Fig. 61.

The wheels of these engines have been commonly constructed of wood, with strong iron tires, furnished with flanges adapted to the rails. But Mr. Stephenson has recently substituted, in some instances, wheels of iron with hollow spokes. The engine draws after it a tender carriage containing the fuel and water; and, when carrying a light load, is capable of performing the whole journey from Liverpool to Manchester without a fresh supply of water. When a heavy load of merchandise is drawn, it is usual to take in water at the middle of the trip.

(93.) In reviewing all that has been stated, it will be perceived that the efficiency of the locomotive engines used on this railway is mainly owing to three circumstances: 1st, The unlimited power of draft in the furnace, by projecting the waste steam into the chimney; 2d, The unlimited abstraction of heat from the air passing from the furnace, by Mr. Booth's ingenious arrangement of tubes traversing the boiler; and, 3d, Keeping the cylinders warm, by immersing them in the chamber under the chimney.[27] There are many minor details which might be noticed with approbation, but these constitute the main features of the improvements, and should never, for a moment, be lost sight of by projectors of locomotive engines.

The successive introduction of improvements in the engines, some of which we have mentioned, has been accompanied by corresponding accessions to their practical power, and to the economy of fuel; and they have now arrived at a point which is as far beyond the former expectations of the most sanguine locomotive projectors, as it assuredly is short of the perfection of which these wonderful machines are still susceptible.

In the spring of the year 1832, I made several experiments on the Manchester railway, with a view to determine, in the actual state of the locomotive engines at that time, their powers with respect to the amount of load and the economy of fuel. Since that time I am not aware that, in these respects, the engine has received any material improvement. The following are the particulars of three experiments thus made:—

I.

On Saturday, the 5th of May, the engine called the "Victory" took 20 wagons of merchandise, weighing gross 92 tons 19 cwt. 1 qr., together with the tender containing fuel and water, of the weight of which I have no account, from Liverpool to Manchester (30 miles,) in 1 h. 34 min. 45 sec. The train stopped to take in water half-way, for 10 minutes, not included in the above mentioned time. On the inclined plane rising 1 in 96, and extending 1-1/2 mile, the engine was assisted by another engine called the "Samson," and the ascent was performed in 9 minutes. At starting, the fire-place was well filled with coke, and the coke supplied to the tender accurately weighed. On arriving at Manchester the fire-place was again filled, and the coke remaining in the tender weighed. The consumption was found to amount to 929 pounds net weight, being at the rate of one third of a pound per ton per mile.

Speed on the level was 18 miles an hour; on a fall of 4 feet in a mile, 21-1/2 miles an hour; fall of 6 feet in a mile, 25-1/2 miles an hour; on the rise over Chatmoss, 8 feet in a mile 17-5/8 miles an hour; on level ground sheltered from the wind, 20 miles an hour. The wind was moderate, but direct ahead. The working wheels slipped three times on Chatmoss, and the train was retarded from 2 to 3 minutes.