No preparation is necessary for its combustion and no residue is left. It is easily distributed in pipes to points of consumption many miles distant, and no known method for the distribution of power equals in economy that of the transportation of a gaseous... Congressional Serial Set - Seite 6311901Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| 1904 - 654 Seiten
...when the gas may be brought to the surface, where it is at once ready to be used as fuel and light or to become a direct source of power in the gas engine....transportation of a gaseous fuel in pipes. ' ' The above tables prepared by Mr. OHpbant, show that the ordinary natural gas engine consumes only 13 feet... | |
| United States. Bureau of Mines - 1902 - 1012 Seiten
...earth at the mouth of the well until it reaches the farthest consumer at the end of the pipe line. No preparation is necessary for its combustion, and no residue is left. It needs only to be mixed with the proper amount of air and to have the combustion started by a naked... | |
| Gilson Willets - 1903 - 666 Seiten
...of natural gas. This statement is contained in the reports of the United States Geological Survey. All other fuels require a large amount of labor to...reservoirs of this ideal fuel, so far as known, are found in the northwestern flank of the Appalachian Mountains, extending from northern-central New York to... | |
| 1903 - 1318 Seiten
...where it is at once ready to be used as fuel or to become a direct source of power in the gas-engine. No preparation is necessary for its combustion and...flank of the Appalachian mountains, extending from northern- central New York to central Tennessee, and on the summit of the great Cincinnati arch in... | |
| 1903 - 912 Seiten
...where it is at once ready to be used as fuel or to become a direct source of power in the gas-engine. No preparation is necessary for its combustion and...flank of the Appalachian mountains, extending from northern- central New York to central Tennessee, and on the summit of the great Cincinnati arch in... | |
| Gilson Willets - 1903 - 672 Seiten
...it is at once ready to be used as fuel, or to become a direct source of power in the gas engine. Xo preparation is necessary for its combustion and no...reservoirs of this ideal fuel, so far as known, are found in the northwestern flank of the Appalachian Mountains, extending from northern-central New York to... | |
| 1904 - 654 Seiten
...when the gas may be brought to the surface, where it is at once ready to be used as fuel and light or to become a direct source of power in the gas engine....equals in economy that of the transportation of a gascous fuel in pipes. ' ' The above tables propared by Mr. Oliphant, show that the ordinary natural... | |
| West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey - 1904 - 676 Seiten
...fuel and light, or to become a direct source of power in tie pas entrine. No preparation is necessnry for its combustion and no residue is left. It is easily...transportation of a gaseous fuel in pipes. ' ' The above tables prepared by Mr. Oliphant, show that the ordinary natural gas engine consumes only 13 feet... | |
| Israel Charles White - 1904 - 652 Seiten
...where it is at onre ready to he used as fuel and light or to become a direct source of power in Uie gas engine. No preparation is necessary for its combustion...and no known method for the distribution of power pquals in economy that of tl\u transportation of a gaseous fuel in pipes. ' ' The above tables prepared... | |
| Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines - 1905 - 1076 Seiten
...of carbon and hydrogen, and is a perfect fuel as it issues from its original rock-sealed reservoirs. No preparation is necessary for its combustion and no residue is left. It is not affected by ordinary temperature and it is easily distributed by pipes to points of consumption.... | |
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