A comparison of the newly invented corn-mill, with those worked by wind and water, as likewise those worked by Newcomen & Cawley's leaver steam engine with a short historical account of the invention of fire machinery: and a critical review, or an account of some parts of the leaver engine, which the Imperial Academy of Sciences, at Petersbourg, has crowned for the theory of engines which receive their motion from the force of steam: with the manner to find out an universal measure in solids, as in fluids, and an answer to an ironical conclusion on the English for pirating other peoples' inventions. By Mr. Blakey.
- Blakey, William, b. 1712.
- Date:
- M DCC LXXXIX. [1789]
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Comparison of the newly invented corn-mill, with those worked by wind and water, as likewise those worked by Newcomen & Cawley's leaver steam engine (Online)
A comparison of the newly invented corn-mill, with those worked by wind and water, as likewise those worked by Newcomen & Cawley's leaver steam engine: with a short historical account of the invention of fire machinery: and a critical review, or an accoun
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London : printed by H. Reynell, No. 21, Piccadilly. And sold by J. Debrett, opposite Burlington-House, Piccadilly, M DCC LXXXIX. [1789]
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- Full text available: 1789.