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For more information on Joseph Bramah, visit Britannica.com.
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| Biography: Joseph Bramah |
Joseph Bramah (1749-1814) is considered to be one of the most important inventors of his day. The hydraulicpress was his foremost contribution. The world also recognizes him for improving and patenting the flushing toilet.
Joe Bremmer was born on April 13, 1749 to a Yorkshire farmer and his wife in the town of Stainborough, near Barnsley, England. He was expected to take over the family farm. However, an accident at the age of 16 left Bremmer lame, and prevented him from continuing work on the farm. He turned to woodworking and cabinetry, and became apprenticed to a carpenter. Upon completing his apprenticeship, he moved to London where he set up his own carpenter and cabinetry business.
Flushed Out Ideas
Bremmer was an inventive person, always looking for a better way to make things work. While installing toilets for his customers, he realized the existing valve system was unsatisfactory and set about redeveloping the mechanism. In 1778, he patented his own device, improving upon its flushing system. While waiting for approval of the patent, he changed his name from Joe Bremmer to Joseph Bramah, believing it to sound more elegant and professional.
His second noteworthy contribution was the development of the Bramah lock. Specifically designed to foil thieves, Bramah placed one of the locks in the window of his shop and offered a reward of 200 guineas to anyone who could successfully pick the lock. He did not live to see anyone meet his challenge. The lock remained secure for the next 67 years, from 1784 until 1851, when an American mechanic named Alfred Hobbs finally succeeded, after 51 hours of work. The lock was complex. Bramah knew that manufacturing it in large quantities would require the further development of a set of well-designed and precisely engineered machine tools. To accomplish this, he hired Henry Maudslay, a nineteen-year-old blacksmith, as an apprentice. Maudslay proved to be a mechanical genius.
Contributed to the Industrial Revolution
The collaboration of Bramah and Maudslay was extremely successful and resulted in the development of numerous important inventions. In 1794, they developed the slide rest, a crucial improvement to the lathes of the day. The slide rest eliminated the need to hand hold a cutting tool against the metal to be cut. The iron fist of the slide rest now held the tool firmly in place against the metal and provided uniform movement along a carriage, permitting greater accuracy and improved output in metal working.
The following year, Bramah invented the hydraulic press. This device was capable of exerting pressure to several thousand tons, for the purpose of shaping heavy pieces of iron and steel. The press offered the first practical application of hydraulic principles to manufacturers and builders, increasing production capabilities ten-fold. It set the standard for an entire technology. Modern applications of this invention include the car-jack, presses for baling waste paper and metal, and the hydraulic braking system for vehicles. The hydraulic press is considered to be one of the greatest contributions to the industrial revolution.
Other Inventions
Bramah's inventiveness and creativity took many turns throughout his life. He secured a total of 18 patents. Early in his career, Bramah was intrigued by the idea of using water as a means of propulsion. In 1785, he proposed the concept of moving ships by means of screws. His suggestion was the first step toward the replacement of the paddle wheel with propellers for improved and faster movement of ships. Bramah's other inventions included a machine for numbering bank notes, a wood-planing machine, a beer pump, machines for making paper, a machine which made nibs for pens, and a machine to aerate water.
Joseph Bramah died on December 9, 1814 in London, England. He is recognized as one of the fathers of the British machine-tool industry. Without such contributions as the hydraulic press and the concept of water propulsion with screws, builders such as Robert Stephenson and Isambard Brunell could not have built their tubular bridges or launched the largest steam vessel of its time.
Further Reading
A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists Wiley-Interscience, A. and C. Black, Ltd., 1969.
The Columbia Encyclopedia, 5th ed., Columbia University Press, 1993.
The Hutchinson Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Helicon Publishing Ltd., 1998.
World of Invention, 2nd ed., Gale Group, 1999.
Encyclopaedia Britannica Onlinehttp://members.eb.com/bol/topic?eu-16419&sctn=1. (January 12, 2000).
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Joseph Bramah |
| Wikipedia: Joseph Bramah |
| Joseph Bramah | |
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Joseph Bramah
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| Born | 13 April 1748 Wentworth, Yorkshire |
| Died | 9 December 1814 Pimlico |
| Nationality | England |
| Known for | hydraulic press |
Joseph Bramah (13 April 1748[1] – 9 December 1814), born Stainborough Lane Farm, Wentworth, Yorkshire, England, was an inventor and locksmith. He is best known for having invented the hydraulic press. Along with William George Armstrong, he can be considered one of the two fathers of hydraulic engineering.
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He was the second son in the family of three sons and two daughters of Joseph Bramma (note the different spelling of the surname), a farmer, and his wife, Mary Denton. He was educated at the local school in Silkstone and on leaving school he was apprenticed to a local carpenter. On completing his apprenticeship he moved to London, where he started work as a cabinet-maker. In 1783 he married Mary Lawton of Mapplewell, near Barnsley, and the couple set up home in London. They subsequently had a daughter and four sons. The couple first of all lived at 124 Piccadilly, but later moved to Eaton Street, Pimlico.
His first successful invention whilst in London was an improved water closet. He found that the current model of water closet being installed in London houses had a tendency to freeze in cold weather. He designed a new model in which the usual slide valve was replaced by a hinged flap that sealed the bottom of the bowl. He obtained a patent for his design in 1778 and began making water closets at a workshop in Denmark Street, St Giles The design was a success and production continued well into the 19th century.
His original water closets are still working in Osbourne House, Queen Victoria's home on the Isle of Wight.
After attending some lectures on technical aspects of locks, Bramah, designed a lock of his own. He received a patent for his new lock in 1784. In the same year he started the Bramah Locks company at 124 Piccadilly, which is today based in Marylebone, London and Romford, Essex.
The locks produced by his company were famed for their resistance to lock picking and tampering, the company famously had a "Challenge Lock" which was displayed in the window of their London shop from 1790 mounted on a board containing the inscription:
The artist who can make an instrument that will pick or open this lock shall receive 200 guineas the moment it is produced.
The challenge stood for over 67 years until, at the Great Exhibition of 1851 an American locksmith by the name of Alfred Charles Hobbs was able to open the lock and, following some argument about the circumstances under which he had opened it, was awarded the prize. Hobbs attempt required some 51 hours, spread over 16 days.
The Challenge Lock is in the Science Museum in London. An examination of the lock shows that it has been rebuilt since Hobbs picked it, originally it had 18 iron slides and 1 central spring. It was rebuilt to have 13 steel slides, each with its own spring.
Bramah received a second patent for a lock design in 1798.
Partly due to the precision requirements of his locks, Bramah spent much time developing tools to assist manufacturing processes. He relied heavily on the expertise of Henry Maudslay whom he employed in his workshop from the age of 18. Between them they created a number of innovative machines that made the production of Bramah's locks more efficient, and were applicable to other fields of manufacture.
Just before Bramah died, his workshops also employed Joseph Clement who among other things made several contributions in the field of lathe design.
Bramah's most important invention was the hydraulic press. The hydraulic press depends on Pascal's principle, that pressure throughout a closed system is constant. The press had two cylinders and pistons of different cross-sectional areas. If a force was exerted on the smaller piston, this would be translated into a larger force on the larger piston. The difference in the two forces would be proportional to the difference in area of the two pistons. In effect the cylinders act in a similar way that a lever is used to increase the force exerted. Bramah was granted a patent for his hydraulic press in 1795.
Bramah's hydraulic press had many industrial applications and still does today. At the time hydraulic engineering was an almost unknown science, and Bramah (with William George Armstrong) was one of the two pioneers in this field.
The hydraulic press is still known as the Bramah Press after its inventor.
Bramah was a very prolific inventor. Not all of his inventions were as important as his hydraulic press. They included: a beer engine (1797), a planing machine (1802), a paper-making machine (1805), a machine for automatically printing bank notes with sequential serial numbers (1806), and a fountain pen (1809).
One of Bramah's last inventions was a hydrostatic press capable of uprooting trees. This was put to work at Holt Forest in Hampshire. While superintending this work Bramah caught a cold, which developed into pneumonia. He died at Holt Forest on 9 December 1814. He was buried in the churchyard of St Mary's, Paddington.
In 2006 a pub in Barnsley town centre was opened named the Joseph Bramah in his memory.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
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