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  2. Steam power during the Industrial Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_power_during_the...

    The development of machine tools, such as the lathe, planing and shaping machines powered by these engines, enabled all the metal parts of the engines to be easily and accurately cut and in turn made it possible to build larger and more powerful engines. [4] In the early 19th century, after the expiration of the Boulton & Watt patent in 1800 ...

  3. History of the steam engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_steam_engine

    During the Industrial Revolution, steam engines started to replace water and wind power, and eventually became the dominant source of power in the late 19th century and remaining so into the early decades of the 20th century, when the more efficient steam turbine and the internal combustion engine resulted in the rapid replacement of the steam ...

  4. Stationary steam engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stationary_steam_engine

    Stationary steam engines are fixed steam engines ... They were introduced during the 18th century and widely made for the whole of the 19th century and most of the ...

  5. History of steam road vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_steam_road_vehicles

    The first experimental vehicles were built in the 18th and 19th century, but it was not until after Richard Trevithick had developed the use of high-pressure steam, around 1800, that mobile steam engines became a practical proposition. The first half of the 19th century saw great progress in steam vehicle design, and by the 1850s it was viable ...

  6. Marine steam engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_steam_engine

    A marine steam engine is a steam engine that is used to power a ship or boat. This article deals mainly with marine steam engines of the reciprocating type, which were in use from the inception of the steamboat in the early 19th century to their last years of large-scale manufacture during World War II.

  7. Steam engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_engine

    The final major evolution of the steam engine design was the use of steam turbines starting in the late part of the 19th century. Steam turbines are generally more efficient than reciprocating piston type steam engines (for outputs above several hundred horsepower), have fewer moving parts, and provide rotary power directly instead of through a ...

  8. James Watt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Watt

    (Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, by Francis Chantrey) James Watt FRS FRSE (/ w ɒ t /; 30 January 1736 (19 January 1736 OS) – 25 August 1819) [a] was a Scottish inventor, mechanical engineer, and chemist who improved on Thomas Newcomen's 1712 Newcomen steam engine with his Watt steam engine in 1776, which was fundamental to the changes brought by the Industrial Revolution in both his native Great ...

  9. Timeline of steam power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_steam_power

    Steam power developed slowly over a period of several hundred years, progressing through expensive and fairly limited devices in the early 17th century, to useful pumps for mining in 1700, and then to Watt's improved steam engine designs in the late 18th century.