¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Laminations
1. lamination [n] - See also: lamination
Lexicographical Neighbors of Laminations
Literary usage of Laminations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Insulation of Electric Machines by Harry Winthrop Turner, Henry Metcalf Hobart (1905)
"CHAPTER XVIII INSULATING ARMATURE PUNCHINGS AND laminations IN GENERAL PRACTICE
varies widely as regards the means employed for insulating laminations from ..."
2. Practical Marine Engineering for Marine Engineers and Students: With Aids by William Frederick Durand (1901)
"Now when a plate with such laminations is worked into the structure of a boiler
with the continual fluctuations of temperature and the consequent expansions ..."
3. Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers by American Institute of Electrical Engineers (1917)
"There are two general paths of heat conduction in all armature cores; namely, a
flow along the laminations to where their edges come in contact with the air ..."
4. Practical Aviation: An Understandable Presentation of Interesting and by Charles Brian Hayward (1919)
"Details of Hub and laminations. Sections near the hub may be increased, ...
All modern propellers are built up of a number of laminations of wood glued ..."
5. A Practical Treatise on the Manufacture of Brick, Tiles and Terra-cotta by Charles Thomas Davis (1895)
"This makes a disruption in the bond of the material, and the brick will be moulded
with the clay in layers, or so called laminations. These laminations are ..."
6. Dynamo-electric Machinery: A Manual for Students of Electrotechnics by Silvanus Phillips Thompson (1903)
"The insulation consists of alternate laminations of sheet mica and tough paper.
A temperature rise of 40° C. is permitted unless a lower limit is stipulated ..."
7. Dynamo-electric Machinery: A Manual for Students of Electrotechnics by Silvanus Phillips Thompson (1896)
"The insulation consists of alternate laminations of sheet mica and tough paper.
A temperature rise of 40° C. is permitted unless a lower limit is stipulated ..."
8. Armature Construction by Henry Metcalf Hobart, A. G. Ellis (1907)
"CHAPTER II ARMATURE laminations IT was formerly the opinion that the softest
Swedish charcoal iron was the most suitable material for armature laminations. ..."