The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci — Volume 2 by Leonardo da Vinci
page 93 of 614 (15%)
page 93 of 614 (15%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
anteciedete_, see on the same page.
Lines 16-18. The translation of this is doubtful, and the meaning in any case very obscure. Lines 19-23 are on the right hand margin close to the two sketches on Pl. CII, No. 3.] 772. OF CRACKS IN WALLS, WHICH ARE WIDE AT THE BOTTOM AND NARROW AT THE TOP AND OF THEIR CAUSES. That wall which does not dry uniformly in an equal time, always cracks. A wall though of equal thickness will not dry with equal quickness if it is not everywhere in contact with the same medium. Thus, if one side of a wall were in contact with a damp slope and the other were in contact with the air, then this latter side would remain of the same size as before; that side which dries in the air will shrink or diminish and the side which is kept damp will not dry. And the dry portion will break away readily from the damp portion because the damp part not shrinking in the same proportion does not cohere and follow the movement of the part which dries continuously. OF ARCHED CRACKS, WIDE AT THE TOP, AND NARROW BELOW. Arched cracks, wide at the top and narrow below are found in walled-up doors, which shrink more in their height than in their |
|