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[[File:Elsecar Newcomen engine.jpg|thumb|Bottom chamber<ref>{{harvnb|Woodall|1975|p=29}}</ref> of the [[Elsecar Engine]]]]
[[File:Elsecar Newcomen engine.jpg|thumb|Bottom chamber{{sfnp|Woodall|1975|p=29}} of the [[Elsecar Engine]]]]
A '''cataract''' was a speed governing device used for early single-acting [[beam engine]]s, particularly [[atmospheric engine]]s and [Cornish engine]]s.
A '''cataract''' was a speed governing device used for early single-acting [[beam engine]]s, particularly [[atmospheric engine]]s and [[Cornish engine]]s. It was a kind of [[water clock]].


The cataract is distinctly different from the [[Watt governor]], in that it does not control the speed of the engine's stroke, but rather the timing between them.
The cataract is distinctly different from the [[centrifugal governor]], in that it does not control the speed of the engine's stroke, but rather the timing between strokes.


== Operation ==
== Operation ==
[[File:Cataract (Steam and the Steam Engine - Land and Marine, 1875).jpg|thumb|Cataract, c.&nbsp;1875<ref name="Evers, Cataract" />]]
[[File:Cataract (Steam and the Steam Engine - Land and Marine, 1875).jpg|thumb|Cataract, c.&nbsp;1875<ref name="Evers, Cataract" />]]
The typical installation of a [[house-built engine|house-built]] beam engine spanned four floors. The cylinder and the engine driver's usual working position were located in the 'bottom chamber'. Above this were the 'middle chamber', with the cylinder top cover and 'top nozzle' (the upper valve chest), and above that the 'top chamber' or beam chamber.<ref>{{harvnb|Woodall|1975|pp=29–30}}</ref> The cataracts were located in the lowest part of the engine house, in a chamber below the bottom chamber, along with the exhaust pipe. This space was awkward to access and not visited in normal operation.
The typical installation of a [[house-built engine|house-built]] beam engine spanned four floors. The cylinder and the engine driver's usual working position were located in the 'bottom chamber', approximately at ground level. Above this were the 'middle chamber', with the cylinder top cover and 'top nozzle' (the upper valve chest), and above that the 'top chamber' or beam chamber.{{sfnp |Woodall |1975 |pp=29–30}} The cataracts were located in the lowest part of the engine house, in a chamber below the bottom chamber, along with the exhaust pipe. This space was awkward to access and not visited in normal operation.


[[File:Cornish engines, Crofton - geograph.org.uk - 660336.jpg|thumb|Valvegear, horns and arbors of the [[Crofton Pumping Station]]]]
[[File:Cornish engines, Crofton - geograph.org.uk - 660336.jpg|thumb|Valvegear, horns and arbors of the [[Crofton Pumping Station]]]]
The [[valve gear]] (or 'working gear') of a Newcomen or Cornish engine is based on the ''plug rod''. This is a vertical rod, hung from the beam, and moving in parallel to the piston. Adjustable [[tappet]]s are attached to this rod. These tappets strike long curved iron levers or 'horns' that are carried on three horizontal shafts or 'arbors'.<ref group="note" >Some Cornish winding engines had their valves arranged across different number of arbors, although their basic operation remains the same.</ref> Each arbor works one of the engine's valves. For the [[Cornish cycle]]s, these valves are the upper steam inlet to the top of the cylinder, the equilibrium valve that links upper and lower portions of the cylinder, and the lower exhaust and condensing water injection valves, which share an arbor.<ref name="Woodall, Operating cycle" >{{harvnb|Woodall|1975|pp=31–33}}</ref> Unlike most other steam engines, these engines could be run intermittently: making a single stroke before stopping and waiting for the valves to be restarted again.<ref>{{Cite book
The [[valve gear]] (or 'working gear') of a Newcomen or Cornish engine is based on the ''plug rod''. This is a vertical rod, hung from the beam, and moving in parallel to the piston. Adjustable [[tappet]]s are attached to this rod. These tappets strike long curved iron levers or 'horns' that are carried on three horizontal shafts or 'arbors'.{{efn-lr|Some Cornish winding engines had their valves arranged across different number of arbors, although their basic operation remains the same.}} Each arbor works one of the engine's valves. For the [[Cornish cycle]]s, these valves are the upper steam inlet to the top of the cylinder, the equilibrium valve that links upper and lower portions of the cylinder, and the lower exhaust and condensing water injection valves, which share an arbor.<ref name="Woodall, Operating cycle" >{{harv|Woodall|1975|pp=31–33}}</ref> Unlike most other steam engines, these engines could be run intermittently: making a single stroke before stopping and waiting for the valves to be restarted again.<ref>{{Cite book
|title=The Steam Engine
|title=The Steam Engine
|volume=II
|volume=II
|chapter=3: A Treatise on Engines and Boilers
|chapter=3: A Treatise on Engines and Boilers
|last=Clark |first=Daniel Kinnear
|last=Clark |first=Daniel Kinnear
|authorlink= Daniel Kinnear Clark
|author-link= Daniel Kinnear Clark
|publisher= Blackie & Son.
|publisher= Blackie & Son.
|year=1892
|year=1892
|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=w_E8xghOUgYC&pg=PA282&lpg=PA282&dq=cataract+%22steam+engine%22&source=bl&ots=lw7u_lcD76&sig=VV3rjhHPfUA9UG7D5g0FY9sKKFA&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Sc2nT-L-A5Gh8gO9qMjoBA&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=cataract%20%22steam%20engine%22&f=false
|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w_E8xghOUgYC&q=cataract+%22steam+engine%22&pg=PA282
|pages=275–276
|isbn=
|ref={{harvid|Clark|1892}}
|pages=275–276
}}</ref> The speed of each power stroke or 'coming indoors' was a feature of the engine and was not easily varied, but there was no need for the engines to run continuously, stroke after stroke.<ref name="Woodall, Operating cycle" /><ref name="Farey, Cataract" >{{Cite book
}}</ref> The speed of each power stroke or 'coming indoors' was a feature of the engine and was not easily varied, but there was no need for the engines to run continuously, stroke after stroke.<ref name="Woodall, Operating cycle" /><ref name="Farey, Cataract" >{{Cite book
|title=A treatise on the steam engine: historical, practical, and descriptive
|title=A treatise on the steam engine: historical, practical, and descriptive
|last=Farey |first=John
|last=Farey |first=John
|authorlink=John Farey
|author-link=John Farey, Jr.
|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=V3lRAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA189&lpg=PA189&dq=cataract+%22steam+engine%22&source=bl&ots=3ZVBXr3sxO&sig=fdXScp0DrWvc8gyzTPfdORwDtg8&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Sc2nT-L-A5Gh8gO9qMjoBA&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=cataract%20%22steam%20engine%22&f=false
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=V3lRAAAAYAAJ&q=cataract+%22steam+engine%22&pg=PA189
|volume=Vol 1
|volume=1
|year=1827
|year=1827
|pages=188–189
|publisher=
}}</ref> This was a direct contrast to the [[rotative beam engine]], and the rotary nature of almost all other steam engines. With the original Newcomen cycle, the speed of the return stroke varied according to the boiler pressure, although this still did not affect the strength or speed of the power stroke.{{sfnp|Farey|1827|p=187}}
|isbn=
|ref={{harvid|Farey|1827}}
|pages=188–189
}}</ref> This was a direct contrast to the [[rotative beam engine]], and the rotary nature of almost all other steam engines. With the original Newcomen cycle, the speed of the return stroke varied according to the boiler pressure, although this still did not affect the strength or speed of the power stroke.<ref name="Farey, 187" >{{harvnb|Farey|1827|p=187}}</ref>


Use of a cataract could allow an engine to be operated at only a third of its ungoverned speed.<ref>{{harvnb|Clark|1892|p=339}}</ref> When pumping load was variable, cataracts could also be connected and disconnected as required, allowing the engine to work at full speed for a period and then stopped in between.<ref>{{harvnb|Clark|1892|p=203}}</ref>
Use of a cataract could allow an engine to be operated at only a third of its ungoverned speed.{{sfnp|Clark|1892|p=339}} When pumping load was variable, cataracts could also be connected and disconnected as required, allowing the engine to work at full speed for a period and then stopped in between.{{sfnp|Clark|1892|p=203}}


The cataract itself resembled a small [[plunger pump]].<ref name="Evers, Cataract" >{{Cite book
The cataract itself resembled a small [[plunger pump]].<ref name="Evers, Cataract" >{{Cite book
|title=Steam and the Steam Engine: Land and Marine
|title=Steam and the Steam Engine: Land and Marine
|last=Evers |first=Henry
|last=Evers |first=Henry
|publisher=Williams Collins |location=Glasgow
|publisher=Williams Collins |location=Glasgow
|year=1875
|year=1875
|pages=60–61
|ref={{harvid|Evers|1875}}
|pages=60–61
|url=
}}</ref> It was an iron box in a cistern filled with water, with a plunger or piston set in the top and pressed downwards by a weight. The water within the pump could only escape through a small tap or valve.<ref name="Woodall, Cataract" >{{Cite book
}}</ref> It was an iron box in a cistern filled with water, with a plunger or piston set in the top and pressed downwards by a weight. The water within the pump could only escape through a small tap or valve.<ref name="Woodall, Cataract" >{{Cite book
|title=Steam Engines and Waterwheels
|title=Steam Engines and Waterwheels
|last=Woodall |first=Frank D.
|last=Woodall |first=Frank D.
|publisher=Moorland
|publisher=Moorland
|year=1975
|year=1975
|isbn=0903485354
|isbn=0903485354
|pages=33–34
|ref={{harvid|Woodall|1975}}
|pages=33–34
}}</ref><ref name="Kelly, Cataract" >{{Cite book
}}</ref><ref name="Kelly, Cataract" >{{Cite book
|chapter=Appendix A: Crofton Nº&nbsp;1 Boulton & Watt Engine
|chapter=Appendix A: Crofton Nº&nbsp;1 Boulton & Watt Engine
|title=The Non-Rotative Beam Engine
|title=The Non-Rotative Beam Engine
|last=Kelly |first=Maurice
|last=Kelly |first=Maurice
|publisher=Camden Miniature Steam Services
|publisher=Camden Miniature Steam Services
|year=2002
|year=2002
|isbn=0-9536523-3-5
|isbn=0-9536523-3-5
|page=21
|ref={{harvid|Kelly|2002}}
}}</ref> As the plunger gradually fell, its motion was passed upwards by a rocking lever and a rod to the valvegear in the middle chamber. Once the rod had risen sufficiently, this opened the first valve to admit steam into the upper part of the cylinder, beginning a new stroke.{{efn-lr|This was the initiation of a stroke with the Cornish cycle. For a Newcomen engine, the cataract triggered the water injection valve that caused condensation in the cylinder,{{sfnp|Clark|1892|p=169}} and thus the beginning of the power stroke.}}
|page=21
}}</ref> As the plunger gradually fell, its motion was passed upwards by a rocking lever and a rod to the valvegear in the middle chamber. Once the rod had risen sufficiently, this opened the first valve to admit steam into the upper part of the cylinder, beginning a new stroke.{{#tag:ref|This was the initiation of a stroke with the Cornish cycle. For a Newcomen engine, the cataract triggered the water injection valve that caused condensation in the cylinder,<ref>{{harvnb|Clark|1892|p=169}}</ref> and thus the beginning of the power stroke.|group=note}}


Once the stroke had begun, the cataract's rocking lever was pushed downwards by the engine. This lifted the plunger, which acted as a suction pump within the cataract to refill the plunger box, through a flap valve from its surrounding cistern.<ref name="Kelly, Crofton drawings" >{{harvnb|Kelly|2002|p=56}}</ref> The cistern was kept filled with water by the pump that the engine itself was working.
Once the stroke had begun, the cataract's rocking lever was pushed downwards by the engine. This lifted the plunger, which acted as a suction pump within the cataract to refill the plunger box, through a flap valve from its surrounding cistern.{{sfnp|Kelly|2002|p=56}} The cistern was kept filled with water by the pump that the engine itself was working.


The water outlet valve was controlled by a rod from the bottom chamber. This was used by the engine's driver to control the working speed, according to the work required.<ref name="Kelly, Crofton drawings" />
The water outlet valve was controlled by a rod from the bottom chamber. This was used by the engine's driver to control the working speed, according to the work required.{{sfnp|Kelly|2002|p=56}}


The cataract's actuating rod also had a screw adjuster, which acted to vary the water injection time (Newcomen) or the phasing between the inlet and exhaust valves (Cornish).<ref name="Kelly, Crofton drawings" /> This could be used to give a longer and more effective condensation time, if the condensing water supply was warm, as in the Summer. This adjustment appears to have been poorly understood though, and little used by the engine drivers.<ref name="Woodall, Cataract" />
The cataract's actuating rod also had a screw adjuster, which acted to vary the water injection time (Newcomen) or the phasing between the inlet and exhaust valves (Cornish).{{sfnp|Kelly|2002|p=56}} This could be used to give a longer and more effective condensation time, if the condensing water supply was warm, as in the Summer. This adjustment appears to have been poorly understood though, and little used by the engine drivers.<ref name="Woodall, Cataract" />


== Development ==
== Development ==

=== Early cataracts ===
=== Early cataracts ===
The cataract first appeared on [[Newcomen engine]]s in Cornwall, although their inventor is unknown. They were known in [[John Smeaton|Smeaton]]'s time, and they may be another of the developments to Newcomen's engine for which he was responsible.<ref name="Farey, Cataract" /> [[James Watt]] encountered these on his trip to Cornwall in 1777.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, 46" >{{harvnb|Dickinson|Jenkins|1927|p=46}}</ref> They were of a simpler type, these early cataracts or 'jack in the box' were a simple tumbling box: a wooden box on a pivot was filled with water through an adjustable cock.<ref name="Farey, Cataract" /> When the box was filled sufficiently to overbalance, the engine's injection valve would be triggered.
The cataract first appeared on [[Newcomen engine]]s in Cornwall, although their inventor is unknown. They were known in [[John Smeaton|Smeaton]]'s time, and they may be another of the developments to Newcomen's engine for which he was responsible.<ref name="Farey, Cataract" /> [[James Watt]] encountered these on his trip to Cornwall in 1777.{{sfnp|Dickinson|Jenkins|1927|p=46}} They were of a simpler type, these early cataracts or 'jack in the box' were a simple tumbling box: a wooden box on a pivot was filled with water through an adjustable cock.<ref name="Farey, Cataract" /> When the box was filled sufficiently to overbalance, the engine's injection valve would be triggered.


=== Watt ===
=== Watt ===
[[Boulton and Watt]] used the simple tumbling box design of cataract for some years afterwards, to around 1779.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, 183-184" >{{cite book
[[Boulton and Watt]] used the simple tumbling box design of cataract for some years afterwards, to around 1779.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, 183-184" >{{cite book
|last=Dickinson |first=H.W.
|last1=Dickinson |first1=H.W.
|last2=Jenkins |first2=R.
|last2=Jenkins |first2=R.
|title=James Watt and the Steam Engine
|title=James Watt and the Steam Engine
|origyear=1927
|orig-year=1927
|year=1981
|year=1981
|publisher=Moorland Publishing
|publisher=Moorland Publishing
|isbn=0-903485-92-3
|isbn=0-903485-92-3
|ref={{harvid|Dickinson|Jenkins|1927}}
|ref={{harvid|Dickinson|Jenkins|1927}}
|pages=183–184
|pages=183–184
}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Clark|1892|p=365}}</ref> After this other designs were used, including a water cataract where the same water was used and recycled continuously and also an air cataract using a circular bellows. An air cataract of this type was supplied for the [[Ale and Cakes Mine]]. The plunger pump design of cataract had appeared in Cornwall by 1785, but was not Watt's invention.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, 183-184" />
}}</ref>{{sfnp|Clark|1892|p=365}} After this other designs were used, including a water cataract where the same water was used and recycled continuously and also an air cataract using a circular bellows. An air cataract of this type was supplied for the [[Ale and Cakes Mine]]. The plunger pump design of cataract had appeared in Cornwall by 1785, but was not Watt's invention.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, 183-184" />


=== Later cataracts ===
=== Later cataracts ===
The term 'cataract' became a synonym for [[dashpot]], at least where this was associated with steam engines and their governors. They were used as a damping device to avoid over-sensitivity with centrifugal governors.<ref>{{harvnb|Clark|1892|pp=67,182}}</ref>
The term 'cataract' became a synonym for [[dashpot]], at least where this was associated with steam engines and their governors. They were used as a damping device to avoid over-sensitivity with centrifugal governors.{{sfnp|Clark|1892|pp=67,182}}


Cataracts were also used as an over-speed safety device for direct-acting water pumps.<ref group="note" >These were the type of small reciprocating pump commonly used as [[boiler feedwater pump]]s and often described as the 'Weir' type.</ref> A seesaw or 'differential' lever was placed between the pump's piston rod and a cataract adjusted for the pump's normal working speed. If the pump suddenly accelerated, owing to the pump bursting or similar, the piston would overtake the cataract and the action of the differential lever would then close the pump's steam inlet valve and stop the pump, limiting possible damage.<ref>{{harvnb|Clark|1892|p=281}}</ref>
Cataracts were also used as an over-speed safety device for direct-acting water pumps.{{efn-lr|These were the type of small reciprocating pump commonly used as [[boiler feedwater pump]]s and often described as the 'Weir' type.}} A seesaw or 'differential' lever was placed between the pump's piston rod and a cataract adjusted for the pump's normal working speed. If the pump suddenly accelerated, owing to the pump bursting or similar, the piston would overtake the cataract and the action of the differential lever would then close the pump's steam inlet valve and stop the pump, limiting possible damage.{{sfnp|Clark|1892|p=281}}


== Open loop control ==
== Open loop control ==
The cataract, like most regulators, is an example of a [servomechanism]]. However unlike the better-known Watt centrifugal governor, this is an [[open-loop control|''open-loop'']], rather than [[closed-loop control]]. The cataract runs at its own speed, but does not measure the resultant speed of the engine. The cataract has also been described as a 'water clock'.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, 183-184" /> This assumes that the relationship between the cataract's operation and the engine's speed is fixed, which is a valid assumption for a beam engine as the cataract controls the ''timing'' of the engine's stroke, rather than a variable power or throttle valve. Where a governor controls such a throttle valve, as for the Watt governor, the speed of the engine depends on a complex and unpredictable relation between the engine load, the valve position and the varying efficiency of the engine. Such governors must use a closed-loop control if they are to maintain an effective and precise regulation.
The cataract, like most regulators, is an example of a [[servomechanism]]. However unlike the better-known Watt centrifugal governor, this is an [[open-loop control|open-loop]], rather than [[closed-loop control]]. The cataract runs at its own speed, but does not measure the resultant speed of the engine. The cataract has also been described as a 'water clock'.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, 183-184" /> This assumes that the relationship between the cataract's operation and the engine's speed is fixed, which is a valid assumption for a beam engine as the cataract controls the timing of the engine's stroke, rather than a variable power or throttle valve. Where a governor controls such a throttle valve, as for the Watt governor, the speed of the engine depends on a complex and unpredictable relation between the engine load, the valve position and the varying efficiency of the engine. Such governors must use a closed-loop control if they are to maintain an effective and precise regulation.


=== Synchronisation ===
=== Synchronisation ===
One advantage of the independent and open loop nature of the cataract's control was that two engines could be adjusted to run in synchronisation, but in [[antiphase]]. With pumping engines, this gave a more even output to their pumping.<ref>{{Cite web
One advantage of the independent and open loop nature of the cataract's control was that two engines could be adjusted to run in synchronisation, but in [[antiphase]]. With pumping engines, this gave a more even output to their pumping.<ref>{{Cite web
|title=The Grand Junction 100 inch Engine
|title=The Grand Junction 100 inch Engine
|url=http://www.kbsm.org/engines/100-inch-engine
|url=http://www.waterandsteam.org.uk/our-engines/100-inch-engine
|publisher=[[Kew Bridge Steam Museum]]
|publisher=[[Kew Bridge Steam Museum]]
|access-date=2017-01-12
}}</ref>
|archive-date=2018-09-25
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180925025857/https://www.waterandsteam.org.uk/our-engines/100-inch-engine
|url-status=dead
}}</ref>


=== Centrifugal governor ===
=== Centrifugal governor ===
Although the [[centrifugal governor]] was already known from its use for [[watermill|water-]] and [[windmill]]s, it was not until 1788 when Watt was the first to apply it to a steam engine.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, Centrifugal governor" >{{harvnb|Dickinson|Jenkins|1927|pp=220–223}}</ref> This was the ''[[Lap Engine]]'', an early rotative engine now preserved in the [[Science Museum, London]].
Although the [[centrifugal governor]] was already known from its use for [[watermill|water-]] and [[windmill]]s, it was not until 1788 when Watt was the first to apply it to a steam engine.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, Centrifugal governor" >{{harv |Dickinson |Jenkins |1927 |pp=220–223}}</ref> This was the '[[Lap Engine]]', an early rotative engine now preserved in the [[Science Museum, London]].


With a rotative engine, it was necessary to control the rate at which an engine moved throughout its stroke, not merely to vary the timing between strokes. This required the use of a [[throttle valve]] in the steam supply, controlled by the governor. As the load on [[mill engine]]s and similar uses could vary, closed-loop control such as the engine speed-based centrifugal governor was also needed.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, Centrifugal governor" /> The cataract was thus not used on rotative engines, not even where single-acting Cornish winding engines were still used in Cornwall.<ref>{{harvnb|Woodall|1975|p=49}}</ref>
With a rotative engine, it was necessary to control the rate at which an engine moved throughout its stroke, not merely to vary the timing between strokes. This required the use of a [[throttle valve]] in the steam supply, controlled by the governor. As the load on [[mill engine]]s and similar uses could vary, closed-loop control such as the engine speed-based centrifugal governor was also needed.<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927, Centrifugal governor" /> The cataract was thus not used on rotative engines, not even where single-acting Cornish winding engines were still used in Cornwall.{{sfnp|Woodall|1975|p=49}}


Cornish engines were not amenable to control by a throttle valve, as their operating cycle depended on the condensation time more than a throttled steam supply. [[Non-rotative beam engine]]s also had no easy means to drive a centrifugal governor. For these reasons the cataract remained in service for as long as the Cornish engine did.<ref>'Victoria' Pumping Engine, East London Water-works, {{harvnb|Clark|1892|pp=275–276}}</ref>
Cornish engines were not amenable to control by a throttle valve, as their operating cycle depended on the condensation time more than a throttled steam supply. [[Non-rotative beam engine]]s also had no easy means to drive a centrifugal governor. For these reasons the cataract remained in service for as long as the Cornish engine did.<ref>'Victoria' Pumping Engine, East London Waterworks, {{harv|Clark|1892|pp=275–276}}</ref>


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
{{Notelist-lr}}
{{Reflist|group=note|liststyle=lower-roman}}


== References ==
== References ==
{{Portal|Cornwall}}
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}
{{Reflist|colwidth=35em}}

{{Steam engine configurations|state=collapsed}}


{{Steam engine configurations}}
[[Category:Steam engine governors]]
[[Category:Steam engine governors]]
[[Category:Cornish engines]]
[[Category:Cornish engines]]
[[Category:Beam engines]]
[[Category:Beam engines]]
[[Category:Stationary steam engines]]

Latest revision as of 20:49, 19 November 2023

Bottom chamber[1] of the Elsecar Engine

A cataract was a speed governing device used for early single-acting beam engines, particularly atmospheric engines and Cornish engines. It was a kind of water clock.

The cataract is distinctly different from the centrifugal governor, in that it does not control the speed of the engine's stroke, but rather the timing between strokes.

Operation

[edit]
Cataract, c. 1875[2]

The typical installation of a house-built beam engine spanned four floors. The cylinder and the engine driver's usual working position were located in the 'bottom chamber', approximately at ground level. Above this were the 'middle chamber', with the cylinder top cover and 'top nozzle' (the upper valve chest), and above that the 'top chamber' or beam chamber.[3] The cataracts were located in the lowest part of the engine house, in a chamber below the bottom chamber, along with the exhaust pipe. This space was awkward to access and not visited in normal operation.

Valvegear, horns and arbors of the Crofton Pumping Station

The valve gear (or 'working gear') of a Newcomen or Cornish engine is based on the plug rod. This is a vertical rod, hung from the beam, and moving in parallel to the piston. Adjustable tappets are attached to this rod. These tappets strike long curved iron levers or 'horns' that are carried on three horizontal shafts or 'arbors'.[i] Each arbor works one of the engine's valves. For the Cornish cycles, these valves are the upper steam inlet to the top of the cylinder, the equilibrium valve that links upper and lower portions of the cylinder, and the lower exhaust and condensing water injection valves, which share an arbor.[4] Unlike most other steam engines, these engines could be run intermittently: making a single stroke before stopping and waiting for the valves to be restarted again.[5] The speed of each power stroke or 'coming indoors' was a feature of the engine and was not easily varied, but there was no need for the engines to run continuously, stroke after stroke.[4][6] This was a direct contrast to the rotative beam engine, and the rotary nature of almost all other steam engines. With the original Newcomen cycle, the speed of the return stroke varied according to the boiler pressure, although this still did not affect the strength or speed of the power stroke.[7]

Use of a cataract could allow an engine to be operated at only a third of its ungoverned speed.[8] When pumping load was variable, cataracts could also be connected and disconnected as required, allowing the engine to work at full speed for a period and then stopped in between.[9]

The cataract itself resembled a small plunger pump.[2] It was an iron box in a cistern filled with water, with a plunger or piston set in the top and pressed downwards by a weight. The water within the pump could only escape through a small tap or valve.[10][11] As the plunger gradually fell, its motion was passed upwards by a rocking lever and a rod to the valvegear in the middle chamber. Once the rod had risen sufficiently, this opened the first valve to admit steam into the upper part of the cylinder, beginning a new stroke.[ii]

Once the stroke had begun, the cataract's rocking lever was pushed downwards by the engine. This lifted the plunger, which acted as a suction pump within the cataract to refill the plunger box, through a flap valve from its surrounding cistern.[13] The cistern was kept filled with water by the pump that the engine itself was working.

The water outlet valve was controlled by a rod from the bottom chamber. This was used by the engine's driver to control the working speed, according to the work required.[13]

The cataract's actuating rod also had a screw adjuster, which acted to vary the water injection time (Newcomen) or the phasing between the inlet and exhaust valves (Cornish).[13] This could be used to give a longer and more effective condensation time, if the condensing water supply was warm, as in the Summer. This adjustment appears to have been poorly understood though, and little used by the engine drivers.[10]

Development

[edit]

Early cataracts

[edit]

The cataract first appeared on Newcomen engines in Cornwall, although their inventor is unknown. They were known in Smeaton's time, and they may be another of the developments to Newcomen's engine for which he was responsible.[6] James Watt encountered these on his trip to Cornwall in 1777.[14] They were of a simpler type, these early cataracts or 'jack in the box' were a simple tumbling box: a wooden box on a pivot was filled with water through an adjustable cock.[6] When the box was filled sufficiently to overbalance, the engine's injection valve would be triggered.

Watt

[edit]

Boulton and Watt used the simple tumbling box design of cataract for some years afterwards, to around 1779.[15][16] After this other designs were used, including a water cataract where the same water was used and recycled continuously and also an air cataract using a circular bellows. An air cataract of this type was supplied for the Ale and Cakes Mine. The plunger pump design of cataract had appeared in Cornwall by 1785, but was not Watt's invention.[15]

Later cataracts

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The term 'cataract' became a synonym for dashpot, at least where this was associated with steam engines and their governors. They were used as a damping device to avoid over-sensitivity with centrifugal governors.[17]

Cataracts were also used as an over-speed safety device for direct-acting water pumps.[iii] A seesaw or 'differential' lever was placed between the pump's piston rod and a cataract adjusted for the pump's normal working speed. If the pump suddenly accelerated, owing to the pump bursting or similar, the piston would overtake the cataract and the action of the differential lever would then close the pump's steam inlet valve and stop the pump, limiting possible damage.[18]

Open loop control

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The cataract, like most regulators, is an example of a servomechanism. However unlike the better-known Watt centrifugal governor, this is an open-loop, rather than closed-loop control. The cataract runs at its own speed, but does not measure the resultant speed of the engine. The cataract has also been described as a 'water clock'.[15] This assumes that the relationship between the cataract's operation and the engine's speed is fixed, which is a valid assumption for a beam engine as the cataract controls the timing of the engine's stroke, rather than a variable power or throttle valve. Where a governor controls such a throttle valve, as for the Watt governor, the speed of the engine depends on a complex and unpredictable relation between the engine load, the valve position and the varying efficiency of the engine. Such governors must use a closed-loop control if they are to maintain an effective and precise regulation.

Synchronisation

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One advantage of the independent and open loop nature of the cataract's control was that two engines could be adjusted to run in synchronisation, but in antiphase. With pumping engines, this gave a more even output to their pumping.[19]

Centrifugal governor

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Although the centrifugal governor was already known from its use for water- and windmills, it was not until 1788 when Watt was the first to apply it to a steam engine.[20] This was the 'Lap Engine', an early rotative engine now preserved in the Science Museum, London.

With a rotative engine, it was necessary to control the rate at which an engine moved throughout its stroke, not merely to vary the timing between strokes. This required the use of a throttle valve in the steam supply, controlled by the governor. As the load on mill engines and similar uses could vary, closed-loop control such as the engine speed-based centrifugal governor was also needed.[20] The cataract was thus not used on rotative engines, not even where single-acting Cornish winding engines were still used in Cornwall.[21]

Cornish engines were not amenable to control by a throttle valve, as their operating cycle depended on the condensation time more than a throttled steam supply. Non-rotative beam engines also had no easy means to drive a centrifugal governor. For these reasons the cataract remained in service for as long as the Cornish engine did.[22]

Notes

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  1. ^ Some Cornish winding engines had their valves arranged across different number of arbors, although their basic operation remains the same.
  2. ^ This was the initiation of a stroke with the Cornish cycle. For a Newcomen engine, the cataract triggered the water injection valve that caused condensation in the cylinder,[12] and thus the beginning of the power stroke.
  3. ^ These were the type of small reciprocating pump commonly used as boiler feedwater pumps and often described as the 'Weir' type.

References

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  1. ^ Woodall (1975), p. 29.
  2. ^ a b Evers, Henry (1875). Steam and the Steam Engine: Land and Marine. Glasgow: Williams Collins. pp. 60–61.
  3. ^ Woodall (1975), pp. 29–30.
  4. ^ a b (Woodall 1975, pp. 31–33)
  5. ^ Clark, Daniel Kinnear (1892). "3: A Treatise on Engines and Boilers". The Steam Engine. Vol. II. Blackie & Son. pp. 275–276.
  6. ^ a b c Farey, John (1827). A treatise on the steam engine: historical, practical, and descriptive. Vol. 1. pp. 188–189.
  7. ^ Farey (1827), p. 187.
  8. ^ Clark (1892), p. 339.
  9. ^ Clark (1892), p. 203.
  10. ^ a b Woodall, Frank D. (1975). Steam Engines and Waterwheels. Moorland. pp. 33–34. ISBN 0903485354.
  11. ^ Kelly, Maurice (2002). "Appendix A: Crofton Nº 1 Boulton & Watt Engine". The Non-Rotative Beam Engine. Camden Miniature Steam Services. p. 21. ISBN 0-9536523-3-5.
  12. ^ Clark (1892), p. 169.
  13. ^ a b c Kelly (2002), p. 56.
  14. ^ Dickinson & Jenkins (1927), p. 46.
  15. ^ a b c Dickinson, H.W.; Jenkins, R. (1981) [1927]. James Watt and the Steam Engine. Moorland Publishing. pp. 183–184. ISBN 0-903485-92-3.
  16. ^ Clark (1892), p. 365.
  17. ^ Clark (1892), pp. 67, 182.
  18. ^ Clark (1892), p. 281.
  19. ^ "The Grand Junction 100 inch Engine". Kew Bridge Steam Museum. Archived from the original on 2018-09-25. Retrieved 2017-01-12.
  20. ^ a b (Dickinson & Jenkins 1927, pp. 220–223)
  21. ^ Woodall (1975), p. 49.
  22. ^ 'Victoria' Pumping Engine, East London Waterworks, (Clark 1892, pp. 275–276)