The Heart and the Built-up Gun.
Examination of the heart brings out a principle in its structure closely paralleled in modern invention. Guns of old were cast or forged as ordinary columns or shafts are to-day, the strength of the metal being virtually uniform throughout when the guns were at rest on their trunnions. As explosive charges more and more powerful were employed, these guns gave way, the pressure of the exploding gases stretching the metal at the bore to rupture, before the outer metal could add its resistance. A modern built-up gun is made up of a series of, let us say, four cylinders: the first, of comparatively small bore and thickness, is innermost. It is cooled to as low a temperature as possible, when a second cylinder is slipped over it red-hot to form a tight fit. Both masses of metal are now slowly cooled, when a third red-hot, closely fitting cylinder is passed over them. All three united masses are now cooled, when the fourth and widest cylinder of all, red-hot, is passed over these three inner tubes, and the whole gun is allowed gradually to fall in temperature. When this process is completed the inner parts of the gun, by virtue of the shrinkage in the metal as it cooled, are under severe compression, while the outer parts are in as extreme a state of stretch or tension. When such a gun is fired its inner cylinders oppose much greater resistance to the outward pressure of the exploding gases than did the walls of the old-time guns. The strength of the old guns was uniform throughout when they were doing nothing, and very far from uniform at the instant of firing; a built-up gun, on the contrary, has uniform strength in its every part just when that uniformity is wanted, at the moment of explosion. The built-up gun therefore uses projectiles vastly heavier and swifter than those of former times. Its structure, made up of cylinders successively shrunk one upon another, resembles that of the heart, whose two inner parts have their fibres wound somewhat like balls of twine, these in turn being tightly compressed by a covering of other fibres. The heart has to resist no such explosive force as arises within a gun, but in its propulsion of blood through the arteries and veins it has to exert great pressure, with no rest throughout a lifetime. This pressure is uniformly distributed throughout the muscular tissue by a structure which, as engineers would say, has its outer layers in tension and its inner layers in compression. During twenty-four hours the labor of an average human heart is equal to lifting two hundred and twenty tons one foot from the ground.
What building-up does to strengthen the gun has been repeated in the case of the circular saw: driven at a high speed it becomes so highly heated at its periphery that the resulting expansion may crack the metal in pieces. In an improved method of manufacture the saw is hammered to a compression which gradually increases from rim to centre. In this way the tendency of the periphery to fly apart is withstood by the compressive forces at the central portion of the disc.
This ingenious treatment of metal for guns and saws reminds us of a familiar resource in carpentry, [illustrated] on page 36. An ordinary book-shelf, if fairly long and not particularly stout, bends beneath its burden and may at last slip out from its mortices and fall with injury to its books. At the outset this is prevented by bending the shelf to convexity on its upper surface. Then a heavy load no more than brings the shelf to straightness, so that the books remain in their places with both safety and sightliness. Here a principle is involved worth a moment’s pause. An inventor asks, What effect will a working load exert which it is desirable to lessen or withstand? He gives his structure a form opposite to that which will result from an imposed burden, so that when at work his structure, a shelf, a cylinder, a saw, will assume its most effective shape.