Rudiments of the Art of Constructing and Repairing Common RoadsJohn Weale, 1850 - 136 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 3
... Hyde - park , the ridge may be traced by Paddington , Barrow - hill , Primrose - hill , Hampstead , Caen - wood , Highgate , Hornsey - lane , and Mount Pleasant - about one mile east of which winds the New River , on its way to London ...
... Hyde - park , the ridge may be traced by Paddington , Barrow - hill , Primrose - hill , Hampstead , Caen - wood , Highgate , Hornsey - lane , and Mount Pleasant - about one mile east of which winds the New River , on its way to London ...
Page 32
... Hyde - park corner , and proceeding along the south side of Hyde - park and Kensington - gardens , passes through Kensing- ton , Hammersmith , and Turnham - green to Brentford , and throughout all this distance of eight miles , is lined ...
... Hyde - park corner , and proceeding along the south side of Hyde - park and Kensington - gardens , passes through Kensing- ton , Hammersmith , and Turnham - green to Brentford , and throughout all this distance of eight miles , is lined ...
Page 37
... Hyde - park and Kensington , keeping parallel to the Staines - road as far as Shepherd's - bush , nearly three miles from London . It there diverges into a northerly direction , and passes on by Acton and Ealing - common , to the north ...
... Hyde - park and Kensington , keeping parallel to the Staines - road as far as Shepherd's - bush , nearly three miles from London . It there diverges into a northerly direction , and passes on by Acton and Ealing - common , to the north ...
Page 42
... Hyde - park . The reason , then , of the road being much the straightest in general direc- tion , is to be sought for in the innumerable short bends and twists which have been noticed in describing its general course . First , there are ...
... Hyde - park . The reason , then , of the road being much the straightest in general direc- tion , is to be sought for in the innumerable short bends and twists which have been noticed in describing its general course . First , there are ...
Page 44
... Hyde , then adopts the valley of one of the principal feeders of the Brent , which rises beyond Edge- ware , in fact ... Park - street , where it crosses the Coln itself , and then over two small rises in the ground to St. Stephen's ...
... Hyde , then adopts the valley of one of the principal feeders of the Brent , which rises beyond Edge- ware , in fact ... Park - street , where it crosses the Coln itself , and then over two small rises in the ground to St. Stephen's ...
Other editions - View all
Rudiments of the Art of Constructing and Repairing Common Roads Samuel Hughes,Henry Law No preview available - 2016 |
Rudiments of the Art of Constructing and Repairing Common Roads Henry Law,Samuel Hughes No preview available - 2008 |
Common terms and phrases
Alban's Amersham angles ascends Barnet bends broken stone carriage chain chalk Chipping Ongar clay Coln column common roads concrete considerable contour lines course crosses Croydon cutting Dartford datum Deptford depth descends distance district ditches drains east side elevated embankment existing road feet fence flat force required formation surface foundation goes gravel green-sand Guildford half a mile height high ground hill Holyhead-road horizontal Hyde-park inches inclined road irregular laid Leatherhead length less level road line of road Maidenhead Maidstone miles from London nearly paved pavement Pinner quantity railway repair required to draw requisite Rickmansworth ridge rise river river Coln river Mole river Thames road materials road passes road proceeds road-making Romford shown in fig slopes stage wagon Stamford-hill straight line stream sufficient summit Thames thence town traffic Uxbridge valley velocity wealden west side westerly direction wheels width Wokingham Wrotham وو
Popular passages
Page 64 - 2 On a well-made broken stone road, in a dry clean state . „ 5 On a well-made broken stone road, covered with dust . „ 8 On a well-made broken stone road, wet and muddy . „ 10 On a gravel or flint road, in a dry clean state . . „ 13 On a gravel or flint road, in a wet and muddy state . „ 32 Stage wagon, B=^t^ + J£ + Cv . . . (1.) Stagecoach, B = W w 4- ~ + cv . . . (2.) ETTLE 1.
Page 97 - You don't mean you would prefer a bog? — If it was not such a bog as would not allow a man to walk over it, I should prefer it.
Page 121 - Few persons are aware of the extent to which a road may be injured by high hedges, or lines of trees. Trees are worse than hedges, because they not only deprive the road of the action of the air and sun, but...
Page 62 - The resistance to traction is directly proportional to the load, and inversely proportional to the diameter of the wheel. 2nd. Upon a paved or a hard macadamized road the resistance is independent of the width of the tyre, when this quantity exceeds from 3 to 4 inches.
Page 63 - Upon soft roads of earth, or sand or turf, or roads fresh and thickly gravelled, the traction is independent of the velocity. • 6th. Upon a well-made and compact pavement of hewn stones, the traction at a walking pace is not more than three-fourths of that upon the best macadamized roads under similar circumstances : at a trotting pace it is equal to it. 7th. The destruction of the road is in all cases greater as the diameters of the wheels are less, and it is greater in carriages without than...
Page 89 - And, in answer to the question, "Do you consider a road so made will not be likely to wear hollow in the middle, so as to allow the water to stand, after it has been used for some time?
Page 101 - The gravel selected for this purpose should be free from any kind of dirt, clay, or other impurity, and should consist of stones and sand, mixed in about such proportions that the latter would just fill the interstices of the former. The gravel should then be mixed with the proper quantity of ground...
Page 102 - All the irregularities of the upper part of the said pavement are to be broken off by the hammer, and all the interstices to be filled with stone chips firmly wedged or packed by hand with a light hammer, so that when the whole pavement is finished there shall be a convexity...
Page 61 - What additional increase in the length of a road would be equivalent to a given inclined plane upon it; or conversely, what inclination might be given to a road as an equivalent to a given decrease in its length? To satisfy this question...
Page 99 - ... as great a degree of solidity as possible. The same mode of proceeding should be followed even where it is intended to form either a paved or concrete foundation ; for, as before remarked, too much care cannot be bestowed on that part of the road.