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utorak, 31.01.2012.

LOADED SAFETY VALVE : LOADED SAFETY


LOADED SAFETY VALVE : SPIRAX SARCO VALVES : PRESSURE RELIEF VALVE.



Loaded Safety Valve





loaded safety valve






    safety valve
  • The safety valve is a provision in the Sentencing Reform Act and the United States Federal Sentencing Guidelines that authorizes a sentence below the statutory minimum for certain nonviolent, non-managerial drug offenders with little or no criminal history.

  • A valve opening automatically to relieve excessive pressure, esp. in a boiler

  • A means of giving harmless vent to feelings of tension or stress

  • a valve in a container in which pressure can build up (as a steam boiler); it opens automatically when the pressure reaches a dangerous level

  • A safety valve is a valve mechanism for the automatic release of a substance from a boiler, pressure vessel, or other system when the pressure or temperature exceeds preset limits. It is part of a bigger set named pressure safety valves (PSV) or pressure relief valves (PRV).





    loaded
  • (of a firearm) Charged with ammunition

  • Containing in abundance or to excess

  • (of statements or questions) charged with associative significance and often meant to mislead or influence; "a loaded question"

  • Carrying or bearing a load, esp. a large one

  • laden: filled with a great quantity; "a tray loaded with dishes"; "table laden with food"; "`ladened' is not current usage"

  • (of weapons) charged with ammunition; "a loaded gun"











H.M.S. Thunderer in 1904




H.M.S. Thunderer in 1904





HMS Thunderer was a British Royal Navy Devastation-class battleship and an ironclad turret ship designed by Edward James Reed with revolving turrets, launched in 1877. The new innovations introduced on these ships led to them being regarded with some suspicion, and this was partly justified when two unfortunate incidents clouded the initial success of the design.

On 14 July 1876 shortly after completion she suffered a disastrous boiler explosion which killed 45 people when one of her eight 30 pound per square inch (210 kPa) box boilers burst as she proceeded from Portsmouth Harbour to Stokes Bay to carry out a full power trial.

The explosion killed 15 people instantly, including her captain who was in the boiler room at the time and injured around 70 others, of whom 30 later died. The reason for the explosion was that the pressure gauge was broken and the safety valves had seized through corrosion. The boiler explosion signalled the end of box boilers in favour of the Scotch cylindrical type, and it led directly to the writing of the first official Steam Manual in 1879.

Thunderer suffered another serious accident in January 1879 when the left 12-inch (305 mm) gun in the forward turret exploded during practice firing in the Sea of Marmora killing 11 and injuring a further 35. The reason for this accident was that the muzzle-loading gun had been double loaded following a misfire, and was a major reason for the Royal Navy changing to breech loading guns. It led to improved loading and handling procedures, and Thunderer herself was re-equipped with long-calibre 10" breech-loaders, and settled down in her old age to become a favourite of the Fleet: King George V served in her for a while as Lieutenant Prince George of Wales. With her broad beam she was a fine gun-platform, and the phrase "As steady as the old Thunderer" was high praise for any newcomer to the Navy.

She was refitted in 1881 and equipped with triple expansion engines, which roughly halved her coal consumption at 80% power (and thus doubled her range), paving the way for the widespread introduction of these engines in the Royal Navy.

Further extensive modifications were carried out in 1890-1892. and she was decomissioned and sold for scrap in 1909.











Manchester Patricroft coaling tower 5th June 1968




Manchester Patricroft coaling tower 5th June 1968





Stanier 8F 2-8-0 48374 is under the coaling plant having its tender recharged at Manchester Patricroft shed - the chute can be seen in the centre. The operator sat in the small huts (one for each bunker presumably) in a very dusty & black environment. The engine's safety valves lifting must have also have disturbed even more coal dust.

The 16t wagons loaded with coal were raised on a lift on the other side of the building up to the top of the plant where they were tipped over & the coal fell into the bunker, the empty wagon returning to ground level. Another dirty & dusty environment.

The only one in the UK still standing is at Carnforth but that has not been used for years.









loaded safety valve







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