Dundee Foundry Co
The Dundee Foundry began with the manufacture of iron castings and developed interests in steam engines and ships' machinery. Maker of the Stirling engine. The Dundee Foundry achieved considerable success in that field.
1790 Dundee Foundry was established.
1829 Archibald Sturrock became an apprentice
c.1839 Supplied locomotives to the Arbroath and Forfar Railway
In about 1843 the company was taken over by Gourlay, Mudie and Co.
1843 John Mackenzie was an apprentice at Gourlay, Mudie and Co’s Dundee Foundry.
Eventually owned by Gourlay Brothers and Co.
James Stirling (1800-1876) became an engineer and later manager in the foundry; he built a large air engine at his Dundee Foundry Co. One of Stirling's engines was in operation at the Dundee Foundry from 1843 until 1847.
Stirling's 45 HP hot air engine, commissioned in March 1843, worked until December 1845 when one air vessel failed (the bottom of the air vessel succumbed to the heat), followed by another failure in May 1846, and a third in December 1847. After Stirling had left the foundry, the new management removed the engine. [1].
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ 'The Regenerator Principle in the Stirling and Ericsson Hot Air Engines' by Edward E. Daub, The British Journal for the History of Science, Vol. 7, No. 3 (Nov., 1974), pp. 259-277