''This article is about the Scottish engineer and inventor. For Ronald Reagan's Secretary of the Interior, see
James G. Watt.''
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image:James Watt small.jpg
James Watt (
January 19, 1736–
August 19, 1819) was a
Scottish mathematician and
engineer whose improvements to the
steam engine were a key stage in the
Industrial Revolution.
He was born in
Greenock,
Scotland, and lived and worked in
Birmingham,
England. He was a key member of the
Lunar Society. Many of his papers are in
Birmingham Central Library.
Timeline
- 1736: Born in Greenock, Scotland
- 1754: Learned the trade of mathematical-instrument making in London before returning to Glasgow
- 1763: Repaired a Newcomen steam engine, which started him thinking about ways to improve the engine.
- 1765: While wandering through the Glasgow Green's "Golf Course", comes upon the idea of a separate condensing chamber for the steam engine.
- 1767: Surveyor of Forth and Clyde canal.
- 1769: Patented separate condensing chamber for steam engine.
- 1774: Started a business in Soho, near Birmingham, with Matthew Boulton to manufacture his improved Watt steam engine.
- 1781: Converted reciprocal engine motion to rotary motion.
- 1782: Invented double-acting engine.
- 1784: Patented a steam locomotive.
- 1788: Adapted centrifugal governor for use on steam engine.
Engineering Achievements
Watt adopted the
centrifugal governor to regulate the speed of a steam engine. (This was already in use for governing wind and watermills.) He invented the
parallel motion linkage to convert circular motion to an approximate straight line motion (of which he was most proud) and the steam indicator to measure steam pressure in the
cylinder throughout the working cycle of the engine, so showing its efficiency.
Watt greatly helped the development of the embryonic steam engine into a viable and economic means of power generation. He realised that the
Newcomen steam engine was wasting nearly three quarters of the steam energy in heating the
piston and chamber. Watt developed a separate
condenser chamber which significantly increased the efficiency. Further refinements (
insulation of the steam cylinder, the double-acting engine, a counter, an indicator, and a
throttle valve) made the steam engine his life's work.
Watt was opposed to the use of high pressure steam, and is held by some to have held back the technical development of the steam engine by other engineers, until his patents expired in 1800. With his partner Matthew Boulton he battled against rival engineers such as Jonathan Hornblower who tried to develop engines which did not fall foul of his
catch-all patents. Boulton proved an excellent businessman, and both men eventually made fortunes.
He introduced a unit called the
horsepower to compare the power output of steam engines, his version of the unit being equivalent to 550 foot-pounds per second (about 745.7
watts).
Watt also invented several other things, not least a copying device for letters.
Legacy
James Watt's model of the steam engine converted a machine of limited use to one of
efficiency and many applications. It was the foremost energy source in the emerging Industrial Revolution, and greatly multiplied its productive capacity. (Without it, humans might have continued to provide power.) It was also essential in later
transportation advancements, such as the
steamboat and locomotive.
Remembrance
The
SI unit of
power, the
watt, is named after him. So is, at least in part,
Edinburgh's
Heriot-Watt University.
He is also remembered by the
Moonstones, two individual statues, and a
statue of him, Boulton and Murdoch by
William Bloye, and a school named in his honour, all in Birmingham.
There are 4 colleges named after him in Scotland, James Watt College in Kilwinning (North Ayrshire Campus) and Greenock (2 in Greenock, Finnart Campus and Waterfront Campus) and a campus in Largs.
Matthew Boulton's home,
Soho House, is now a museum, commemorating the work of both men.
There are over 50 roads or streets named after him, in the UK.
See also
and his predecessors:
Bibliography
Rev. Dr. Richard L, Hills,
James Watt, Vol 1, His time in Scotland, 1736-1774 (2002), 480pp, many illus., Landmark Publishing Ltd, ( Order:
ISBN 1-84306-045-0) [ The second volume covering his time in England until his death in 1819 is due for publication in 2005.]
Watt, James
Watt, James
Watt, James
Watt, James
Watt, James
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