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Not Watts indeed. I saw the presentation in a small museum in France. Watt simply improved the steam engine.
As early as 1690, it was a French physicist who invented the prototype of the earliest steam engine in human history: the steam-vacuum mode, which is also known as the Papen model. It predates Watt's improved steam engine by 750 years.
In 1698, the English engineer Saffrey invented the first practical machine in the Papen model. However, due to its danger, it has not been promoted.
In 1705, a British blacksmith Newcomen invented the atmospheric pressure steam engine based on his predecessors, which is also known as the Newcomen steam engine. And it has been widely used in practice.
Then, in 1765, Watt was commissioned to repair a broken Newcomen steam engine, and thus began his history of improving the steam engine.
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No, Watt only improved the steam engine, and it is not known who invented it; What is known is that Papan, Savrey, and Newcomen in England pioneered the manufacture and improvement of steam engines in British mining enterprises, among which Savory built the first working steam engine.
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Watt invented the world's first steam engine.
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Watt only improved the steam engine to make it widely used, and a man named Savery built the first steam engine around 1700, and later improved it several times, and with the Industrial Revolution, it was widely used.
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Watt invented the first steam engine.
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Watt, remembering that he saw the water boiling when he was a child, so from this association.
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It's not Watt, it's Watt. Upstairs is right
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What's going on? Could it be that Edison just improved the electric light?
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The world's first steam engine was invented by the ancient Greek mathematician Hero of Alexandria in the 1st century AD, which was the prototype of the steam engine.
Around 1679, French physicist Denis Pappin built the first working model of a steam engine after observing steam escaping his pressure cooker. His contemporary, Samuel Moran, also proposed the idea of a steam engine.
In 1698 Thomas Sevelli and in 1712 Thomas Newcomen built the early industrial steam engine, both of which contributed to the development of the steam engine.
Construction of a steam engine.
The steam engine is mainly composed of cylinder, base, piston, crank connecting rod mechanism, slide valve steam distribution mechanism, speed regulating mechanism and flywheel. The cylinder and base are stationary parts.
In a steam boiler, water is boiled into steam through the combustion process. The steam is steamed through the pipe and sent to the cylinder. The valve controls the time when the steam arrives at the cylinder, enters the slide valve chamber through the main steam valve and the throttle valve, and is controlled by the slide valve to alternately enter the left or right side of the cylinder to push the piston to move.
The steam pushes the piston inside the cylinder to do work, and the cooled steam is introduced into the condenser through the pipe to re-condense into water. This process is repeated over and over again when the steam engine is in motion.
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The first steam engine, Thomas Sevelly, was invented in 1698.
Thomas Sevelli created the first practical steam engine to solve the problem of power for the rapid pumping of water from coal and tin mines. It is equivalent to the power of 20 horses working at the same time, and can pump water hundreds of feet below the ground.
The machine invented by Thomas also had a fatal weakness: it consumed too much coal as power. As a result, it had to be placed on the edge of a coal mine, which theoretically cost little at the time. Other than that, such a machine doesn't necessarily have much efficiency.
Despite such big shortcomings, it still opened the door for the British to effectively mine coal. The result of the appearance of the first practical steam engine is of extraordinary significance.
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1. The world's first steam engine was invented by the ancient Greek mathematician Hero of Alexandria in the 1st century AD, which is the prototype of the steam engine;
Thomas Sevelli and in 1712 Thomas Newcomen built the early industrial steam engine;
Robert Fulton was the first to successfully use a steam engine to drive a steamer;
4. From 1765 to 1790, Watt made a series of inventions, such as a separate condenser, an insulation layer outside the cylinder, an oil-lubricated piston, a planetary gear, a parallel motion connecting rod mechanism, a centrifugal governor, a throttle valve, a pressure gauge, etc., which increased the efficiency of the steam engine to more than 3 times that of the original Newcomt machine, and finally invented the industrial steam engine.
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