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Publicēts: 26.04.2007.
Valoda: Angļu
Līmenis: Vidusskolas
Literatūras saraksts: Nav
Atsauces: Nav
  • Konspekts 'What Was the First Car', 1.
  • Konspekts 'What Was the First Car', 2.
  • Konspekts 'What Was the First Car', 3.
  • Konspekts 'What Was the First Car', 4.
  • Konspekts 'What Was the First Car', 5.
  • Konspekts 'What Was the First Car', 6.
  • Konspekts 'What Was the First Car', 7.
  • Konspekts 'What Was the First Car', 8.
Darba fragmentsAizvērt

A Catholic priest named Father Ferdinand Verbiest has been said to have built a steam powered vehicle for the Chinese Importer Chin Lung in about 1678. There is no information about the vehicle, only the event. Since Thomas Newcomen didn't build his first steam engine until 1712 we can guess that this was possibly a model vehicle powered by a mechanism like Hero's steam engine, a spinning wheel with jets on the periphery. Newcomen’s engine had a cylinder and a piston and was the first of this kind, and it used steam as a condensing agent to form a vacuum and with an overhead walking beam, pull on a rod to lift water. It was an enormous thing and was strictly stationary. The steam was not under pressure, just an open boiler piped to the cylinder. It used the same vacuum principle that Thomas Savery had patented to lift water directly with the vacuum, which would have limited his pump to less than 32 feet of lift. Newcomen's lift would have only been limited by the length of the rod and the strength of the valve at the bottom. Somehow Newcomen was not able to separate his invention from that of Savery and had to pay for Savery's rights. In 1765 James Watt developed the first pressurized steam engine which proved to be much more efficient and compact that the Newcomen engine.
The first vehicle to move under its own power for which there is a record was designed by Nicholas Joseph Cugnot and constructed by M. Brezin in 1769. A replica of this vehicle is on display at the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers, in Paris. I believe that the Smithsonian Museum in Washington D. C. also has a large (half sizes ?) scale model.…

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