48 résultats
1982765772PN. New. 1982. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition. . PN paperback
1519455402.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1539871223.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1968733750PN. New. 1968. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition. . PN paperback
A9781537151847Paperback / softback. New. paperback
B9781530025985Paperback / softback. New. paperback
B9781537151847Paperback / softback. New. paperback
B9781519271242Paperback / softback. New. paperback
B9781533465375Paperback / softback. New. paperback
26278816like new. unknown
1537151843.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1530025982.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1533465371.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1519271247.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1991D1V00280781991. Single Issue Magazine. Good. A nice copy. Text in mint/unmarked condition. Cover has minor wear. Binding is tight. unknown
2002D1U00280772002. Single Issue Magazine. Good. A nice copy. Text in clean/unmarked condition. Cover has minor wear. Binding is tight. unknown
2003x-1402012446Kluwer Academic Pub 2003. Hardcover. New. 552 pages. 9.00x6.00x1.00 inches. Kluwer Academic Pub hardcover
1972744789PN. New. 1972. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition. . PN paperback
1996KOS00600351Japan Maritime Self Defense Force 1996. Soft Cover. Fine. KOS00600351 Japan Maritime Self Defense Force paperback
13685No place or date. Two fragments: ONE: Half of a letter 11 x 10cm tipped onto album page fair conditionn text as follows: "PS We expected some difficulty in carrying out the Telegraph between Europe and America - but are notr at all disappointed with the present stoppage - Bruce's spider made many swings beforee he fatened his liune to the other side. - Weshall make anther swing next May or JUne - then underlined I think we shall get over small loss her In the meantime we are busy in the Mediterranean and towards the East. TWO: fragment roughly 11 x3cm tipped onto the same album page with residue of tex as follows "stronger than he was part of word ten years ago - walks with one stick sometimes with none.- With best regards to yourself and family circle Yours Edward B. Bright." With newspaper clipping dating from the 50th anniversary of the landing of the cable at Valentia etc 1908 with an account of the achievement of a connection between Europe and the USA. No place or date. unknown
190976677Place Not Identified: Publisher Not Identified. Very Good-. 1909. Leather. This book is hard-bound in a custom fine binding of full black leather with a gilt stamped heraldic/armorial insignia to the upper cover a gilt stamped anchor insignia on the lower cover gilt tooling to the cover edges and spine. There are silk doublures inside the covers. The covers show scuffing and soiling edge-wear and rubbing to the joints corners and spine-ends. The hinges are cracked with the text-block loosening and with some of the pages loosening or loose laid-in. The contents are bright and generally clean with illustrations of Battleships Submarines Etc. some actual/real photographs and some color illustrations pasted-down but also with some toning. Some of the ships in the acutal photographs include The "Dreadnought" - Submarine On The Surface - Submarine In The Act of Diving - Submarine Submerged - Submarine Beached - Torpedo Boat Destroyer Going 30 Knots - And - Torpedo Boat Destroyer Going 36 Knots. . (Publisher Not Identified) hardcover
74349E-264. Paperback. Very Good. Trade PB. 8vo. The Lake Submarine Corporation New York. No Date 1900. 32 pgs. Illustrated. First Edition/First Printing. Issued in stapled stamped blue wrappers that are lightly worn with some light shelf-wear to the extremities present. Book is free of ownership marks. Text is clean and free of marks. Binding tight and solid. The series of photographs contained herein shows the evolution of this type from . 1894 up to the present time July 1900. "--Preface. Simon Lake September 4 1866 – June 23 1945 was a Quaker American mechanical engineer and naval architect who obtained over two hundred patents for advances in naval design and competed with John Philip Holland to build the first submarines for the United States Navy. Argonaut was a class of submarines built by engineer Simon Lake. When used without clarification Argonaut generally refers to the second-built and larger submarine launched in 1900 at Baltimore. She was 36-foot 11 m long cigar shaped and built of steel. She had a White and Middleton gas engine and propeller dynamo searchlight and pumps for air and water. Her main attribute like that of the older sibling and predecessor Argonaut Junior 1894 ; was a wet diving chamber that allowed a diver to leave and re-enter the submarine. Argonaut No 1 and Argonaut No 2 are used as the name of this vessel. EB; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . paperback
186342775London Taylor and Francis 1863. 4to. No wrappers as extracted from "Philosophical Transactions" 1862 - Vol. 152 - Part II. Pp. 987-1017. Clean and fine. <br/><br/><em>First appearance of a main paper in the electrical theory of submarine cables."An important paper of thirty quarto pages published in the ‘Transactions of the Royal Society’ for June 19 1862 under the title ‘Experimental Researches on the Transmission of Electric Signals through submarine cables Part I. Laws of Transmission through various lengths of one cable by Fleeming Jenkin Esq. communicated by C. Wheatstone Esq. F.R.S.’ contains an account of a large part of Jenkin’s experimental work in the Birkenhead factory during the years 1859 and 1860. This paper is called Part I. Part II. alas never appeared but something that it would have included we can see from the following ominous statement which I find near the end of Part I.: ‘From this value the electrostatical capacity per unit of length and the specific inductive capacity of the dielectric could be determined. These points will however be more fully treated of in the second part of this paper.’ Jenkin had in fact made a determination at Birkenhead of the specific inductive capacity of gutta-percha or of the gutta-percha and Chatterton’s compound constituting the insulation of the cable on which he experimented. This was the very first true measurement of the specific inductive capacity of a dielectric which had been made after the discovery by Faraday of the existence of the property and his primitive measurement of it for the three substances glass shellac and sulphur; and at the time when Jenkin made his measurements the existence of specific inductive capacity was either unknown or ignored or denied by almost all the scientific authorities of the day." William Thomson Lord Kelvin in "Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin" by Robert Louis Stevenson.Jenkin a British engineer served as secretary of the British Association's Electric Standards Committee formed in 1861 which was responsible for setting and naming the standard units of electrical quantity and resistance. </em> unknown