Propeller Problems, 334 ; (Letter), 443 Sebmer and Drawe, Messrs., on Reversing Rolling Mill Engines, 468, 484
  • Seligman, Dr. R., and F. J. Willott on Alu- mininm and its Alloys, 62, 97
  • Sewage Disposal, Royal Commission on, 399, 426, 452
  • Pumping Station at Glasgow, 348, 349, 495
  • Works, Shieldhall, at Glasgow, 492, 495 Sewerage and Sewage Purification in the United States in 1909, 139

Ships and Shipbuilding, General:

  • Auxiliary Machicery of the Cartier, 638 Cargoes on Board Ship, Ascertaining the Weight, A. Murray, 299
  • Clyde Shipbuilding, 130, 224
  • Coal Conveyor for Loading Ships, C. A.
  • Musker, 102 Commercial Motor Vessels, 384 Corrugated Sides of the e.s. Monitoria and their Effect, A, H. Haver, 204
  • Electric and Autogenous Welding in Ship Repairs, 220
  • Geared Turbine Machinery for Merchant Ships,
  • C. A. Parsons, 322 ; (Lytters), 362, 380, 420 Marine Engines and Motors—see Engines and Mo< ora also Electrical Matters Marine Eogineering in 1909, 16; (Letter), 101
  • Eneineeriog in the United States in 1909, 85
  • Superheating, 400 Turbines—see Turbines Modern Screw Propeller Results, T. B. Abell, 298, 334
  • Motor Lifeboats of the R. N. Institution, J. R. Barnett, 299
  • Production in the Engineering and Shipbuilding Trades, Censu* of, 95
  • Propellers, Two, Three, or Four, 113 Propulsion, Phenomena of, Professor J. B.
  • Henderson, 298, 334
  • Screw Propeller Problems, 334 ; (Letter), 443 Shaft Horse-power Measurement, Twist and Torque, Professor B. Hopkinson, 324 Stability of Ships, 267
  • Steamship Repairs by Electric and Autogenous Welding, A. Scott Younger, 220 Superheating at Sea, 437 ; (Letter), 526 Tanks, Experimental—see Tanks Turbines—see Turbines
  • Wako and Thrust Deduction Values, W. J. Luke, 298, 334 ; (Letter), 443
  • Work and Wages, Particulars of, 104

Ships and Shipbuilding, British Navy:

  • Australian Destroyer Paramatta, 164 British Scout Cruisers, 61
  • Warships, Forty Years’Progress, 564 Collingwood, H.M. Battleship, Turbines of, 139 {Tteo Ttfo-page Suppleinenis, FebrwsrtfWth, 1910)
  • Colonial Warships, 276, 363 Colossus, H.M. Battleship, 376 Destroyers, British and German, Turbines for, 266 {Tieo pag'’ Supplement^ Marek 1910) Hercules, H.M. Battleship, 498
  • Lion, H.M. Cruiser, A Forecast, 10, 14, 36
  • Swift, H.M. Destroyer, Cammell, Laird and Co., 232 {Snppb-ment^ January Tth^ 1910) Thames Dreadnought, 308 Tribal Class of Destroyers, 314
  • Warships, Four New, 23
  • Zulu, H.M. Destroyer, Hawthorn, Leslie, 314

Ships and Shipbuilding, Naval Matters:

  • Battleship of the Future, Admiral Bacon. 273, 284, 307
  • Clyde, Warship Building on the, 363
  • Construction of Warships and Machinery on Tyneside, 249
  • Electricity on Warships, 69 ; (Letter), 101 Engine-rooms, Ancient and Modern, 279 First Lord’s Statement, 279
  • Forty Years’ Progress in Displacement and Speed of Warships, 564
  • Jena as a Target, 247
  • Naval Architecture, Account of the Society for the Improvement of, A. W. Johns. 274
  • Engineering in the United States in 1909, 85
  • Estimates, 253, 269 Experiments, 227
  • Rosyth as a Naval Base, 3.53 Shooting in the Navy, 143
  • Supplementary Navy Estimates, 224
  • Three-gun Turret, Coming of the, 88
  • Turbines io Warships, Present Status of, 43
  • United States Navy, Engineering Education in the, 61
  • Warship Machinery, Increasing Cost of, 242
  • Warships and Machinery under Construction in England, Progress of, 36 ; (Correction), 63 of the World, 350, 392
  • World’s Dreadnoughts, 330, 360

Ships and Shipbuilding, Foreign Navies:

  • American Scouts, Comparative Trials, 557 Argentine Dreadnoughts, 152 ; (Letter), 193 Austria-Hungary, First Submarine Boats for, 140
  • Motor Gunboats, Yarrow, 301. 306 Austrian Naval Programme, 494 Brazilian Scout-Cruisers Bahia and Rio Grande do Sul, 431, 514, 518 [Ttcn-ixine SunnlcmerUf April 1910)
  • Chilian Navy, New Engineer-in-Cbief, Lieut. H. C. Anstey, 573
  • Destroyers, British and German, Turbines for, 266 [Ttro-pag> Supplfvient, March \3)lh^ 1910) French Battleships, Projected, Jean Bart and Courbet, 356, 362, 6z2
  • Destroyer Actde, 245 {Tiro-page Sup- plemenlt March llf/i, 1910) Destroyers, Comparative Trials of, 95 Naval Programme, 161, 334 Torpedo-boat Destroyers, 245, 562;
  • ((jorrection). 270 ; (Letter), 340 {Ttco- pagr Supplcmtnlt March IIM, 1910) German Cruiser Von der Tann, 488 Japanese Battleship Satsuma, 386
  • Cruiser Ibuki, Turbines, Fore River Shipbuilding Company, 86 Jena as a Target, 247 Norwegian Submersible Kobben, 612, 613, 616 Portugal. Mine-laying Steamer for, Thorny- croft, 143
  • Russian Navy, Present Status of, 110

Ships and Shipbuilding, Mercantile and Miscellaneous Vessels:

  • Clyde Shipbuilding, 130, *224
  • Edinburgh Castle, Union-Castle Line, Harland and Wolff. 130
  • Mercantile Ships in 1909, 18
  • Mouitoria, s s.. Corrugated Sides of, A. H. Haver, 204
  • Mountaineer, Paddle Steamer, A. and J. Inglis, 624
  • North-Eastern Railway Tug Boats, Cox and Co., 191, 19.5
  • Salvador Railway Steamers, 632
  • Schwann, s.s., Schmidt Superheater on, 400
  • Survey Twin-screw Steamer Cartier for Canada, Swan, Hunter and Wigham Richardson, 638
  • Twin-screw Shallow-draught 'lug Bulbul, G. Rennie and Co., 597
  • Vespasian, s.s.. Geared Turbine Machinery in, C. A. Partons, 322 ; (Letter), 362
  • Vollrath Tham, Ore-carrying Steamship, Hawthorn, Leslie and Company, 278, 282
  • White Star Line {Sij'trrn-jtugr Supplement^ June 2Ath, 1910)
  • Liners Lanrentic, Olympic, and Titanic, 18, 231, 640 {Supplement^ January lUt, 1910) ; {Sitlem-page Supplermmt and bro four-page Sup- plrtnrntff June 24f//, 1910)
  • Liner Mersey, Training Ship for Boys (x., Sijcteen-jmge Supplement^ June 2Atkt 1910)

Shipbuilding Notes :

  • Anchor Line and Booth Line, New Steamers Ordered, 208
  • Austria-Hungary, Prosperity in Shipbuilding Industry, 117
  • British India Company’s Now Vessels, 117 Experimental Tank at Teddington, Superintendent’s Appointment, 208
  • G. M. Stabiuty Balance, 50, 117
  • Holt and Co.’s Shipbuilding Methods, 117 Laing’s Yard to be Reopened, 141
  • Large Liners, Increased Number Projected, 208 M. G. Meters, 50, 117
  • Naval Architecture in 1909, 50
  • Teaching in Durham and other Universities, 60 Protesilaus, and Innovations in Shipbuilding, Hawthorn, Leslie and Co., 117 Shipbuilding Industry’s Iteviving Prospects, 141 Smith’s Docks Company Moves to Middlesbrough, 141
  • Snaefell and Levuka Launched, Structural Details, 208
  • Trieste and Lloyd Arsenal, 117 !
  • Union-Castle Liners Garth Castle and Edinburgh Castle Launched, 141
  • SHIPYARDS—Works Shooting—Ships, Naval Matters Shore Detritus, Accumulation of, during an Offshore Wind, Prof. A. H. Gibson, 632
  • Shows—Exhibitions Signalling—sr/- Submarine Sinking Foundation Piers with a Shield, 259 Sleigh—Motor Sleigh ,
  • Slide Rule, Yokota, John Davis and Son, 118
  • Smith, Prof. C. A. M., on Elastic Breakdown of Certain Steels, 485
  • - E. A., on Assay of Industrial Gold Alloys, 62
  • - R. H., on Dams with Overhung Batter, 544
  • - R. H., on Preliminary Training of Engineers, 397
  • Sounding Machine for Marine Survey, “Lucas,” 638
  • South Africa, Conveyance of Machinery in, 622 America—ser Engineering
  • Spark Arrester for Cupolas, S. Osborn and D. jCsrnegie, 613
  • Sprinklers, Grinnell’s Automatic, 398
  • State, The, and Inland Transport, 199 i
  • or Private Bounties on Steel Exports, 544
  • Steam Pipe, Indicating a, 36; (Letter), 127 Turbines—Turbines Whistle Pipes, Preventing Condensation in, J. H. Yatoi, 441 i
  • Steel—str Iron and Steel
  • Storie, 6. B., on Steam Turbines for Driving Textile Mills, 100
  • Streets and Roads in the United States in 1909, I 140
  • Stromeyer, C. E.. on Brittleness of Mild Steel Due to Nitrogen, 324 '
  • Submarine Sound Signalling, Gardener Apparatus, British Insulated and Heleby Cable Company, 391
  • Sugar Cane Mill, Rousselot, 509 Machinery at Brussels, Stork, 508 San Salvador, Fawcett, Preston and Co., 509
  • Superheater for Locomotives, American, 260 Schmidt, on s.s. Schwann, 400 Superheating, 70 at Sea, 437
  • Supplement, Sixteen-page, the White Star Line, {JuM 24tk, 1910)
  • Supplements, Illustrated—See Separate Section
  • TAGAYEFF, G., on Homogeneity of Metals, 485
  • Tank, Experimental, at the National Physical Laboratory, 248. 249, 274, 286
  • Telegraph Wires, Electrostatic, Charging of, by Locomotives, R. W. Weightman, 406 Telegraphy and Tele{)bony, Developments, Sir James Gavey, 648
  • Temperature, Indicator, F. Mellin and Co., 77
  • Test of Steam Engine—XM Engines
  • Testing Cement by the Brinell Ball Method, 218 Machine. Edward G. Herbert, 473, 485, 500, 519
  • of Materials, Berlin Material prufungs- arat, 39, 586
  • Trass, Professor M. Gary, 586
  • Textile Mills, Steam Turbines for Driving, G. B. Stone, 100
  • Thames Dreadnought, 303
  • Thermal Storage at King’s-road Works, Pancras, 572
  • Thomas, Percy H., on Lightning Protection Tidal Power, W. O. Horsnaill, 461 ; (Letters), 590
  • Tide-predicting Machine, E. Roberts, 48
  • Tin-box Factory at Barking, Self-Opening Tin Boz Company, 222
  • Tire and Rail, Area of Contact Between, 308
  • Tires and Axles Exhibited at Buenos Ayres,
  • Thomas Firth, Vickers, Sons and Maxim, and Cammell, Laird and Co., 460
  • Titan Fittings—Pneumatic
  • Torsionmeter, Hopkinson-Thring, 324
  • Town Planning in Liverpool, 171
  • Tractor, Light Compound Steam, Mann’s Patent I Steam Cart and Wagon Company, 153
  • Oil, Cyclone Agricultural Tractor Company, 63D
  • Marshall. 636
  • Steam, Mann's, 636
  • Wallis and Steevens, 636
  • Tractors, Agricultural, at Liverpool Show, 636
  • Oil, Ivel Agricultural Motors, 636 Saunderson and Gifkins, 636
  • TRADE Improvement, 46 Traffic, London, 35, 466
  • Trains—see Railways
  • Tramway Cars, Electric Braking of, A. Gerrard, 414
  • Tunnels—see Railways Turbine, Bergmann Steam, Dick, Kerr and Co., 163
  • Gas, 149
  • Marine Steam, with Reducing Gear, Westinghouse Company, 178, 179 ; (Letters', 362. 380, 420
  • Rateau Marine Steam. 563
  • Results, Steam, Comparison of, 364
  • Steam, Rotor Construction, 494
  • Turbines of U.M. Battleship Collingwood, 139 [Ttpo Ttro-page Supplements^ February llfA, 1910)
  • for Brazilian Scout-Cruisers Bahia and Rio Grande do Sul, Vickers, Sons and Maxim, 431, 514 518 {Tteo-page Sup’ plement^ April 29M, 1910) at Brussels, 608
  • for Canadian Hydraulic Lift Locks, 589 Impulse Marine, in Germany, 266, 531, ^8; (Letter), 590 (Ttvn-page Supplemenlt Marek 18^/<, 1910)
  • for the Japanese Cruiser Ibuki, Fore River Shipbuilding Company, 86
  • Marine Steam, Design of Manumvring Gear for, 479
  • Marine Steam, Impulse and Reaction, Sir W. H. White, 531, 568 ; (letter), 590
  • and Piston Engines, Combined, 465 and Propellers, 438 ; (Letter), 459 Steam, for Textile Mills, G. B. Storie, 100
  • Warships, Present Status of, 43
  • Tyne Pier—see Harl^urs
  • UNEMPLOYMENT—»«f Labour
  • VACUUM. Cost of a, 96
  • Valencia Electric Station—Electrical Matters Valves, Two New, C. E. Teilow, 625
  • Viaduct, Fortcreek, 646 ; Cleveland Bridge and Engineering Company, 646
  • Vickers, Sons and Maxim's Exhibits at Buenos Ayres, 460
  • WAGON, Electric Haulage, 470
  • Milling Machine—Machine TOCIM
  • Wagons, 40-Ton Bogie, Leeds Forge Company, 460
  • Walker, Miles, Exciter, 250
  • - on Short Circuiting Electric Generators. 365
  • - on Turbo-Field Magnets, Ac., 365,388

War Material:

  • Armoured Machine Gun Cars, 84
  • French Government Specification for Automatic Rides, 301 ; (Erratum). 333
  • Howitzer Shell, Ehrhardt, 513
  • Fried. Krupp. 597
  • Krupp Lights for Field Artillery, 550
  • Ordnance, New Type, Ehrhardt Shell, 513
  • Schneider's Li^t Field Gun, 521
  • Velocity of Bullets, Improved Method of Measuring, Professor Crantz. 619
  • War Material in 1909, 3
  • Warship Machinery—see Ships, Naval Matters Warships—sn- Ships
  • WASHERY Bunkers—see Coal
  • Water Cooler for Gas Engines, Test, 336; (Letter), 862
  • Purification in the United States in 1909, 123
  • Recorder, Lea, 537

Water Supply:

  • Braintree Waterworks Extensions, 194
  • Filtration Data, W. R. Bald win-Wiseman, 155
  • Lead in Drinking Water, 428
  • Liverpool Waterworks at Vymwy, 274, 310
  • London, 433, 610
  • Nottingham, Pumping Engines for, Ashton, Frost and Company, 124 {Ttro’/Mg^ SuppU- mrnlt February itk, 1910}
  • Sheffield, L. S. Af. Marsh, 155
  • Water Supply in 1909, 8
  • - the United States in 1909, 123
  • Welsh Scheme, 472
  • WATER Wheels—Wheels
  • Weaving Appliances, F. Nasmith, 50
  • Welding—itte Electric Matters
  • Westminster Electrical Station—see Electrical Matters, Horseferry Station
  • Wheels, Motor Cars—see Motor Cars Railway—see Railways Water, Application of the Pitot Tube to
  • the Testing of, W. R. Eckart, 34, 44
  • White, Sir W. H., on Impulse and Reaction Marine Steam Turbines, 531, 568; (Letter), 590
  • Wimperis Accelerometer, 455
  • Winding Plant, Electric, at the Hartou Colliery, 620, 621
  • Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony Instruments, . H els by Wireless Telegraphy Company, 546
  • Wood-boring Machines, Four-spindle, John Pickles, 650
  • Wood Saw—see Saws
  • Workmen’s Trips to Brussels, 608

Works:

  • Electrical Works at Southall, Johnson-Sundell, 31
  • Galvanising Works at Chelsea, Cowper-Coles Syndicate, 391
  • German Shipyards, 188, 583
  • Salt Works at Weston Point, Cheshire, 584, 592 ; (Additions), 628, 650
  • White Star Works, Liverpool (xi., Supplement^ June 1910)
  • YARNS, Hand Knotter for Tying, J. Stubbs, 130
  • Yarrow Boilers for Warshij)®, 392
  • Year-books—xt r Calendars, Ac.
  • Younger, A. Scott, on Steamship Repairs by Electric and Autogenous Welding,

See Also

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Sources of Information