Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. All scrapped. [3] : 107–111. The Chesapeake and Ohio class M-1 was a fleet of three steam turbine locomotives built by the Baldwin Locomotive Works for the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway in 1947–1948 for service on the Chessie streamliner. As diesel locomotives became more prevalent following World War II, the C&O was one of several railroads ...

  2. Turbine - Steam, Technology, History: The first device that can be classified as a reaction steam turbine is the aeolipile proposed by Hero of Alexandria, during the 1st century ce. In this device, steam was supplied through a hollow rotating shaft to a hollow rotating sphere. It then emerged through two opposing curved tubes, just as water issues from a rotating lawn sprinkler. The device was ...

  3. Industrial Turbine. Tweets by @aidancbrady. The Industrial Turbine multiblock structure is used to produce power from steam. Ideally, the steam is generated by a fission reactor directly, or by heating up water in the Thermoelectric Boiler with superheated sodium produced by a fission reactor. Another integral use of the structure is to turn ...

  4. In outward flow radial turbine stages, the flow of the gas or steam occurs from smaller to larger diameters. The stage consists of a pair of fixed and moving blades. The increasing area of cross-section at larger diameters accommodates the expanding gas. This configuration did not become popular with the steam and gas turbines.

  5. Scrapped May 29, 1952. The Pennsylvania Railroad 's S2 class was a steam turbine locomotive designed and built in a collaborative effort by Baldwin Locomotive Works and Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company, as an attempt to prolong the dominance of the steam locomotive by adapting technology that had been widely accepted in the marine ...

  6. 蒸気タービンの動翼 発電用蒸気タービン. 蒸気タービン(じょうきタービン、英: steam turbine )は、蒸気のもつエネルギーを、タービン(羽根車)と軸を介して回転運動へと変換する外燃機関。

  7. Steam turbines, dairy machinery, and the de Laval nozzle for rocket engines Signature Karl Gustaf Patrik de Laval ( Swedish pronunciation: [ˈɡɵ̂sːtav dɛ laˈvalː] ⓘ ; 9 May 1845 – 2 February 1913) was a Swedish engineer and inventor who made important contributions to the design of steam turbines and centrifugal separation machinery for dairy .