Читать книгу Inventors at Work, with Chapters on Discovery - George Iles - Страница 28
Experimental Basins.
ОглавлениеThese figures show that a designer must bear in mind the speed at which this ship is to run; they prove that he may choose one form to minimize friction, or another form if he particularly wishes to bring wave-making resistance to the lowest possible point. Forms of these two kinds are readily studied when represented in models 12 to 20 feet in length towed through tanks built for the purpose. Experiments of this kind were undertaken as long ago as 1770, in the Paris Military School; the methods then inaugurated and copied in London at the Greenland Docks were greatly improved by Mr. William Froude in a tank which he constructed at Torquay in England, in 1870. His modes of investigation, duly adopted by the British Admiralty, and after his death continued by his son, Mr. Edmund Froude, have created a new era in ship design. To-day in Europe and America there are eleven such tanks as Mr. Froude’s, all larger than his and more elaborate in their appliances. In addition to learning the behavior of models diverse in type, Mr. Froude worked out the rules which subsist between the performance of a model and that of a ship of like form; these he brought to proof in 1871 when he towed Her Majesty’s Ship Greyhound, and verified his estimates in towing its model. The rules concerned, known as those of mechanical similitude, are given in detail by Professor Cecil H. Peabody in his “Naval Architecture,” page 410. While experiments become more and more valuable as one refinement succeeds another, there is always much well worth knowing to be learned from the actual behavior of a vessel as she takes her way through a canal, a shallow river, or the storm-beaten stretches of the sea.
The experimental tank of the United States Navy at Washington, is 470 feet long, 44 broad, and 141⁄2 deep; it is arranged for models 20 feet in length. See the page opposite. The towing carriage is a bridge spanning the tank just above the water; it is a riveted steel girder. The towing mechanism, of massive proportions, is driven by four electric motors of abundant power. A double set of brakes brings the carriage gradually and quietly to rest from a high speed. A self-acting recorder measures both speed and resistance. Ship builders may have models built by the Bureau in charge, that of Construction and Repair of the United States Navy Department, and have these models towed at any desired speeds, paying simple cost.
MODEL BASIN, U. S. NAVY YARD, WASHINGTON, D. C.
It was in 1880 that the lessons of towing experiments with models began to be adopted in practice. As a result the forms of steamers have been greatly improved. Originally their lines were taken from those of sailing vessels but, as dimensions grew bolder and speeds were increased, it became clear that steamers demanded wholly different lines of their own. These lines, fortunately, may be plainly disclosed in experiments with a model, because a steamer usually runs on an even keel, in which position a model is easily driven through a tank. A sailing vessel, on the contrary, is nearly always heeled over by the wind so that it seldom runs on an even keel; tank experiments, therefore, avail but little for the improvement of its lines. Even were the model inclined at various angles in one test after another, sails must be omitted, with their influence on steering, their lifting and burying effects, often extreme.
1. Starboard Side. 2. Horizontal Sections. 3. Vertical Sections. 4. Central Longitudinal Section. 5. Part of the Gunwhale inside, with its Skirting in Front and in Section. 6. Section through AB. 7. Bird’s Eye View.
THE VIKING SHIP.
Enlarged illustration (155 kB)