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James
Watt
1736-1819
James Watt was born in Greenock in 1736, the son of a ship's chandler
(trader in canvas, etc). Watt had little formal education due
to poor health in his youth, but pottering about in his father's
shop he developed an interest in trying to make things "work
like clockwork".
In
his late teens he went to London to learn to be a "mathematical
and philosophical instrument maker", and when he returned
to Glasgow he got a job making instruments with Glasgow University,
who gave him accomodation and a workshop.
In
1763 John Anderson asked him to repair an early steam engine he
had acquired. This early model, known as a Newcomen engine, was
very inefficient. The cylinder (where the piston was) had to be
heated when steam was admitted, and then gradually cooled again
to condense the steam. This wasted a lot of time and fuel. Two
years later, while wandering aimlessly through Glasgow Green,
Watt hit upon the idea of condensing the steam in a separate vessel.
This removed the need for heating and cooling, making the engine
faster, safer, and more fuel-efficient. A stone in Glasgow Green
marks this spot, where the industrial revolution really began.
(Later, in 1778 Watt presented Anderson with a micrometer he had
designed and made, as a gesture of thanks.)
Watt
went into business with Matthew Boulton, a Birmingham engineer,
producing engines based on this new approach. Engineers from all
the industrialised countries flocked to see their factories.
Watt's
engines were initially used for pumping water from cornish tin
and copper mines. Later, the new cotton mills, which had been
built near fast-flowing rivers to take advantage of water power,
almost all switched to steam. Gradually, mills began to move toward
the centres of population. At first, steam power was used mainly
for spinning, but eventually weaving was also powered by steam
engine. By 1819, the year of Watt's death, there were 18 steam
weaving factories in Glasgow, with 2800 looms. (This was excellent
news for factory owners, but hundreds of unemployed handloom weavers
were not so enthused.) The increased power-to-weight ratio of
the new engines also permitted their use for marine propulsion
- in 1788 a steam-powered catamaran was taken across Dalswinton
loch by William Symington.
Despite
his success, Watt was a rather insecure and jealous man, who did
not like others having their own ideas. When one employee of the
company, a man named William Murdoch, experimented with high pressure
steam engines, Watt discouraged him from patenting and continuing
his work, even though his engines were potentially much better
and smaller than the ones Watt himself had invented. Murdoch never
patented his design, and returned to fixing Watt's own engines.
(However, Murdoch did make another important contribution, to
gas lighting.)
Apart
from his steam research, which he originally carried out in the
grounds of Kinneil House near Linlithgow, Watt was involved in
many other projects. He solved the problem of how to convert the
up-and-down piston movement to rotary movement (so that engines
could power looms, bellows, and other mechanical devices), he
created the term "horsepower", and he also invented
the rev. counter, a machine for copying sculpture, and a letter
copying press (a very early photocopier!).
When
Watt retired in 1800, he had become a very rich man.
In
1882, 63 years after Watt's death, the British Association gave
his name to the unit of electrical power - and today James Watt's
name is to be found written on almost every lightbulb in the world.
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