Dial Thermometer.—Terminate a piece of tube, of six-tenths of an inch in diameter, with two points, and solder to one of these points a tube one-eighth of an inch in diameter and six inches long; close the end of this small tube, and, heating a zone of the reservoir, near the base of the other point, blow a bulb there. Cut off the point by which you have blown, at a little distance from the bulb; open and border the end of the narrow tube, and bend it into a U. See [pl. 4], fig. 16.
Fill the bulb and the reservoir with alcohol, and add a drop of mercury which fills a certain space in the narrow tube. This mercury bears on its surface a little iron weight, to which a thread is fastened; the other end of this thread passes over a pulley, whose axis turns a needle. The expansion or contraction of the alcohol causes the mercury to rise and fall, and consequently produces a movement of the needle or index of the dial. This thermometer is graduated like the others, by being brought into comparison with a standard thermometer.
Chemical Thermometer.—This instrument is merely a common thermometer, the divisions of which, graduated on paper, are enclosed in a very thin glass tube, to hinder them from being altered or destroyed when the instrument is plunged into liquids. [Pl. 4], fig. 4, 5, 6, and 7, represent chemical thermometers of various kinds.
The case of the thermometer can be made in two different ways. According to the first, you take a tube of a pretty large diameter, and with very thin sides; you draw out one end and obliterate the point, which you bend into a ring, in a direction perpendicular to that of the case; you pass through this ring the stalk of the thermometer, which is thus placed parallel to the large tube. After having fixed the graduated scale in the interior of the case, by means of a small drop of sealing-wax, which has been dropped on the slip of paper, and which, being supported against the side of the case, needs only to be warmed to adhere there and fix the scale securely to its envelope, you close the upper extremity of the case by drawing it out, obliterating the canal and soldering it to the thermometer tube which has been introduced into the ring at the lower end of the case. You heat the connecting piece till it is soft, and then push the thermometer up and down until the zero marked on its tube corresponds with the zero marked on the scale within the case. See [pl. 4], fig. 6 and 7.
The second method of making the case is as follows:—You take a tube with thin sides, and sufficiently large to contain the entire thermometer; you draw out the tube at one end, and choke it at some distance from the point of the contracted part. This you must do in such a manner as to form a little bulb, which is to be ballasted in the manner described at the article Hydrometers. After having introduced into the case a little ball of cotton, you place therein the thermometer, furnished with its scale, and in such a manner that the reservoir rests on the cotton. You terminate the upper end of the case either with a ring or by a contraction which permits the instrument to be suspended by a cord. See [pl. 4], fig. 4 and 5.
Spiral Thermometer.—Take a tube which is not capillary, but which has thin sides; close one of its ends, and bend it round by pressing it with a metallic rod; continue to bend it round till it has made several turns, all in the same plane. See [pl. 1], fig. 13. The latter turns may be managed with the fingers instead of the metallic rod. When the reservoir so formed is sufficiently large, solder to the end of it a capillary tube, which you point in a direction perpendicular to that of the axis of the spiral. The instrument is represented by [pl. 4], fig. 8.
Pocket Thermometer.—The pocket thermometer differs in nothing from the thermometer just described, except that the capillary tube, instead of passing away from the spiral in a straight line, is turned round, so as to form a continuation of the spiral. See [pl. 4], fig. 17.