Rocket and Turbinia
by davidtrout
Two steam pioneers side by side at Newcastle's Discovery Museum last week. George and Robert Stephenson's Rocket (1829) and Charles Parson's Turbinia (1894). When Rocket was trialled on the newly built Liverpool and Manchester Railway it travelled faster than man had ever gone before except when riding a particularly fast horse or falling off a mountain or high building. Turbinia became the fastest ship in the world when it was tested..
K30+Sigma 10-20mm lens
K30+Sigma 10-20mm lens
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pauljay
Uploaded06/08/2018 - 20:29
CategoryTransport
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Posted 07/08/2018 - 16:11
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Enjoyed the commentary and the chance to get a very good look at Stephenson's Rocket, which I had seen before only in a crude drawing in my grade school reader.
Posted 08/08/2018 - 00:37
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Looks like they have done a nice display job with them too.
Posted 08/08/2018 - 12:11
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vic cross wrote:
When Turbinia was first built the Admiralty weren't interested. SO. Parsons took it to the big navy review (at Southampton?/ Portsmouth?) and when the navys finest and fastest where at full steam ahead he had Turbinia Zig Zag inbetween them up and down the line of ships to prove his point
As a Geordie of a certain age I grew up on the Tyne where Parsons ship yard was and new the Turbinia in the museum from being a child.
Us Geodies are a clever lot.
CHEERS Vic.
When I did my Steam Turbine theory as part of my Marine Engineering studies, even here on this side of the pond, the story of the Turbinia and the development of the Parson Reaction Turbine was part of the curriculum.
When Turbinia was first built the Admiralty weren't interested. SO. Parsons took it to the big navy review (at Southampton?/ Portsmouth?) and when the navys finest and fastest where at full steam ahead he had Turbinia Zig Zag inbetween them up and down the line of ships to prove his point
As a Geordie of a certain age I grew up on the Tyne where Parsons ship yard was and new the Turbinia in the museum from being a child.
Us Geodies are a clever lot.
CHEERS Vic.
Practitioner of the art of capturing and preserving for all to see "brief moments in time"
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Gear: Cameras - K1ii, K100D, MZ60, K1000. Lenses - Pentax HD DFA 3.5-5.6 28-105 ED DC WR, DA 16-45 f:4, DA 18-55 f:3.5-5.6, DFA f:3.5-5.6 28-105 ED WR, FA 28-90 f:3.5-5.6, FAJ 75-300 f:4.5-5.8, DA 50 f:1.8, DA 35 f:2.4, A-50 1:2, M-50 1:2. Lenses - Sigma, Super Wide II 24mm f:2.8, 10-20mm f:4-5.6 EXDC, 50-500 Bigma f:4-6.3 EX. Tamon SP Di AF 90mm F2.8 Macro, LensBaby Composer Pro Sweet 35 f:2.5, Vivitar 80-200 Macro Zoom f:4, Accessories AF-360FGZ, AF-360FGZII Flash, Ketnor Digital Super Wide 0.42X AF Lens
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2041 posts
19 years
Kettering Northants
As a Geordie of a certain age I grew up on the Tyne where Parsons ship yard was and new the Turbinia in the museum from being a child.
Us Geodies are a clever lot.
CHEERS Vic.