Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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Of the rag and chain pumps there are six kinds known to us, of which
the
first is made as follows: A cave is dug under the surface of earth or in a
tunnel
, and timbered on all sides by stout posts and planks, to prevent either
the
men from being crushed or the machine from being broken by its collapse.
In this cave, thus timbered, is placed a water-wheel fitted to an angular axle.
The iron journals of the axle revolve in iron pillows, which are held in timbers
of
sufficient strength.
The wheel is generally twenty-four feet high,
occasionally
thirty, and in no way different from those which are made for
grinding
corn, except that it is a little narrower.
The axle has on one side
a
drum with a groove in the middle of its circumference, to which are fixed
many
four-curved iron clamps.
In these clamps catch the links of the chain,
which
is drawn through the pipes out of the sump, and which again falls,
through
a timbered opening, right down to the bottom into the sump to a
balancing
drum.
There is an iron band around the small axle of the
balancing
drum, each journal of which revolves in an iron bearing fixed to a
timber
.
The chain turning about this drum brings up the water by the
balls
through the pipes.
Each length of pipe is encircled and protected by
five
iron bands, a palm wide and a digit thick, placed at equal distances from
each
other; the first band on the pipe is shared in common with the
preceding
length of pipe into which it is fitted, the last band with the succeed­
ing
length of pipe which is fitted into it.
Each length of pipe, except the
first
, is bevelled on the outer circumference of the upper end to a distance
of
seven digits and for a depth of three digits, in order that it may be inserted
into
the length of pipe which goes before it; each, except the last, is reamed
out
on the inside of the lower end to a like distance, but to the depth

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