G'day all.
I'm researching the Tivoli coal mine near Ipswich, Queensland and came upon this 1875 description of a steam pump they were going to install:
This machine is of American origin, and is specially designed for use in mines, the working parts being with that object reduced to the smallest possible space. To an ordinary double-action pump a steam cylinder is joined and serves as the motor, the steam being conveyed from the boiler, which may be on the surface. This principle of arrangement will be availed of at the Tivoli mine, which is worked by a sloping tunnel 1800 feet in length and reaching a depth of over 300 feet. The steam will be conveyed the entire distance by pipes, properly packed to prevent condensation. Having no fly-wheel or governor, the engine and pump take up very trifling space in the mine, and the one under notice, with an 11-inch cylinder, will throw over 3000 gallons of water per hour out of the mine. By an additional patent, occupying no space to speak of, the engine can be made self-condensing at a moment’s notice, a decided advantage under many circumstances.
Can any of our steam-savvy listers point me at a graphic image of what this thing would have looked like ? Ideally I'd like to pin down the US manufacturer.
Thanks in advance
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I'm a Geo
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