are not used.
Some time ago the writer was standing near a traction engine, when the
engineer, (I guess I must call him that) asked me to stay with the engine
a few minutes. I consented. After he had been gone a short time I
thought I would look after the water. It showed about two inches in the
glass, which was all right, but as I have advised you, I proposed to
know that it was there and thought I would prove it by trying the cocks.
But on attempting to try them I found them limed up solid. Had I been
hunting an engineer, that fellow would not have secured the job.
Suppose that before I had looked at the glass, it had bursted, which it is
liable to do any time. I would have shut the gauge cocks off as soon as
possible to stop the escaping steam and water. Then I would have tried
the cocks to find where the water was in the boiler. I would have been
in a bad boat, not knowing whether I had water or not. Shortly after this
the fellow that was helping the engine run (I guess I will put it that way)
came back. I asked him what the trouble was with his try cocks. He
said, "Oh, I don't bother with them." I asked him what he would do if
his glass should break. His reply was, "Oh, that won't break." Now just
such an engineer as that spoils many a good engine, and then blames it
on the manufacturer. Now this is one good reason why you are not to
depend entirely on the glass gauge. Another equally as good reason is,
that your glass may fool you, for you see the try-cocks may lime up, so
may your glass gauge cocks, but you say you use them. You use them
by looking at them. You are not letting the steam or water escape from
them every few minutes and thereby cutting the lime away, as is the
case with try-cocks. Now you want to know how you are to keep them
open. Well, that is easy. Shut off the top gauge and open the drain cock
at bottom of gauge cock. This allows the water and steam to flow out of
the lower cock. Then after allowing it to escape a few seconds, shut off
the lower gauge and open the top one, and allow it to blow about the
same time. Then shut the drain cock and open both gauge cocks and
you will see the water seek its level, and you can rest assured that it is
reliable. This little operation I want you to perform every day you run
an engine. It will prevent you from thinking you have water. I don't
want you to think so. I intend that you shall know it. You remember we
said, if you know you have water, you are safe, and every one around
you will be safe.
Now here is something I want you to remember. Never be guilty of
going to your engine in the morning and building a fire simply because
you see water in the glass. We could give you the names of a score of
men who have ruined their engines by doing this very thing. You, as a
matter of course, want to know why this can do any harm. It could not,
if the water in the boiler was as high as it shows in the glass, but it is
not always there, and that is what causes the trouble. Well, if it showed
in the glass, why was it not there? You probably have lived long
enough in the world to know that there are a great many boys in it, and
it seems to be second nature with them to turn everything on an engine
that is possible to turn. All glass gauge cocks are fitted with a small
hand wheel. The small boy sees this about the first thing and he begins
to turn it, and he generally turns as long as it turns easy, and when it
stops he will try the other one, and when it stops he has done the
mischief, by shutting the water off from the boiler, and all the water
that was in the glass remains there. You may have stopped work with
an ordinary gauge of water, and as water expands when heated, it also
contracts when it becomes cool. Water will also simmer away, if there
is any fire left in the fire box, especially if there should be any vent or
leak in the boiler, and the water may by morning have dropped to as
much as an inch below the crown sheet. You approach the engine
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