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  2. SS Columbia (1880) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Columbia_(1880)

    Columbia was the first ship to carry a dynamo powering electric lights instead of oil lamps and the first commercial use of electric light bulbs outside of Thomas Edison's Menlo Park, New Jersey laboratory. [7] [11] [12] Due to this, a detailed article and composite illustration of Columbia was featured in the May 1880 issue of Scientific ...

  3. Cold ironing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_Ironing

    Cold ironing is a shipping industry term that first came into use when all ships had coal-fired engines. When a ship tied up at port there was no need to continue to feed the fire and the iron engines would literally cool down, eventually going completely cold, hence the term cold ironing.

  4. Timeline of lighting technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_lighting...

    1805 Philips and Lee's Cotton Mill, Manchester was the first industrial factory to be fully lit by gas. 1809 Humphry Davy publicly demonstrates first electric lamp over 10,000 lumens, at the Royal Society. [5] 1813 National Heat and Light Company formed by Frederick Albert Winsor. 1815 Humphry Davy invents the miner's safety lamp.

  5. History of electric power transmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_electric_power...

    Voltages used for electric power transmission increased throughout the 20th century. [50] The first "high voltage" AC power station, rated 4-MW 10-kV 85-Hz, was put into service in 1889 by Sebastian Ziani de Ferranti at Deptford, London. [33] The first electric power transmission line in North America operated at 4000 V.

  6. Fire room - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_room

    Vessels typically contained several engines for different purposes. Main, or propulsion engines are used to turn the ship's propeller and move the ship through the water. . The fire room got its name from the days when ships burned coal to heat steam to drive the steam engines or turbines; the room was where the stokers spent their days shoveling coal continuously onto the grates under the ...

  7. Marine propulsion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_propulsion

    Early steamships were fueled by wood, later ones by coal or fuel oil. Early ships used stern or side paddle wheels, which gave way to screw propellers. The first commercial success accrued to Robert Fulton's North River Steamboat (often called Clermont) in US in 1807, followed in Europe by the 45-foot (14 m) Comet of 1812. Steam propulsion ...

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  9. Steam-powered vessel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam-powered_vessel

    Steam can be used to drive a high speed turbine that is connected through some means of transmission to the driving component of the vessel. [3] These are more common on modern ships and were first used in 1897 on the steam ship Turbinia. [4] Nuclear ships almost always use a turbine to harness the energy of the steam that they produce.