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  2. Roots blower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roots_blower

    An Eaton M62 Roots-type supercharger is visible at the front of this Ecotec LSJ engine in a 2006 Saturn Ion Red Line.. The Roots-type blower is simple and widely used. It can be more effective than alternative superchargers at developing positive intake manifold pressure (i.e., above atmospheric pressure) at low engine speeds, making it a popular choice for passenger automobile applications.

  3. Everest Home Improvement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everest_Home_Improvement

    Everest was founded by Lewis Golden in 1964. [4] It became one of the first companies in the market of double glazing. [1] In what became a very fragmented market, [5] with over 3,000 companies, [1] the company grew to become the second biggest in the UK market by sales [1] and turnover [5] with 2.5% of the market (£165m sales) by 2009, [1] later rising to 3%.

  4. Roots Blower Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roots_Blower_Company

    It was founded in 1854 by the inventors Philander Higley Roots and Francis Marion Roots. It is notable for the Roots blower, a type of pump. [1] Today, Roots blowers are mainly used as air pumps in superchargers for internal combustion engines; they were first used in blast furnaces to blow combustion air to melt iron. [2]

  5. Lobe pump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobe_pump

    A lobe pump, or rotary lobe pump, is a type of positive displacement pump. It is similar to a gear pump except the lobes are designed to almost meet, rather than touch and turn each other. An early example of a lobe pump is the Roots Blower , patented in 1860 [ 1 ] to blow combustion air to melt iron in blast furnaces, but now more commonly ...

  6. Centrifugal fan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrifugal_fan

    Figure 1: Components of a centrifugal fan An external motor belt driven inline centrifugal fan discharging inline to the exterior of a building through a duct. Unlike non-inline/non-concentric impeller casing design with a cutoff blade above, the concentrically symetric cylinder casing and impeller geometry of inline type redirects the outflow around so that it is parallel to the inflow of gases.

  7. B. F. Sturtevant Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B._F._Sturtevant_Company

    [1] In 1869 the company introduced the "Sturtevant system," still the basis for much interior heating of buildings. Sturtevant adapted hot blast technology for indoor heating, using ductwork to spread the warmed air. [1] In 1876 the company moved its plant to the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston, and soon began work with the United States Navy.

  8. Blower door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blower_door

    These early research efforts demonstrated the potential power of blower door testing in revealing otherwise unaccounted for energy losses in homes. Previously, air leakage around doors, windows and electrical outlets was considered to be the primary leakage pathway in homes, but Harrje, Dutt and Beya used blower doors to identify thermal bypasses.

  9. Rotary-screw compressor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotary-screw_compressor

    Principal view of the pumping action of a twin-screw pump with a six-lobe female screw and a five-lobe male screw. A compressor (as opposed to a pump) would be shaped the same way, except that the shape of the lobes would change along the length of the screw, so that the volume of the trapped pockets would get squeezed smaller as they get closer to the exhaust port.