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Author Topic: Paddle Wheel Diameter  (Read 5067 times)

grayone

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Paddle Wheel Diameter
« on: December 09, 2012, 09:07:26 PM »
I have a copy of part of an original drawing of the paddle when of the John H Amos and it says the paddle wheel has a mean diameter of 18' 6".  As I can't read anything else on the drawing size wise can someone tell me what this means?

Graham

Offline Tomas Krejci

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  • when the ship .. so only on the hill
Re: Paddle Wheel Diameter
« Reply #1 on: December 12, 2012, 05:17:01 AM »
Hi,
    I believe  it is the diameter  measured between midpoints of the opposite blades

  Tom
Steam....GO!

Offline TailUK

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Re: Paddle Wheel Diameter
« Reply #2 on: December 12, 2012, 08:21:37 PM »
The way I understood it when I was an apprentice was that if you had a tube the mean diameter was the the point half way between the outside diameter and the inside diameter.  In paddlewheel terms I assume it means the point between the inside and outside diameter of the floats.  Which, of course. in a feathering wheel would be the pivoting point of the float.

Offline Brian Gates

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Re: Paddle Wheel Diameter
« Reply #3 on: December 14, 2012, 05:49:18 AM »
Looking at the GA drawing in "British Steam Tugs", which scales correctly for length and beam (from its printed scale - the original at 1/4" would be better), 18'6 would be too large to fit in the paddleboxes.  The wheels are drawn with an overall diameter of 16' with the floats pivoting on a pitch circle diameter of about 13'3.

Odd to find such a difference - I wonder if "mean diameter" in this case refers to some calculation of the wheels effectiveness, perhaps a comparison to a standard with fixed floats?

 

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