James Boydell

James Boydell (died January 1860) was a British inventor of steam traction engines. His most significant invention was the first practical track-laying vehicle, for which he received British patents in August 1846 and February 1854.[1]

Description

Boydell described his invention as "endless rails" or an "endless railway wheel", later variations became known as Dreadnaught Wheels. In his system flat boards were attached to a wheel loosely at their centres. As the wheels revolved, they were capable of spreading the weight of an engine over the surface of the board. Boydell worked with the steam traction engine manufacturer Charles Burrell & Sons to produce road haulage engines from 1856 that used his continuous track design.[2]

Boydell Glacier

The United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee named Boydell Glacier on Trinity Peninsula in northern Graham Land, Antarctica, after him.

gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/772689152234749962/863806804164345856/ufo3.png?width=422&height=422
gollark: No, they're just really bad, like all LyricTech™'s other hardware. Have you seen their apinators? Mere *hectobees* per second.
gollark: It's not what LyricTech™ would like to think. They'd *like* to think they're cool and amazing, but are actually bad.
gollark: (and contrafermionic twos)
gollark: (we also have contrafermionic ones)

See also

Notes

  1. Clarke, John Algernon (1859). Account of the Application of Steam Power to the Cultivation of the Land. Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England. 20. Royal Agricultural Society of England. pp. 202–203. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  2. Lane (1971), p. 23

References

  • Lane, Michael R. (1971). Burrell Showmans Road Locomotives. Model & Allied Publications Ltd. lane.



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