Beam engine

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The remains of a water-powered beam engine at Wanlockhead
The remains of a water-powered beam engine at Wanlockhead
The cast-iron beam of the 1812 Boulton & Watt engine at Crofton Pumping Station – the oldest working example in the world
The cast-iron beam of the 1812 Boulton & Watt engine at Crofton Pumping Station – the oldest working example in the world

A beam engine is a design of engine based on the principles of a first-class lever. A force is applied to one end of a beam, which is pivotted in the middle, and the lever action transfers the force to create work at the other end of the beam.

The most familiar example is the type of stationary steam engine used for pumping water from mines. Here the piston of a vertically-mounted cylinder is attached to one end of the beam, to apply the force through upward and/or downward motion. The other end of the beam is connected to a vertically-acting pump. A downward pull on the piston causes the other end of the beam to lift whatever is attached to it, thereby doing 'work'.

The most common engine was the stationary steam-driven type, but water, wind or other forms of propulsion could be used.

Beam engines need not be 'stationary'. The steamboat Eureka is still powered by its rotative beam engine.

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[edit] History

The first beam engines were water-powered, and used to pump water from mines. A 'preserved' example may be seen at Wanlockhead, in Scotland.

Beam engines were extensively used to power pumps on the English canal system when it was expanded by means of locks early in the industrial revolution, and also to drain water from mines in the same period, and as winding engines.

The beam engine was developed from the Newcomen steam engine, which it replaced. James Watt is traditionally credited with much of its development, although these claims have more recently been questioned.

The beam engine was considerably improved and enlarged in the tin and copper rich areas of south west England, which enabled the draining of the deep mines that existed there. Consequently the Cornish beam engines became world famous, as they remain the most massive beam engines ever constructed.


[edit] Rotative beam engines

In a rotative beam engine, the piston is mounted vertically, and the piston rod does not connect directly to the connecting rod, but instead to a rocker or beam above both the piston and flywheel. The beam is pivoted in the middle, with the cylinder on one side and the flywheel, which incorporates the crank, on the other. The connecting rod connects to the opposite end of the beam to the piston rod, and then to the flywheel.


[edit] See also

[edit] Preserved beam engines

[edit] External links