Tag Archives: instrument

In the Water and Steam Museum

Friday 26th September 2025, 11.20am (day 5,146)

Water and steam museum, 26/9/25

A city the size of London is going to need a lot of water. And unlike, say, Manchester, there are no high hills particularly nearby, in which one can build reservoirs and let gravity do quite a bit of the work of moving that water to where it is needed (water comes all the way to Manchester from the Lake District a hundred miles away through gravity alone). Therefore, some serious pumping is required. What used to be the Kew Bridge pumping station, and is now the London Water and Steam Museum, contains the biggest beam engine ever built, a gargantuan see-saw with a steam engine at one end and the pump at the other. That colossal object was impossible to photograph adequately, but these instruments will do.

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Lung capacity

Monday 26th May 2025, 9.35am (day 5,023)

A public holiday in the UK, but as I had, blatantly, skived off on Friday I worked through it. It was raining anyway. So uneventful was this always going to be, that my idle musings as to just what my present lung capacity might be led to a suitable candidate for today’s photo. A spirometer (definition: “lung-capacity measuring instrument”) hangs around thanks to the wife’s asthma, and there you go. As this figure of, what, 583ml lies at least two-thirds of the way up this particular scale I assume I’m doing OK. (Note: the picture isn’t upside down, but the spirometer is.)

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