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{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2020}}
{{Infobox historic engine
|name = ''Lap Engine''
|image = File:Science Museum - the 'lap engine' (geograph 3661968).jpg
|image_size =
|alt =
|caption =
|type =
|designer = [[James Watt]]
|maker = [[Boulton and Watt]]
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|collection = [[Science Museum Group]]
|___location = [[Science Museum, London]]
|accession = 1861–46<ref name="Science-Museum-1861-46">{{Cite web
|title=Rotative steam engine by Boulton and Watt, 1788.
|website=Science Museum
|url=http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/objects/motive_power/1861-46.aspx
|access-date=13 March 2015
|archive-date=24 September 2015
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924114903/http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/objects/motive_power/1861-46.aspx
|url-status=dead
}}</ref>▼
|working = No
}}
The
It is important as both an early example of a beam engine by
The engines name comes from its use in [[Matthew Boulton]]'s [[Soho Manufactory]], where it was used to drive a line of 43 polishing or [[lapping]] machines, used for the [[Birmingham toy industry|production of buttons and buckles]].<ref name="SM, Lap Engine" /><ref name="Hulse, web, Lap Engine" />
== Innovations ==
Watt did not invent the steam engine and there is no single '[[Watt steam engine]]' as such. He developed a number of separate innovations, each of which improved the existing engines of the day, beginning with [[Newcomen atmospheric engine|Newcomen's]]. The ''Lap Engine'' of 1788, also the [[Boulton and Watt steam engine (Powerhouse Museum)|Whitbread Brewery engine]] (1785), represent survivors of the first engines to show all of Watt's major improvements in one.<ref name="Crowley, Lap Engine" />▼
[[File:Thinktank Birmingham - object 1950S00022(1).jpg|thumb|A 1950 model of the engine, now in [[Thinktank, Birmingham Science Museum]] ]]
▲Watt did not invent the [[steam engine]] and there is no single '[[Watt steam engine]]' as such. He developed a number of separate innovations, each of which improved the existing engines of the day, beginning with [[Newcomen atmospheric engine|Newcomen's]]. The
=== Parallel motion ===
{{
=== Rotative beam engines ===
{{
=== Sun and planet gear ===
[[File:Sun and planet gear science museum.JPG|thumb|The [[sun and planet gear]]]]
{{
|title=Catalogue of the Mechanical Engineering Collection in the Science Division of the Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington
|publisher=Read Books
|year=2007
|url=
|isbn=978-1-4067-8053-6
|page=35
}}</ref> Watt was unwilling to pay a license fee to use the [[crank (mechanism)|crank]] and so sought an alternative. The sun and planet gear was invented by another [[Scottish people|Scottish]] engineer, [[William Murdoch]], an employee of [[Boulton and Watt]]. Watt patented it in October 1781.
The sun and planet gear is a simple [[epicyclic gear]]. The planet is attached rigidly to the end of the [[connecting rod]], hung from the beam. As it rotates it applies a torque to the sun gear, just as for a crank, and so causes it to rotate. As the two gears also rotate relative to each other, like conventional gearwheels, this has the effect of giving the sun gear a further rotation. The sun, and the output crankshaft, thus rotates twice for every piston cycle of the engine, twice as fast as with a conventional crank. Beam engines were slow-moving and the output shafts driven by the Lap Engine were fast-moving, so this was an advantage.
{{clear right}}
=== Centrifugal governor ===
[[File:Boulton and Watt centrifugal governor-MJ.jpg|thumb|upright|The Watt-type [[centrifugal governor]] at the Science Museum, London.]]
{{
According to the Science Museum, it was the first steam engine to be fitted with a [[centrifugal governor]].<ref name="Science-Museum-1861-46"/>{{efn|The earlier [[Whitbread Engine]] of 1785, and the 1786 engine at the [[National Museum of Scotland]] also have a centrifugal governor.}}
{{clear right}}
== History ==
{{Empty section|date=March 2015}}
== Preservation ==
{{Empty section|date=March 2015}}
==
{{Commons category|The Lap Engine}}
{{notelist}}
== References ==
{{Reflist|colwidth=35em|refs=
<ref name="SM, Lap Engine" >{{Cite web
|title=Rotative steam engine by Boulton and Watt, 1788.
|website=Science Museum
|url=https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/objects/co50948/rotative-steam-engine-by-boulton-and-watt-1788-beam-engines
}}</ref>▼
<ref name="Hulse, web, Lap Engine" >{{Cite web
|title=The Lap Engine
|author=David Hulse
|url=http://www.davidhulse.co.uk/543/The-Lap-Engine/
}}</ref>
<!--<ref name="Hulse, Rotary, Lap Engine" >{{Cite book
|title=The Development of Rotary Motion by Steam Power
|first=David |last=Hulse
|chapter=The Lap Engine
|publisher=TEE Publishing
|isbn=1857611195
|year=2001
|url=http://www.davidhulse.co.uk/551/David-Hulse---About-My-Books/
}}</ref>-->
<ref name="Dickinson & Jenkins, 1927" >{{cite book
|last=Dickinson |first=H.W.
|last2=Jenkins |first2=R.
|title=James Watt and the Steam Engine
|
|year=1981
|publisher=Moorland Publishing
|isbn=0-903485-92-3
|ref={{harvid|Dickinson|Jenkins|1927}}
}}</ref>
▲}}</ref>
<ref name="Crowley, Lap Engine" >{{Cite book
|last=Crowley |first=T.E.
Line 82 ⟶ 119:
|year=1982
|isbn=0-906831-02-4
▲}}</ref>
}}
== Further reading ==
{{Steam engine configurations}}▼
* {{Cite magazine
|magazine=[[Model Engineer]]
|volume=146 |issue=3626
|title=Watt's Lap Engine
|date=1 February 1980
}}
[[Category:Preserved beam engines]]
<!-- [[Category:James Watt]] -->
[[Category:Steam engines in the Science Museum, London]]
[[Category:Preserved stationary steam engines]]
[[Category:1788 in England]]
[[Category:1788 in science]]
[[Category:Industrial Revolution]]
[[Category:History of the steam engine]]
[[Category:James Watt]]
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