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Family Routine and Riturals 1st Edition Barbara H. Fiese
Digital Instant Download
Author(s): Barbara H. Fiese
ISBN(s): 9780335243990, 0335243991
Edition: 1
File Details: PDF, 9.14 MB
Year: 2012
Language: english
=
NX
FAMILY A
ROUTINES y
RITUALS Pe
BARBARA H. FIESE *®
FAMILY
ROUTINES
AND
RITUALS
BARBARA H. FIESE
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
‘The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of
the
Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library
Resources.
10987654
To all the families who have made this work possible
and to my own for their support along the way
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2021 with funding from
Kahle/Austin Foundation
https://archive.org/details/familyroutinesri000Ofies
Contents
CHAPTER |
Routines of Daily Living and Rituals in Family Life |
CHAPTER 2
Myths and Misconceptions about Family
Routines and Rituals 28
Gina eink
Developmental Life Course of Routines and Rituals 43
CHAPTER 4
Cultural Variations 63
CHAPTER >
Family Health 78
CHAPTER 6
Protective Processes and Family Rituals 93
CHAPTER 7
Therapeutic Forms of Routines and Rituals 107
CHARTER 8
Promising Prospects 125
References 137
Index 153
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Series Foreword
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Preface
It seems somehow fitting that I write the Preface to this book over
Thanksgiving weekend. The American tradition of Thanksgiving hap-
pens to be one of my favorite family holidays. The tradition revolves
around food, telling family stories, and just relaxing as a group watch-
ing a football game or two after being well fed. The house is full of
wonderful smells and anticipation for family gatherings. My family’s
heritage is evident in the platters pulled out once a year to serve the
turkey, and the meal itself is a blending of old family recipes passed
down across generations to ones that our family has created as our
own. The conversation weaves old tales told every Thanksgiving with
news of members returning after adventures away from home. Encap-
sulated in this gathering are markers of my own family’s identity and
feelings of being connected across generations.
I come from a family of storytellers, so it is with great pleasure
that I have been able to spend much of my professional career hearing
tales of family traditions from individuals participating in research
conducted at the Family Research Lab housed at Syracuse University.
Hundreds of families have invited us into their homes and shared
with us the most intimate and challenging features of family life.
To them, I owe special gratitude for making this work possible. The
work conducted at the Family Research Lab has been supported by
the National Institutes of Health, the John D. and Catherine T. Mac-
Arthur Foundation, the William T. Grant Foundation, the Spencer
Foundation, and the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation. To
these agencies, | acknowledge their support and trust in our labora-
tory to conduct this important research. I have been fortunate to work
with highly talented undergraduate and graduate students over the
past fifteen years and more recently with full-time staff at the Fam-
ily Research Lab. The dedication, sensitivity, and good humor of all
members of the lab have made this work not only possible but also a
source of great satisfaction. In some ways it was risky to embark on a
career of family research, particularly in an area that had received scant
= xj®
xii Preface
Theoretical Framework
Portions of this book focus on how family routines and rituals are re-
flective of larger processes such as the family life cycle, developmental
regulation, and behavior change. Each of these topics is worthy of
attention in its own right and has been the subject of many fine texts.
It is important to emphasize that family routines and rituals are not
necessarily the only or even the most parsimonious way to understand
Exploring the Variety of Random
Documents with Different Content
The induction and eduction spaces are divided by a sectoral
partition; the apertures of admission and discharge on the sides of
the cylinders are of similar construction. The surfaces of contact
between the cylinders b, l and the support d are planed and polished
and are made water-tight by the adjusting screws m m of the pivots.
When the piston p is at the end of its course in either direction the
cylinder and crank are vertical, and the valves all momentarily
closed, the openings by which the channels j j communicate with the
discharge and supply pipes presenting themselves exactly opposite
the solid sectors which separate h from i.
In the next moment the flow of water will recommence, the
cylinder discharging itself from the full side of the piston, and filling
anew from the opposite side. Air chambers and relief-valves are used
as a provision against counter-pressure and hydraulic shocks.
The Brotherhood three-cylinder reciprocating engine is an
appliance for producing rotary motion by water-pressure.
The working parts of the Brotherhood three-cylinder hydraulic
engine consist only of the three pistons and connecting rods, one
crank and one rotating balanced valve and spindle which fits into the
driver and is turned direct from the crank-pin; there are no glands,
stuffing boxes, or oscillating joints.
It is shown by Figs. 131, 132. The three cylinders, A (made in one
casting) are always open at their inner ends, and are attached to a
central chamber, B. They contain three pistons, P, which transmit
motion to the crank-pin through the rods, C. The water is admitted
and exhausted by means of the circular disc valve, V, having a
lignum-vitæ seat. The valve is rotated by the eccentric pin, E. A face
view of this valve is shown above the steam chest. It has segmental
ports which, in rotating, pass over apertures in the valve seat. There
being no dead centers, the engine will start from all positions of the
crank-pin, and a uniform motion of the shaft is produced without a
flywheel.
The pressure is always on the outer end of the piston, so that the
rods, C, are in compression, and take up their own wear. This engine
is well adapted for transmitting pressure to appliances which are
worked intermittently, as, owing to the great speed at which it can
be run, it will not only save the loss from friction (where gearing is
employed), but will also reduce the friction in the machine itself by
enabling the gearing for increasing speed to be dispensed with. The
production of this simple hydraulic rotary engine led to its wide
application to capstans.
Fig. 133 represents a small hydraulic engine—The Compton
Hydraulic Motor—attached to and operating a gas-compressor. It
shows a style of water motor in large use in connection with city
water-mains. A pressure of 15 to 20 lbs. per square inch is sufficient
to operate it; the motor here illustrated occupies a floor space of 9 x
23 inches; it will supply gas burners to the extent of 6,000 candle-
power.
Fig. 133.
The valve motion on the motor is unique in this, the outlets and
inlets have a positive motion by which they are simultaneously
opened and closed by the motion of the piston; this valve motion is
designed to overcome the back pressure; it has a governor,
incorporated in the valve-motion for the purpose of maintaining
uniform pressure on the main pipes.
HYDRAULIC PACKINGS.
Generally speaking a packing is a contrivance or a material to
close a joint. Various greasy materials with gaskets, flax, hemp, etc.,
are used in joints which are screwed down, also collars of rubber,
red lead, luting, graphite, etc.
A most important part in the practical
working of nearly all water-pressure
machines is the leather collar, the
invention of which by Bramah removed the
difficulties which had been experienced in
“U” Packing—Fig. 134. making the large ram work water-tight
when submitted to great pressure.
It consists of a circular piece of stout leather (see cut page 20), in
the center of which a circular hole is cut. This piece of leather is
thoroughly soaked in water and is pressed into a metallic mould and
so that a section of it represents a reversed U, and is fitted into a
groove made in the neck of the cylinder. This collar being concave
downwards, then in proportion as the pressure increases, the edge
nearest the ram being trimmed down, it fits the more tightly against
the ram plunger on one side and the neck of the cylinder on the
other. It should be saturated with Neatsfoot or Castor oil so as to be
impervious to water.
When the least amount of friction
possible is desired in the operating of a
hydraulic plunger, there is no form of
packing which can surpass a properly
prepared and applied Leather “U” Packing
(Fig. 134), and in practice its position is
according to conditions, either in a groove Cup Packing—Fig. 135.
near the upper end of the cylinder, or at
the lower end of the ram.
When for any reason it is not desired to use the outer lip of the
packing, the resulting form is known as a Cup Packing, (Fig. 135),
and when the inner lip is used then we have the Hat or Flange
Packing. Fig. 136.
When the water pressure is not over
2,000 lbs. to the square inch, and a
greater allowance for friction is not
important, a fibrous packing can be
Flange Packing. Fig. 136. used, which is easier of application than
these for large sized cylinders.
The loss of power by the best of leather packings is 1 per cent. on
4 in. ram, 1⁄2 per cent. with 8 in. ram and 1⁄4 per cent. with 16 in.
ram.
HYDRAULIC
APPARATUS
HYDRAULIC APPARATUS.
Apparatus is another name for machinery but it also carries the
particular meaning of a complete collection of instruments or devices
prepared for a particular use, hence, hydraulic apparatus may be
said to include very many combinations of machines to utilize the
pressure or weight of water.
A number of these devices are illustrated in the succeeding pages.
It were vain to attempt to describe all.
Knight in his Mechanical Dictionary has grouped some six hundred
and seventy five terms and names under the heading of “Hydraulic
Engineering and Devices.” In the note are given some terms, the
definition of which the student may, perhaps, look up; thus: Gyle
(the first term given) is a large cistern or vat. The liquor gyle in a
brewery is the water-vat or gyle-tun.
Hydraulic apparatus has been developed mainly from two sources.
The “cut and try” method, which of course was the first and second
from scientific calculations, based upon both the experiments and
upon the mathematics of hydraulics.
It is difficult at this date to say to which procedure the world is the
most indebted, but it is plainly discernable that the two methods
have been necessary as a check upon each other. Untold thousands
of practical experiments and an almost equal number of tables, rules
and calculations have been made. The result has been that out of
many failures the point of economy and efficiency, aimed at, of
hydraulic apparatus is well defined.
Note.—Terms relating to hydraulics named by Edward H. Knight, Civil
and Mechanical Engineer, as above. Gyle; Sluice Valve; The Sough; Stade;
Worm-safe; Weel; Water-twist; Water-lute; Water-gilding; Vineficatur;
Tun; Tide-lock; Tail-bag; Swash-bank; Sump; Stop-plank; Sterhydraulic
apparatus; Staith; Rip-rap; Quay; Puffer; Psychrometer; Levee; Leam;
Leach; Land tank; Kiddle; Kimelin; Keir; Jetty; Invert Burette; Hydraulic
Blower, etc. Some of these terms go “way back,” and the above are a
specimen only of the 675 headings.
Fig. 137.
Section of Claw Type Hydraulic Jack.
HYDRAULIC JACK.
A Lifting-Jack is a contrivance for raising great weights by force
from below; also called a jack-screw. From its derivation from Jack,
equivalent to lad or boy, has arisen its modern use as denoting a
contrivance which is subject to rough usage. It is operated by a
screw, whereas—a hydraulic jack is a jack or lifting apparatus
operated by some liquid, usually oil, acting against a piston or
plunger, the pressure on the liquid being produced by a force pump.
The hydraulic jack consists of, 1, a cylinder; 2, a ram or plunger; and
3, a pump. One of these machines is shown and described in the
Glossary, page 24, another is illustrated by Fig. 138. The Fig. 137 on
the opposite page shows the inside view of Fig. 138 but on a
different scale. The names of the parts are particularly to be noted.
Movable hydraulic, or screw, jacks serve on
numerous occasions most effectively for lifting or
propping-up of less accessible parts. Eye-bolts
and jack-bolts are arranged for, in all parts that
are likely to be handled, to facilitate and
accelerate the work in necessarily crowded
quarters.
The base or foot is usually made of cast iron or
cast steel and may be either round or square to
suit requirements. The cylinder is bored from a
seamless steel ingot and having a thread upon its
lower end is screwed into the base.
The ram is also a tube of seamless steel having
a thread at the top and is screwed into the head
or cap which is made either of cast iron or cast
Fig. 138. steel. The lower end of the ram has a thread
inside to receive the pump plug which contains the delivery valve,
while upon its outside is placed the cup leather packing and the ram
packing ring. The pump for operating the ram is from five-eighths to
three-quarters of an inch in diameter depending upon the capacity
of the jack, and has a plunger packed with a cup leather.
A suction valve is contained within the plunger. A short arm is
fitted upon a socket which enters through the side of the head or
reservoir. This arm is connected by a pin to the pump inside the ram
while the outer end of the socket has a tapered rectangular hole
through it to receive the jack-lever. A leather collar packing makes
the socket tight where it enters the side of the reservoir.
To properly use a hydraulic jack. Place the head under the weight
to be raised, be careful to set the jack plumb with a good solid
footing; put the lever into the socket with its projection on the
bottom side; work the lever until the weight has been raised to the
desired height or an escape of liquid blows out of the safety vent.
Hold the lever up or raise it to its highest position and remove it
from the socket to prevent the valve from opening. In lowering
insert the lever in the socket with the projection underneath and
then cautiously press it slowly down until it brings up against the
stop; remove the lever and turn it over with the projection on top;
insert the lever in the socket and gently but firmly press it on the
end with the right hand clasping the ram with the fore finger, and
thumb of the left hand: thus the workman has full control of the jack
and can lower and stop as frequently as may be found necessary.
If from any cause the valves stick a few sharp quick strokes of the
lever will usually release it and cause it to work, if not, it should be
thoroughly cleaned.
Before shipping the brass filling screw should always be screwed
down tight, and before using this screw should always be loosened
to let the air out and in.
Note.—A prominent firm making these tools says: “In our Jacks, rams
are cut and cylinders bored from solid high carbon steel. We have nearly
300 styles for pushing, pulling or lifting.” This shows the wide use to which
hydraulic jacks are put; the style shown in the Glossary with its broad
base is to be used when the jack stands upon a light board on the ground
and can be placed under the work, or where steadiness is required. Fig.
139 shows a style to be used when there is not room enough to get the
head of the jack under the work, and is the style generally used for
moving engines, boilers, machinery, etc.
In repairing hydraulic jacks the following points should be carefully
observed; before attempting to repair a hydraulic jack the trouble
should be definitely located, next:
Put the jack under a weight and attempt to raise it, carefully
watching its action. Should the liquid leak out around the lever
socket, the gland should be tightened slightly until this leak
disappears. If the packing is worn out unscrew the set screw at the
back of the head about one-quarter inch, then withdraw the socket
not more than one inch, unscrew the gland and put in a new
packing of lamp wick braided and well oiled with mineral oil, which is
free from gum. Afterwards put the socket back to its former place
and tighten the set screw.
When the pump valve leaks the lever can be worked up and down
without raising the ram. This is also true when the plunger packing
becomes worn. If the trouble is found with the valve it can be
ground by taking out the pump plug and unscrewing the brass
bonnet which covers the valve.
Fig. 139.
The details of this punch are like Fig. 142. It has two guards, one
each side of the punch to pull the material operated upon off the
punch as it is raised by the lower lever. Another very convenient
style of hydraulic punch is shown in Fig. 144 where A represents the
body of punch, B the operating lever with the lowering or adjusting
lever shown broken off. The punch proper is shown at C. The center
of gravity of this punch has been so nicely located that by
suspending from the handle the ram hangs plumb.
Fig. 144.
Fig. 145.
THE HYDRAULIC PRESS.
The hydraulic press consists of
1. A Lever,
2. A Pump,
3. and a Ram working in a
4. Cylinder.
Bramah in the year 1796 brought out a very interesting apparatus
which illustrates the law of the equality of pressure which has been
widely adopted in the practical use of the hydraulic press. The
principle upon which this press works is due to Pascal but it
remained for Bramah to put it to practical use. Enormous pressures
are developed by operating the hand lever shown at M in Fig. 145,
which is connected with pump plunger P. The pump barrel A is very
thick and receives its supply from the cistern H through the suction
pipe a.
Fig. 146.
Water is delivered from the pump A through a heavy lead pipe into
the cylinder B of the hydraulic press. The ram P is made tight by the
leather packing n and has a table or platform attached to its upper
end as shown. The stationary part Q consists of a heavy cast-iron
plate supported by four wrought-iron or machinery steel columns. By
operating the handle M of the pump any substances placed between
the table on the ram P and the plate Q may be compressed to any
reasonable extent.
The pressure which can be obtained by this press depends on the
relation of the ram P to that of the plunger P. If the former has a
transverse section fifty or a hundred times as large as the latter, the
upward pressure on the ram will be fifty or a hundred times that
exerted upon the pump plunger. By means of the lever M an
additional advantage is obtained.
If the distance from the fulcrum to the point where the power is
applied is five times the distance from the fulcrum to the plunger P
the pressure on it will be five times the power. Thus, if a man acts
on M with a force of sixty pounds, the force transmitted by the
plunger P will be 300 pounds, and the force which tends to raise the
ram will be 3,000, supposing the section of ram is a hundred times
that of the pump plunger.
Over-pressure, is prevented by safety-valve shown in front of the
pump A. Fig. 146 shows an enlarged section of the pump used in
connection with this press. When the plunger P rises a partial
vacuum is formed below it and the suction valve O rises allowing the
pump barrel to fill with water through the strainer and suction pipe
in the cistern.
When the plunger descends the valve O closes and the water
passes through the discharge valve h into the pipe K, thence into the
cylinder B of the press where it acts upon the ram. When the press
has done its work the ram may be lowered by opening the relief
valve r. The safety valve is shown at i. By removing the plug h the
discharge valve can be reached to grind it in when necessary.
Note.—Hydraulic Pressure Transmission. Water under high pressure—
500 to 3000 lbs. per square inch and upwards—affords a very satisfactory
method of transmitting power to a distance, especially for the movement
of heavy loads at small velocities, as by cranes and elevators. The system
consists usually of one or more pumps capable of developing the required
pressure; 2, accumulators, described on the next page; 3, the distributing
pipes, and 4, the presses, cranes, or other machinery to be operated. This
property of fluids invests us with a power of increasing the intensity of a
pressure exerted by a comparatively small force, without any other limit
than that of the strength of the materials of which the engine itself is
constructed. It also enables us with great facility to transmit the motion
and force of one machine to another, in cases where local circumstances
preclude the possibility of instituting any ordinary mechanical connection
between the two machines. Thus, merely by means of water-pipes, the
force of a machine may be transmitted to any distance, and over
inequalities of ground, or through any other obstructions.
THE HYDRAULIC ACCUMULATOR.
This useful and indispensable apparatus was designed by Sir
William Armstrong. Its use was to secure a uniform pressure of
water in a reservoir by weight so that however much or little of this
water was used the pressure would remain constant.
In the first accumulator which is still in use the
ram was attached to the foundation while the
cylinder rose and fell as the pressure was utilized.
The weights were annular in shape and were
hung upon the outside of cylinder. In the modern
types of accumulators the cylinder is stationary
and the ram supporting the weights is made to
rise and fall.
By means of a hydraulic accumulator a uniform
pressure can be established and maintained on all
parts of a hydraulic main or system.
The volume of water which
is used intermittently for the
purpose of operating presses—
draw-benches for brass and
copper tubing and the like is
replaced by a pump or pumps
which are started and stopped PLAN AT BOTTOM.
automatically by a connection Fig. 148.
between the accumulator and
the throttle or belt shifter of the pump. The
ELEVATION.
accumulator is used for a double purpose of
Fig. 147. maintaining a constant pressure and to store up
any surplus force of the pumps. The friction loss in the transmission
of power by water through mains is very small, as for example: It
has been found that water under a pressure of 700 lbs. per square
inch may be transmitted through well proportioned mains, one mile
with a loss of only two per cent.
The useful work stored in an accumulator may be calculated by
the following rule: Multiply the area of ram in square inches by the
length of the stroke in inches by the pressure m pounds per square
inch divided by 33,000 lbs. the equivalent of one H. P.
This represents the work done by one full stroke of the
accumulator ram in descending from its highest position to its
lowest.
Example. Required the work done by one stroke of a ram twelve
inches in diameter, and a stroke of twenty-two feet, under a
pressure of 750 lbs. to the square inch. Area of 12 ram = 113·097
square inches. No. of ins. in 22 ft. = 264. Then
113·097 × 264 × 750
————————– = 678·582 H.P.
33,000
Mr. Tweddel designed the accumulator shown in Figs. 147 and 148
to furnish the varying demand for water where only one appliance of
this kind is used in connection with a hydraulic system of shop tools
more especially where these tools are numerous.
The ram or spindle A is fixed top and bottom and acts as a guide
for the cylinder B which slides up and down upon it.
This cylinder is loaded with weights marked to indicate the
pressure which the accumulator will balance with those weights in
use. The water is pumped into the bottom through the pipe C, and
fills the annular space around the spindle. The entire weight of
cylinder is raised by the pressure of water acting only on the area of
the end of brass sleeve D D, which is only 1⁄2 inch thick all around
the center spindle, and extends down through the bottom packing in
cylinder, as shown in sectional view. Fig. 149.
A compact arrangement is thus gained and any reasonable,
required cubical capacity may be reached by lengthening the stroke.
The accumulator is supplied by two pumps
having plungers 13⁄8″ diam. by 31⁄2″ stroke,
speed 100 to 120 rev. per minute.
When the loaded cylinder B reaches the top
of its stroke, by means of a small chain it
closes the suction cock E, which shuts off the
water supply of the pumps.
To put in a new bottom packing, the
cylinder is let down to rest on the wooden
blocks G, and the spindle is lifted out of its
tapered seat at the bottom by a tackle
hooked into the eye-bolt at the top. To renew
the top leather the bracket holding the top
end of spindle A, has to be removed.
This accumulator (having only a small area)
falls quickly when the water is withdrawn,
thus producing a combined blow and
squeeze, which is of great advantage in
hydraulic riveting.
The Hydraulic Intensifier is a cylinder
VERTICAL SECTION.
having two diameters, in principle very like
Fig. 149.
the tandem compound engine. It is used for
increasing the pressure of water in hydraulic mains, pipes, or
machines, using only the energy of the pressure water to effect the
change. But for this distinction a steam pump would be an
intensifier. An intensifier worked the reverse way is a “diminisher” as
a hydraulic pump usually is, giving a reduced pressure.
The intensifier is in some respects analogous to the electric
transformer.
The intensifier as used in connection with hydraulic apparatus was
patented in the year 1869 by Mr. Aschroft, but the principle upon
which it works is very much older. Intensifiers are made both single
and double acting.
PERCENTAGE OF THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF WATER
TAKEN FROM THE RESERVOIR.
Elevation of discharge above
Height delivery valve of ram in feet.
of fall
15 18 21 24 27
in feet.
Percentage.
2 ·0724 ·0583 ·0402 ·0307 ·0255
3 ·1327 ·1020 ·0807 ·0651 ·0532
4 ·1960 ·1535 ·1234 ·1020 ·0854
5 ·2614 ·2068 ·1686 ·1404 ·1189
6 ·3282 ·2614 ·2146 ·1800 ·1535
7 ·3960 ·3170 ·2614 ·2203 ·1885
8 ·4647 ·3733 ·3090 ·2614 ·2248
9 ·5341 ·4303 ·3572 ·3030 ·2614
10 ·6040 ·4877 ·4058 ·3450 ·2984
11 ·6745 ·5459 ·4549 ·3874 ·3357
12 ·7453 ·6040 ·5043 ·4302 ·3733
13 ·8166 ·6627 ·5540 ·4732 ·4112
14 ·8881 ·7217 ·6040 ·5166 ·4494
15 ·9600 ·7809 ·6543 ·5601 ·4877
16 — ·8404 ·7048 ·6040 ·5263
17 — ·9001 ·7555 ·6480 ·5650
18 — ·9600 ·8064 ·6921 ·6040
19 — — ·8574 ·7364 ·6430
20 — — ·9086 ·7800 ·6823
21 — — ·9600 ·8254 ·7217
22 — — — ·8701 ·7612
23 — — — ·9150 ·8007
24 — — — ·9600 ·8404
Elevation of discharge above
Height delivery valve of ram in feet.
of fall
30 35 40 45 50
in feet.
Percentage.
2 ·0181 ·0112 ·0063 ·0027 —
3 ·0441 ·0326 ·0243 ·0181 ·0132
4 ·0724 ·0560 ·0441 ·0348 ·0281
5 ·1020 ·0807 ·0652 ·0533 ·0441
6 ·1327 ·1063 ·0870 ·0724 ·0608
7 ·1640 ·1327 ·1096 ·0920 ·0782
8 ·1960 ·1595 ·1327 ·1121 ·0960
9 ·2285 ·1868 ·1561 ·1327 ·1142
10 ·2614 ·2145 ·1800 ·1535 ·1327
11 ·2947 ·2425 ·2041 ·1746 ·1514
12 ·3282 ·2708 ·2285 ·1960 ·1704
13 ·3620 ·2994 ·2532 ·2177 ·1896
14 ·3960 ·3282 ·2780 ·2395 ·2090
15 ·4303 ·3572 ·3030 ·2614 ·2285
16 ·4647 ·3863 ·3282 ·2835 ·2482
17 ·4993 ·4157 ·3535 ·3058 ·2680
18 ·5341 ·4451 ·3790 ·3232 ·2380
19 ·5690 ·4746 ·4046 ·3507 ·3081
20 ·6040 ·5042 ·4303 ·3733 ·3282
21 ·6392 ·5340 ·4561 ·3960 ·3486
22 ·6745 ·5640 ·4820 ·4188 ·3688
23 ·7098 ·5940 ·5080 ·4417 ·3892
24 ·7433 ·6241 ·5341 ·4657 ·4097
Elevation of discharge above
Height delivery valve of ram in feet.
of fall
60 70 80 90 100
in feet.
Percentage.
2 — — — — —
3 ·0063 ·0017 — — —
4 ·0180 ·0112 ·0063 ·0027 —
5 ·0307 ·0217 ·0150 ·0099 ·0063
6 ·0441 ·0325 ·0243 ·0180 ·0132
7 ·0580 ·0441 ·0340 ·0264 ·0205
8 ·0724 ·0560 ·0441 ·0351 ·0281
9 ·0870 ·0682 ·0545 ·0441 ·0360
10 ·1020 ·0807 ·0651 ·0533 ·0441
11 ·1172 ·0934 ·0760 ·0627 ·0524
12 ·1327 ·1063 ·0870 ·0723 ·0608
13 ·1483 ·1194 ·0983 ·0821 ·0694
14 ·1640 ·1327 ·1096 ·0920 ·0782
15 ·1800 ·1460 ·1211 ·1020 ·0870
16 ·1960 ·1595 ·1327 ·1121 ·0960
17 ·2123 ·1731 ·1444 ·1223 ·1050
18 ·2286 ·1868 ·1561 ·1327 ·1142
19 ·2449 ·2006 ·1680 ·1430 ·1262
20 ·2614 ·2145 ·1800 ·1535 ·1327
21 ·2780 ·2286 ·1920 ·1640 ·1420
22 ·2947 ·2425 ·2041 ·1746 ·1514
23 ·3114 ·2567 ·2163 ·1853 ·1609
24 ·3282 ·2708 ·2185 ·1960 ·1704
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