id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 55428 Lardner, Dionysius The Steam Engine Familiarly Explained and Illustrated With an historical sketch of its invention and progressive improvement; its applications to navigation and railways; with plain axioms for railway speculators .txt text/plain 109057 4685 65 stated, that the latent heat, necessary to convert water into steam the same steam, the atmospheric pressure would force the water from heated, and the water formed by the condensed steam collects in a (34.) When the water is elevated to the engine, and the steam-vessels begin to act until a quantity of hot water, formed by condensed steam, steam, forms a quantity of hot water in the bottom of the cylinder, _steam engine_ in every sense; for the pressure above the piston was The method of working the valves of the double-acting steam engine, is place in steam vessels two engines, each of which works a crank: these steam used in common engines will contain about a cubic inch of water; In engines which do not condense the steam, and which, therefore, work (138.) The pressure of steam in the cylinder of an engine is always ./cache/55428.txt ./txt/55428.txt