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CHAPTER XXVII - ON THE DURATION OF MACHINERY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

(261.) The time during which a machine will continue effectually to perform its work, will depend mainly upon the perfection with which it was originally constructed, upon the care taken to keep it in proper repair, particularly to correct every shake or looseness in the axes, and upon the small mass and slow velocity of its moving parts. Every thing approaching to a blow, all sudden change of direction, is injurious. Engines for producing power, such as wind-mills, water-mills, and steam-engines, usually last a long time. But machinery for producing any commodity in great demand, seldom actually wears out; new improvements, by which the same operations can be executed either more quickly or better, generally superseding it long before that period arrives: indeed, to make such an improved machine profitable, it is usually reckoned that in five years it ought to have paid itself, and in ten to be superseded by a better.

“A cotton manufacturer,” says one of the witnesses before a Committee of the House of Commons, “who left “Manchester seven years ago, would be driven out of the “market by the men who are now living in it, provided “his knowledge had not kept pace with those who have “been, during that time, constantly profiting by the progressive improvements that have taken place in that “period.”

(262.) The effect of improvements in machinery, seems incidentally to increase production, through a cause which may be thus explained. A manufacturer making the usual profit upon his capital, invested in looms or other machines in perfect condition, the market price of making each of which is a hundred pounds, invents some improvement.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1832

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