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Scientific American Supplement, No. 484, April 11, 1885 by Various
page 8 of 127 (06%)
use her own torpedo to advantage, and be less likely to be hit herself. He
then called attention to the necessity for well-protected conning towers
in these ships, and prophesied that if a submarine ship, armed with
torpedoes, be ever built, she will be the most formidable antagonist an
ironclad ever had; and the nearer the special torpedo ship approaches this
desideratum the better she will be.

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A PLUMBING TEST.


A recent trial of a smoke rocket for testing drains, described by Mr.
Cosmo Jones in the _Journal of the Society of Arts_, is deserving of
interest. The one fixed upon is 10 in. long, 2½ in. in diameter, and with
the composition "charged rather hard," so as to burn for ten minutes. This
gives the engineer time to light the fuse, insert the rocket in the drain,
insert a plug behind it, and walk through the house to see if the smoke
escapes into it at any point, finishing on the roof, where he finds the
smoke issuing in volumes from the ventilating pipes. The house
experimented upon had three ventilating pipes, and the smoke issued in
dense masses from each of them, but did not escape anywhere into the
house, showing that the pipes were sound. If the engineer wishes to
increase the severity of the test, he throws a wet cloth over the top of
the ventilating pipe, and so gets a slight pressure of smoke inside it.

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