Murray's Hypocycloidal Engine
Murray's Hypocycloidal Engine, now in Thinktank, Birmingham Science Museum, England, was made around 1805[1] and is the world's third-oldest working steam engine[2] and the oldest working engine with a Tusi couple hypocycloidal straight line mechanism.[lower-alpha 1]
| Murray's Hypocycloidal Engine | |
|---|---|
![]() The engine at Thinktank  | |
| Origins | |
| Type | Hypocycloidal | 
| Designer | Matthew Murray | 
| Maker | Fenton, Murray and Wood | 
| Date | 1805 | 
| Country of origin | England | 
| Former operator | 
  | 
| Measurements | |
| Cylinders | 1 | 
| Preservation | |
| Collection | Birmingham Museums Trust | 
| Location | Thinktank, Digbeth, Birmingham, England | 
| Accession no. | 1961S01437.00001 | 
History
    
Designed by Matthew Murray, and made by Fenton, Murray and Wood of Holbeck, Leeds, it is one of only two of the type to survive;[3] the other is located at The Henry Ford, Michigan, United States.[4]
The single-cylinder engine was used by John Bradley & Co of Stourbridge from 1805 until 1931, and by N. Hingley & Sons Ltd of Netherton from 1931 until 1961, when it was acquired by Birmingham City Council for their science museum.[5]
See also
    
- Birmingham Museums Trust
 - Rotative beam engine
 - Smethwick Engine – the oldest working engine in the world, also at Thinktank
 - Sun and planet gear
 - Whitbread Engine – the second-oldest working engine; one of the first rotative steam engines
 
Notes
    
- The oldest working engine, the Smethwick Engine, and the second oldest, the Whitbread Engine, are beam engines, and neither uses a hypocycloidal straight line mechanism.
 
References
    
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Murray engine (Thinktank).
- Reyburn, Ross (2 December 2000). "Full steam ahead; Some of Birmingham's most impressive artefacts are on the move". Birmingham Post. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
 - "Thinktank Birmingham Science Museum". Automuseums. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
 - "Matthew Murray's elegant design". Birmingham Stories. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
 - "Hypocycloidal Pumping Engine". Stationary Steam. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
 - Birmingham Museums Trust catalogue, accession number: 1961S01437.00001
 
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