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Optics Telescope Johannes Lippershey (Middleburg, 1608) By accident - no knowledge of optics Manufactured & sold in London (1609) Microscope Inventor unknown Zacharius Jansen, Galileo (1614) Surveyors quadrant (1631) Earliest - Joseph Lusuerg (Rome, 1674)
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Crank Conversion of rotary & reciprocating motions Cam - Hero of Alexandria Crank & connecting rod (1430)
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Crank & Connecting Rod
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Print Greatest invention of Middle ages Johannes Gutenberg (Germany, 1440) Invention of paper reached Germany in about 1320 Cutting of punches from brass, punch copper plate, pour molten iron Development of inks First book (Caxton, 1474) By 1500, 1050 presses in Europe
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Screw Press
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THE FOURTH AGE Intimations of Automation
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Coinage - first mass production ? Factory system Interchangeability of components A computer too early
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Coinage As early as 600 BC Coin Blanks (1000) Sheet of metal, hammered, then cut Bramante (Florence, 1500) Utilized screw press Rolling mills Boulton (Soho, 1797) Utilized power from steam engine
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Factory System Began with print shops and mints Textile industry (late 1700’s) Flying shuttle (Kay, 1755) Water frame (Arkwright, 1790) Spinning Jenny (Hargreave, 1760) Mule (Crompton, 1788) Power Loom (Robert, 1825) Primarily operated by steam
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Factory System (continued) Industrial cities Coal and oil in addition to steam No need to locate industry by a river Britain Liverpool, Manchester, Glasgow, Leeds, Nottingham, Birmingham Metal-working industries Machines create more machines lathes, boring, milling, shaping, slotting, planing, grinding, & gear-cutting
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James Watt’s Micrometer (1772)
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Henry Maudslay’s Screw Cutting Lathe (1797)
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Interchangeability of Components Beginning of mass production Locks Joseph Bramah (1790) Required accuracy in production Barrel of lock fits casing of another Smooth bore flintlock muskets Eli Whitney (1798) Supplied US govt. with 15,000 Required 8 years
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A Computer Too Early Charles Babbage Professor of Mathematics, Cambridge Difference Engine(1833) Special purpose calculating machine Analytical Engine (>1834) Universal calculator Engine ? Power by steam (no foresight) Purely mechanical with highly precise gearing and machining
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Difference Engine (1833)
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THE FIFTH AGE The Expansion of Steam
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Pre-Steam Francesca della Porta (1606) Suction caused by condensing steam Ability to draw up water Otto von Guericke (1654) Two teams of 8 horses can’t pull apart copper sphere made of two halves Blaise Pascal (1648) Weight of column of air is less at elevation Robert Boyle (1660) Gas laws
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Steam Engine Hero of Alexandria Newcomen (1712) 21 inch dia. piston (12 strokes per min) 10 gallons of water 51 yards per stroke Low efficiency Watt Condense steam & create vacuum Separate condenser (1769) Double-acting engine (1782) Rotative Engine (1781)
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Newcomen (1712)
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Development of Steam Trevithick (1799) High pressure steam Fulton (1807) Clermont on Hudson river Sirius crossed Atlantic (1830) Intercontinental Railway
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THE SIXTH AGE The Freedom of Internal Combustion
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Chronology Huygens utilized gunpowder in piston and cylinder Etienne Lenoir (1859) Coal gas as fuel with ignition Nikolaus Otto (1877) Four-stroke cycle Gottlieb Daimler (1885) Petrol as fuel
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Benz Tricycle (1855)
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Chronology (continued) Paris-Rouen race (1894) Rudolf Diesel (1892) Wright Brothers (1903) Ford Model “A” (1903)
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THE SEVENTH AGE Electrons Controlled
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Chronology Gas Lines (Late 1700s) Philippe Lebon (1799) Gas From Heating Wood Frederick Windsor (1807) Gas From Coal Lit Pall Mall in London (1807) 26 mile long main (1816) Hydraulic Mains Joseph Bramah Hydraulic Press (1795) Hydraulic Mains (1812)
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Chronology (continued) Electricity William Gilbert (1600) Alessandro Volta (1800s) Zinc and Silver discs- Voltaic Pile First True Battery - Static Source of Power Michael Faraday (1831) First Electric Generator Moved Magnet near a Wire Wheatstone & Cooke (1845) Substituted Electromagnets First Dynamo
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Chronology (continued) Telephone - Bell (1876) Incandescent Light Bulb (1879) Thomas Edison - USA J.W. Swan - England Electronics J.A. Fleming - Diode (1904) ASCC/IBM - First computer ? (1944) Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator Mechanical Switching ENIAC - First Electronic Computer (1946) Electronic Num. Integrator and Calculator
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