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The Locomotive - Lighthouse Survival Blog

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PUBLISHED BY THE HARTFORD STEAM BOILER INSPECTION AND INSURANCE COMPANY.<br />

Vol. XXII. HARTFORD, CONN., JANUARY, 1901. No. 1.<br />

A Boiler Explosion from Low Water.<br />

Whenever a boiler explodes the general public concludes, without further evidence,<br />

that the cause of the explosion was low water. Usually the fireman is blamed for it,<br />

especially if the poor fellow was unfortunate enough to be killed, so that he cannot<br />

testify on his own behalf; but this particular corollary of the theory is not essential.<br />

<strong>The</strong> one thing that everybody is certain of is that the water was low and the plates red-<br />

hot, and that somebody then proceeded to pump in some cold feed water. <strong>The</strong> first<br />

gush of feed water that struck the hot plate is supposed to have instantly passed into<br />

steam, causing an enormous increase in pressure, and bursting the boiler.<br />

Fig. 1.<br />

—<br />

Showing the Exploded Boiler.<br />

This theory is simple enough to satisfy any one, and it can be understood by any-<br />

body, no matter how unmechanical he may be. For these i -<br />

easons, we suppose, it has<br />

fastened itself on the public so securely that they will have nothing else, and any<br />

attempt to explain the explosion in any other way is regarded with disfavor. It may be<br />

that there is evidence that plenty of water was present, and that the line of fracture<br />

passed through a serious and obvious defect in the material, or through an area where<br />

the plate was dangerously thinned by corrosion; and yet it is hard to make the average<br />

101865

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