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- Newsgroups: alt.fan.pratchett
- From: leveret@warren.demon.co.uk (Nick Leverton)
- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!demon!warren.demon.co.uk!leveret
- Subject: Re: lots o' questions&annotations for Mort
- Reply-To: leveret@warren.demon.co.uk
- Distribution: world
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- Organization: Indexed; Access: Random.
- Lines: 21
- Date: Tue, 24 Nov 1992 02:15:56 +0000
- Message-ID: <722596556snx@warren.demon.co.uk>
- Sender: usenet@gate.demon.co.uk
-
- In article <memo.760299@cix.compulink.co.uk> kjackson@cix.compulink.co.uk writes:
- >
- >In article <1992Nov14.201417.14868@sol.ctr.columbia.edu>, slb22@cunixb.cc.columbia.edu (Seth L. Blumberg) writes:
- >>In fact, the first recorded steam engines were built in Ephebe (that's
- >>Greece), more or less exactly as depicted in _Small Gods_. I believe 'twas
- >>Archimedes whose writings on steam engines have survived to the present day.
- >>They did, in fact, use copper spheres as heating vessels, and these spheres
- >>did, in fact, have a regrettable tendency to explode, which is what limited
- >>their use until some bright person thought of adding overpressure relief
- >>valves.
- >
- >I thought that the revolving sphere turbine was attributed to Hero of
- >Alexandria?
-
- Yes, it is. But not in any practical form, as far as I have ever heard.
- I don't know the size of Hero's constructions, but since their operating
- principle was by letting steam out of a hole, I doubt whether they'd be
- likely to explode unless the spheres were ambitiously large and the hole
- so small as to give an extremely weak jet in relation to the sphere.
-
- Nick.
-