Galilei, Galileo, Mechanics, 1665
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1
Annotations of Dominico Mantovani upon the Bal­
lance
of Signore Galileo Galilei.
* Galileus ſaith it
expreſly
in this
Copy
which I fol­
low
, but might
omit
it in the Co­
py
which came to
the
hands of Man­
tovani
.
Secondly, it is ſuppoſed in this Problem that the Compoſition
of
two Metals do retain the ſame proportion of Maſs in the
Mixture
as the two Simple Metals, of which it is compounded,
had
at firſt.
I mean, that the Simple Metals retain and keep in
the
Compoſition (after that they are incorporated and commix­
ed
) the ſame proportion in Maſs that the Simple Metals had
when
they were ſeparated: Which in the Caſe of Signore Gali­
leo
, touching the Commixtion of Gold and Silver, I do neither
deny
, nor particularly confeſs.
But if one would, for example,
unite
101 pounds of Copper with 21 pounds of Tin, to make
thereof
120 pounds of Bell-Metal, (I abate two pounds,
ſuppoſed
to be waſted in the Melting) I do think that 120
pounds
of Compound Metal will have a leſs Bulk than the 100
pounds
of pure Copper, and the 20 pounds of Tin unmixt, that
is
, before they were incorporated and melted into one Maſs, and
that
the Compoſition is more grave in Specie than the ſingle Cop­
per
, and the ſingle Braſs: and in the Caſe of Signore Galileo the
Compoſition
of Gold and Silver is ſuppoſed to be lighter in Specie
than
the pure Gold, and heavier in Specie than the pure Silver. Of
which
it would be eaſie to make ſome ſuch like experiment, melt­
ing
together, v. gr. 10 pounds of Lead with 5 pounds of Tin,
and
obſerving whether thoſe 15 pounds, or whatever the Mixture
maketh
, do give the difference betwixt the weight in the Water
to
the weight in the Air, in the proportion that the 15 pounds of
the
two Metals diſ-united gave before: I do not ſay, the ſame diffe­
rence
, becauſe I pre ſuppoſe that they will waſte in melting down,
and
that the Compound will be leſs than 15 pounds, therefore I
ſay
in proportion.

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