. De re metallica. Metallurgy; Mineral industries. 286 BOOK VIII. lower part is a palm wide and thick ; then gradually the upper part becomes narrower and thinner, so that at the top it is three digits and a half wide and two thick. It is bored through at the place where the angles have been somewhat cut away ; the hole is three digits long and one wide, and is one digit's distance from the top. There are some who make that part of the head which is enclosed in the stem, barbed and grooved, in order that when the hooks have been fixed into the stem and wedges fitted to the grooves, it may rema


. De re metallica. Metallurgy; Mineral industries. 286 BOOK VIII. lower part is a palm wide and thick ; then gradually the upper part becomes narrower and thinner, so that at the top it is three digits and a half wide and two thick. It is bored through at the place where the angles have been somewhat cut away ; the hole is three digits long and one wide, and is one digit's distance from the top. There are some who make that part of the head which is enclosed in the stem, barbed and grooved, in order that when the hooks have been fixed into the stem and wedges fitted to the grooves, it may remain tightly fixed, especially when it is also held with two quad- rangular iron bands. Some divide the cam-shaft with a compass into six sides, others into nine ; it is better for it to be divided into twelve sides, in order that successively one side may contain a cam and the next be without one. The water-wheel is entirely enclosed under a quadrangular box, in case either the deep snows or ice in winter, or storms, may impede its running and its turning around. The joints in the planks are stopped all around with moss. The cover, however, has one opening, through which there passes a race bringing down water which, dropping on the buckets of the wheel, turns it round, and flows out again in the lower race under the box. The spokes of the water-wheel are not infrequently mortised into the middle of. A— Box. Although the upper part is not open, it is shown open here, that the WHEEL .MAY BE SEEN. B—WhEEL. C—CaM-SHAFT. D— Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Agricola, Georg, 1494-1555; Hoover, Herbert, 1874-1964. New York, Dover Publications


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Keywords: ., bookauthoragricolageorg14941555, bookcentury1900, booksubjectmin