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Various

"Scientific American Supplement, No. 794, March 21, 1891"


This condition takes out of every day practical drawing use the
integraph invented by Professors James and Sir William Thomson, in
which the sum curve is drawn on a revolving cylinder. It is essential
that the sum curve should be drawn on the board not far from the
primitive, and that this sum curve can be summed once or twice again
without difficulty. The time involved in drawing the four sum curves,
for example, required in passing from the load curve to the deflection
curve of a simple beam, if these curves were drawn on different pieces
of paper and had to be shifted on and off cylinders, would probably be
as long as the ordinary graphical processes. Coradi's integraph works
on an ordinary drawing board, but since there are nearly 10 inches
between the guide point and tracer, the sum curve is thrown 10 inches
behind the primitive in each integration. Thus a double summation
requires say 26 inches of board, and it is impossible to integrate
thrice without reproducing the primitive. The fact that the primitive
and sum curve are not plotted off on the same base is also troublesome
for comparison, and involves scaling of a new base for each summation.


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