7, Stationers’ Hall Court, London, E.C.
January, 1901.
PAGE | |
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING | 1 |
CIVIL ENGINEERING | 10 |
MARINE ENGINEERING, &c. | 17 |
MINING & METALLURGY | 19 |
COLLIERY WORKING, &c. | 21 |
ELECTRICITY | 23 |
ARCHITECTURE & BUILDING | 25 |
SANITATION & WATER SUPPLY | 27 |
CARPENTRY & TIMBER | 28 |
DECORATIVE ARTS | 30 |
NATURAL SCIENCE | 32 |
CHEMICAL MANUFACTURES | 34 |
INDUSTRIAL ARTS | 36 |
COMMERCE, TABLES, &c. | 41 |
AGRICULTURE & GARDENING | 43 |
AUCTIONEERING, VALUING, &c. | 46 |
LAW & MISCELLANEOUS | 47 |
Comprising Tables, Formulæ, Rules, and Data: A Handy Book of Referencefor Daily Use in Engineering Practice. By D. Kinnear Clark, M. Inst. C.E.,Fourth Edition. Small 8vo, 700 pp., bound in flexible Leather Cover, roundedcorners
6/0
Summary of Contents:—Mathematical Tables.—Measurement of Surfacesand Solids.—English and Foreign Weights and Measures.—Moneys.—SpecificGravity, Weight, and Volume.—Manufactured Metals.—Steel Pipes—Boltsand Nuts.—Sundry Articles in Wrought and Cast Iron, Copper,Brass, Lead, Tin, Zinc.—Strength of Timber.—Strength of Cast Iron.—Strengthof Wrought Iron.—Strength of Steel.—Tensile Strength ofCopper, Lead, &c.—Resistance of Stones and other Building Materials.—RivetedJoints in Boiler Plates.—Boiler Shells.—Wire Ropes and HempRopes.—Chains and Chain Cables.—Framing.—Hardness of Metals, Alloys, andStones.—Labour of Animals.—Mechanical Principles.—Gravity and Fal