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steamroller

 
Dictionary: steam·roll·er   (stēm''lər) pronunciation
n.
    1. A steam-driven machine equipped with a heavy roller for smoothing road surfaces.
    2. A similar machine with an internal-combustion engine.
  1. A ruthless or irresistible force or power.

v. also steam·roll (-rōl'), -roll·ered, also -rolled, -roll·er·ing, -roll·ing, -roll·ers, -rolls.

v.tr.
  1. To smooth or level (a road) with a steamroller.
  2. To overwhelm or suppress ruthlessly; crush.
v.intr.
To move or proceed with overwhelming or crushing force.


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Thesaurus: steamroller
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verb

    To render totally ineffective by decisive defeat: annihilate, crush, drub, overpower, overwhelm, smash, thrash, trounce, vanquish. Informal massacre, wallop. Slang clobber, cream, shellac, smear. See win/lose/recovery.

WordNet: steamroller
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has 2 meanings:

Meaning #1: a massive inexorable force that seems to crush everything in its way
  Synonym: juggernaut

Meaning #2: vehicle equipped with heavy wide smooth rollers for compacting roads and pavements
  Synonym: road roller


The verb steamroller has 4 meanings:

Meaning #1: bring to a specified state by overwhelming force or pressure
  Synonym: steamroll

Meaning #2: proceed with great force
  Synonym: steamroll

Meaning #3: crush with a steamroller as if to level

Meaning #4: overwhelm by using great force
  Synonym: steamroll


Wikipedia: Steamroller
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Contents

A steamroller (or steam roller) is a form of road roller – a type of heavy construction machinery used for levelling surfaces, such as roads or airfields – that is powered by a steam engine. The levelling/flattening action is achieved through a combination of the size and weight of the vehicle and the rolls: the smooth wheels and the large cylinder or drum fitted in place of treaded road wheels.

A steam powered road roller

The majority of steam rollers are outwardly similar to traction engines as many traction engine manufacturers later produced rollers based on their existing designs, and the patents owned by certain roller manufacturers tended to influence the general arrangements used by others. The key difference between the two vehicles is that on a roller the main roll replaces the front wheels and axle that would be fitted to a traction engine.

In many parts of the world, the term steam roller is still used to refer to a road roller, regardless of the method of propulsion. This typically only applies to the largest examples (used for road-making).

This article concentrates on steam-powered rollers; see road roller for a description of motor rollers, e.g., diesel rollers.

Configurations

The majority of rollers were of the same basic configuration, with two large smooth wheels at the back and a single wide roll at the front. However, there was also a distinctive variant, the "tandem", which had two wide rolls, one front, one rear (see photo). This configuration is still used for motor road rollers. A further steam-powered variant was the tri-tandem, made by Robey, which was a like a tandem but with two large rear rolls, one mounted immediately in front of the other.

A variation of the basic configuration was the "convertible": an engine which could be either a steam roller or a traction engine and could be changed from one form to the other in a relatively short time – i.e., less than half a day. Convertible engines were liked by local authorities, since the same machine could be used for haulage in the winter and road-mending in the summer.

Design features

Although most steam roller designs are derived from traction engines, and were manufactured by the same companies, there are a number of features that set them apart.

Wheels

The most obvious difference is in the wheels. All traction engines were built with large fabricated spoked steel wheels with wide rims. Those intended for road use would have continuous solid rubber tyres bolted around the rims, to improve traction on tarmac. Engines intended for agricultural use would have a series of strakes bolted diagonally across the rims, like the tread on a modern pneumatic tractor tyre, and the wheels were typically wider to spread the load more evenly.

Steam rollers, on the other hand, had smooth rear wheels and a roller at the front. The roller was a single wide cylinder supported at either end. This replaced the separate wheels and axle of a traction engine.

Smokebox

In the conventional arrangement, the front roller is mounted centrally, forward of the chimney. In order to allow enough clearance from the boiler (and hence a larger front roll), the smokebox is extended forward substantially at the top to incorporate a support plate on which to mount the bearing for the roller assembly. This gives the distinctive, hooded look to the front of a steam roller. It also necessitates a different design of smokebox door – it has to drop down, rather than opening sideways, due to the limited access available.

Special equipment

The rear rollers were fitted with scraper bars. As the vehicle moved along, these removed any surface material that had become stuck to the roll, to prevent a build-up of material and ensure a flat finish was maintained.

Some steam rollers were fitted with a scarifier mounted on the tender box at the rear. They could be swung down to road level and used to rip up the old surface before a road was remade.

Another accessory was a tar sprayer – a bar mounted on the back of the roller. This was not a common fixture.

Manufacturers

Britain was a large exporter of steam rollers to the world over the years, with the firm of Aveling and Porter probably being the most famous and the most prolific.

Many other traction engine manufacturers built steam rollers, but after Aveling and Porter, the most popular were Marshall, Sons & Co., John Fowler & Co., and Wallis & Steevens.

In America, the Buffalo-Springfield Roller Company was a large builder. J. I. Case made a roller variant of their famed farm engines, but had a small market share. Other nations had makers including the Czechs, Swiss, Swedes, Germans and Dutch which produced steam rollers.

Use (UK)

A former Bedfordshire County Council Aveling & Porter Road Roller in 2004

A number of companies owned fleets of steam rollers and contracted them out to local authorities.

Many were still in use into the 1960s, and part of the M1 motorway was made with the help of steam rollers.[1]

A few steam rollers were still being used for road maintenance in the early 1970s, and this may go some way to explaining why road rollers are still colloquially known as steam rollers to this day.

Current use

Many steam rollers are preserved in working order, and can be seen in operation during special live steam festivals, where operating scale models may also be displayed. At some of the UK steam fairs and rallies, demonstrations of road building using the old techniques, tools and machines are re-enacted by 'Road Gangs' in authentic dress; steam rollers feature prominently in these demonstrations. The annual Great Dorset Steam Fair has a section dedicated to road-making machinery, including a line-up of working steam rollers.

In popular culture

On television

  • UK steeplejack and engineering enthusiast Fred Dibnah was known as a National Institution in Great Britain for the conservation of steam rollers and traction engines. The first engine he restored to working order was an Aveling & Porter steam roller, registration no. DM3079. Built in 1912, it was a 10 ton slide-valve, single-cylinder, 4-shaft, road roller.[2]

Originally named "Allison", after his first wife, Fred renamed the engine "Betsy" (his mother's name) following his divorce – Fred's view being "wives may change but your mother remains your mother!"

This roller was featured in many of Fred's early television programmes. It may still be seen at steam rallies in Britain and was in steam at the Great Dorset Steam Fair in 2006, working in the road-mending demonstration.

On film

Unlike the often-lethal movie roles by their diesel-powered equivalents, the film appearances by steam rollers are relatively benign:

  • In the 1971 film Dad's Army, the Walmington-on-Sea platoon are sent on an exercise for Home Guard training. On the way, an incident that disables Jones's van results in Capt. Mainwaring commandeering a passing steam roller to tow the van to the exercise. Unfortunately, on arrival at the training camp, Mainwaring and Jones discover that neither knows how to stop the roller, and they end up flattening their tents and equipment.

In fiction

  • Roley is one of the main vehicle characters in the children's books and television series, Bob the Builder. He is a green roller with a cab, enclosed power unit and no chimney, and so is obviously diesel-powered – nevertheless, his official title is Roley the Steamroller. This is another example of how the use of "steam roller", to describe a modern road roller, still persists in the English language.

In music

  • The group Buffalo Springfield named themselves after a steam roller parked outside the house.
  • The song Steamroller Blues was written and performed by James Taylor in 1970 and subsequently became a favourite of live concerts by Elvis Presley.
  • In Marianne Moore's To A Steam Roller, she portrays the democratizing ability of the steamroller: "You lack half wit. You crush all the particles down / into close conformity, and then walk back and forth / on them" (3-5).[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Steam Road Rollers (Gallery)". Bedfordshire Steam & Country Fair 2005. Bedford Steam Engine Preservation Society. http://www.bseps.org.uk/scf2k5/scf2k5__rollers.htm. Retrieved 2007-02-08. 
  2. ^ Fred Dibnahs roller 'Betsy'

External links

  • Road Roller Association – UK-based society dedicated to the preservation of steam (and motor) rollers and ancillary road-making equipment.
  • "Steam Dinosaur" – world's oldest surviving traction engine: immediate ancestor of Aveling's earliest rollers.
    (Article includes lots of detail about early Aveling roller design.)
  • Fred Dibnah's roller 'Betsy' – The story of Betsy's restoration

Translations: Steamroller
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - damptromle
v. tr. - tromle ned
v. intr. - køre frem som en damptromle

Nederlands (Dutch)
platwalsen, wals

Français (French)
n. - (Constr) rouleau compresseur
v. tr. - cylindrer, laminer, écraser, aplanir, briser (un opposant), imposer
v. intr. - briser, écraser

Deutsch (German)
n. - Dampfwalze
v. - walzen

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (ατμοκίνητος) οδοστρωτήρας
v. - στρώνω με οδοστρωτήρα, (μτφ.) σαρώνω στο πέρασμά μου, συντρίβω ολοσχερώς

Italiano (Italian)
travolgere

Português (Portuguese)
n. - rolo compressor

Русский (Russian)
паровой каток, всесокрушающая сила, грубое давление, навязывание

Español (Spanish)
n. - apisonador
v. tr. - apisonar
v. intr. - proceder con fuerza implacable

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - ångvält
v. - mosa sönder, krossa

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
蒸汽压路机, 压倒对方的手段, 用压路机把...压平, 以势压倒, 压垮, 以势压倒对方

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 蒸汽壓路機, 壓倒對方的手段
v. tr. - 用壓路機把...壓平, 以勢壓倒, 壓垮
v. intr. - 以勢壓倒對方

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 증기 롤러, 도로용 롤러, 압박 수단
v. tr. - 증기 롤러로 고르게 하다, ~을 제압하다
v. intr. - 강압적으로 밀고 나가다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - スチームローラー, 圧倒的な力, 蒸気ローラー
v. - 力で押しつぶす

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) حادله طرق تعلم بالبخار (فعل) يفرض رأيه أو ارادته دون مراعاة غيره‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮מכבש-קיטור, כוח מדכא‬
v. tr. - ‮כבש, מחץ, רמס‬
v. intr. - ‮המשיך בכוח שאין לעצרו‬


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Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Thesaurus. Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary Copyright © 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Steamroller" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more

 

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