. Mechanical appliances, mechanical movements and novelties of construction; a complete work and a continuation, as a second volume, of the author's book entitled "Mechanical movements, powers and devices" ... including an explanatory chapter on the leading conceptions of perpetual motion existing during the past three centuries. 3^4 PP:KrETUAL MOTION. each other; but the tube, D, with its bulb swelled out, displaces a pintof water more than its opposite tube, and hence will attempt to rise withthe force of about one pound, and each tube, when it arrives at thesame position, must produce the s


. Mechanical appliances, mechanical movements and novelties of construction; a complete work and a continuation, as a second volume, of the author's book entitled "Mechanical movements, powers and devices" ... including an explanatory chapter on the leading conceptions of perpetual motion existing during the past three centuries. 3^4 PP:KrETUAL MOTION. each other; but the tube, D, with its bulb swelled out, displaces a pintof water more than its opposite tube, and hence will attempt to rise withthe force of about one pound, and each tube, when it arrives at thesame position, must produce the same result; the wheel must have acontinual power, equal to about one pound, wdth a radius of two 957. PERPETUAL MOTION. Air-buoyed wheel. A is a cisternof water filled as high as line R; C are six bladders, communicating by the tubes, D, with the hollowaxle E, which axle is connectedwqth the bellows, F, by the pipe is a crank, connected with thecrank, I, by the rod K. L is abevel w^heel, M a pinion, N itsshaft. O is a crank attached tothe bellow:, F, by the rod P. Qare valves with projecting and S are tw^o projecting is a hole in the axle, E, form-ing a communication with it andthe lowermost bladder. The axb,E, being put in motion, is expected to carry round the bladdersand tables, and by the cranks, H and I, and the connecting rod, K,cause the wheel, L, to revolve, which, communicating a similar motionto the pinion, M, shaft, N, and crank, O, works the bellows, F, fromwhich the air enters the axle, E, by the tube, G, and passing throughthe hole in it at T, enters the lower bladder, C, by the tube D; this blad-der being thus rendered lighter than the space it


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhiscoxgardnerdexter18, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910