Lexicographical Neighbors of Reheaters
Literary usage of Reheaters
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Steam Power Plant Engineering by George Frederick Gebhardt (1913)
"The range of pressures sanctioned by modern practice for different pes of engines
is as follows : 198. Receiver reheaters: Intermediate Reheating. ..."
2. Transactions of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers by American Society of Mechanical Engineers (1904)
"Test 13, Engine C, full load with jackets and reheaters 472 135. ... 27, " "
quarter load with reheaters 487 149. " 28, " " half load without reheaters 489 ..."
3. Steam Power Plant Engineering by George Frederick Gebhardt (1917)
"Receiver reheaters: Intermediate Reheating. —-The receivers between the cylinders of
... The question of the propriety of using reheaters is an open one, ..."
4. Direct-acting Steam Pumps by Frank Ferdinand Nickel (1915)
"reheaters.—When economy is an object, reheaters may be placed between two ...
These reheaters are generally cylindrical shells with heads and iron tubes ..."
5. Heat Engineering: A Textbook of Applied Thermodynamics for Engineers and by Arthur Maurice Greene (1915)
"reheaters Steam as it leaves the cylinder of an engine is likely to be quite wet
and hence the moisture deposited on the walls at entrance into the next ..."
6. Steam Power Plant Piping System: Their Design, Installation and Maintenance by William Lorenzo Morris (1909)
"System; Supporting Engine reheaters to give Sufficient Head for Drip Flow.
simple arrangement which has the advantage that it can be varied about i in. ..."
7. Steam Power Plant Engineering by George Frederick Gebhardt (1910)
"Receiver-reheaters. — The receivers between the cylinders of multi-expansion
engines are frequently equipped with heating coils as illustrated in Fig. ..."
8. Railroad Construction: Theory and Practice; a Text-book for the Use of by Walter Loring Webb (1922)
"reheaters. A reheater is substantially the same as a superheater in its general
principle of construction. When steam has been exhausted from a ..."