Lexicographical Neighbors of Reheater
Literary usage of Reheater
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Compressed Air Plant: The Production, Transmission and Use of Compressed Air by Robert Peele (1920)
"The reheater should be placed as close as possible to the machine using the air
... Sullivan reheater. done with stationary engines, and even in the case of ..."
2. Compressed Air Plant: The Production, Transmission and Use of Compressed Air by Robert Peele (1920)
"The reheater should be placed as close as possible to the machine using the air
... Sullivan reheater. done with stationary engines, and even in the case of ..."
3. Compressed Air: A Treatise on the Production, Transmission and Use of by Theodore Simons (1914)
"Air enters the reheater at the top and is forced to take a circuitous ...
The heated air leaves the reheater by a flanged opening in the bottom ring, ..."
4. Compressed Air: A Treatise on the Production, Transmission and Use of by Theodore Simons (1914)
"Air enters the reheater at the top and is forced to take a circuitous ...
The heated air leaves the reheater by a flanged opening in the bottom ring, ..."
5. Stationary Engineering by Joseph Gerald Branch (1907)
"The reheater.—This is a modification of a receiver, containing coils, ...
The usual form of a reheater consists of a cast iron or wrought iron shell, ..."
6. Steam Power Plant Piping System: Their Design, Installation and Maintenance by William Lorenzo Morris (1909)
"The object in passing all drips through the reheater coil is, as previously noted,
to insure quick removal and to eliminate handling drips of different ..."
7. International Library of Technology: A Series of Textbooks for Persons by International Textbook Company (1902)
"A reheater is a modification of the receiver commonly used in multiple-expansion
engines and consists essentially of a receiver containing coils or nests of ..."
8. The Mechanical Engineering of Steam Power Plants by Frederick Remsen Hutton (1908)
"The Receiver and the reheater. A rule of very general acceptance is that the
pressure in the receiver should not rise to nor exceed one-half that in the ..."