The Civil engineer and architect's journal, scientific and railway gazette . ins will be required, which at, say 11. each, amounti to £800 0 0 Estimate for building a Sewer along Pall-Mall-East, Trafalgar-square, Dun-cannon-street, Strand, and Villiers-street, for diverting the Western andEastern branches of the Hartshorn-lane Main sewer,—being a length of2,230 feet, at 18s. per foot £2,007 0 0 Estimate for Two Water Wheels, with complele Lifting Machineryattached, and including all necessary work. £ I. d. Brickwork—say 40 rods at 10/. 400 0 0 Two Water Wheels, at 200i 400 0 0 Lifting Machiner
The Civil engineer and architect's journal, scientific and railway gazette . ins will be required, which at, say 11. each, amounti to £800 0 0 Estimate for building a Sewer along Pall-Mall-East, Trafalgar-square, Dun-cannon-street, Strand, and Villiers-street, for diverting the Western andEastern branches of the Hartshorn-lane Main sewer,—being a length of2,230 feet, at 18s. per foot £2,007 0 0 Estimate for Two Water Wheels, with complele Lifting Machineryattached, and including all necessary work. £ I. d. Brickwork—say 40 rods at 10/. 400 0 0 Two Water Wheels, at 200i 400 0 0 Lifting Machinery—say 200 0 0 Total .. £1,000 0 0 REFERENCE TO ENGRAVINGS, PLATE V. Fig. 5.—Section of Shaft on A A. Fig. 6.—Plan nt Shaft. Fig. 7.—Section of Gully Drain from Grating to Sewer. Fig. 8.—Plan of Gully and Grallng. Fig. 9.—Transverse Section of Gully and Grating on A B. Fig. 10.—Longitudinal Section of Gully and Grating on C D. Fig. 11.—Section of Drain and Flap at Vent. Fig. 12.—Front View of Flap. Fig. 13.—Mode of Striking ttw Curves. f LAli. V. I 1848. THE CIVIL ENGINEER AND ARCHITECTS JOURNAL. 81 ON THE MOTION OF WATER.—By Guido Grandi. bij E. Cresy, Esq., in his Evidence before the Metrnpo-Utan Sanitary Our author has taken considerable pains to construct a paraliolictable, siven in his work (Book 2, cap. 5) ; by a reference to whichmuch labour will be saved by those who desire to make similar in-vestigations ; he thus describes it :•— This table is divided into three columns. The first containing:a natural series of luimbers from 1 to 1800, representing: equalparts, as inches or other measures. These numbers are the heightsfrom which tlie water falls. The second column contains the rootsof the opposite numbers in the first, and expresses tlie velocity ofthe water, corresponding to the height in the first column, in inte-gers and decimals: when the root is somewhat greater than thetruth, the sign -|- is prefixed,
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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, booksubjectarchitecture, booksubjectscience