... as great as the theory allows to an incidence of 40. We may therefore, on all occasions, keep the yards more square ; and the loss which we sustain by the diminution of the x'ery oblique impulse will be more than compensated by its more favourable... A System of Mechanical Philosophy - Síđa 644eftir John Robison - 1822 - 50 síđurHeildartexta - Um bókina
| Encyclopaedia Britannica - 1810 - 824 síđur
...impulfions continue to be very confiderable, and that even an incidence of fix degrees gives an impulte as great as the theory allows to an incidence of 40. We may therefore, on all occaiions, keep the yards more fquare ; and the lofs which we fuHain by the diminution of the very... | |
| 1816 - 762 síđur
...impullions continue to be very considerable, and that even an incidence »f fix degrees gives an irr.pulfc as great as the theory allows to an incidence of 40. We may therefore, on all occafions, keep the yards more fquare ; and the lofs which we fuftain by the diminution of the very... | |
| Encyclopaedia Perthensis - 1816 - 746 síđur
...impulfions continue to be very confiderable, and that even an incidence f)l fix degrees gives an impulfe as great as the theory allows to an incidence of 40. We may therefore, on all occafions, keep the yards more fquare ; and the lofs which we fuftain by the diminution of the very... | |
| 1823 - 936 síđur
...acquire : and this trifling velocity would be wasted in leeway ; for we have seen that the diminution <>t S = W: A > МM H g 8 sZj) a5u o ...v 0ζ Q c K O l r i ت 0 ` P 2 Š E аз the theory allows to an incidence of 40. We may therefore, on all occasions, keep the yards more... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 420 síđur
...great obliquities, the impulsions continue to be very considerable, and that even an incidence of 6° gives an impulse as great as the theory allows to...the loss which we sustain by the diminution of the very oblique impulse will be more than compensated by its more favorable direction with respect to... | |
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