Ways Of Making Moulds For All Sires $Bells; Their Measurements; And The Procedure For Bells, Mortars, Basins, And Other Similar Vessels.

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 591 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1942
Abstract
IT has been discovered by skilled bell founders, more through experience than from geometrical calculation (although calculation does enter), that a certain relationship of dimensions in both large and small bells makes the tone and the weight almost certainly what is desired. This is in addition to the customary shape which is, according to the historians, perhaps that found by the first discoverers of bells. Among themselves bell founders have made a rule of these measurements and have called it the bell scale. Beginning with the small ones weighing ten pounds, it increases by degrees to a point where, as I have seen, they are able to make them even twenty-five and thirty thousand pounds. This scale is of great enlightenment if one does not have a bell already made for comparison.
Citation
APA: (1942) Ways Of Making Moulds For All Sires $Bells; Their Measurements; And The Procedure For Bells, Mortars, Basins, And Other Similar Vessels.
MLA: Ways Of Making Moulds For All Sires $Bells; Their Measurements; And The Procedure For Bells, Mortars, Basins, And Other Similar Vessels.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1942.