Power, Speed, and Form
Dave Monroe
monropolitan at yahoo.com
Sat Nov 4 12:08:55 CST 2006
Billington, David P. and David P. Billington Jr.
Power, Speed, and Form: Engineers and the Making
of the Twentieth Century. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton UP, 2006.
Power, Speed, and Form is the first accessible account
of the engineering behind eight breakthrough
innovations that transformed American life from 1876
to 1939--the telephone, electric power, oil refining,
the automobile, the airplane, radio, the long-span
steel bridge, and building with reinforced concrete.
Beginning with Thomas Edison's system to generate and
distribute electric power, the authors explain the
Bell telephone, the oil refining processes of William
Burton and Eugene Houdry, Henry Ford's Model T car and
the response by General Motors, the Wright brothers'
airplane, radio innovations from Marconi to Armstrong,
Othmar Ammann's George Washington Bridge, the
reinforced concrete structures of John Eastwood and
Anton Tedesko, and in the 1930s, the Chrysler Airflow
car and the Douglas DC-3 airplane.
These innovations used simple numerical ideas, which
the Billingtons integrate with short narrative
accounts of each breakthrough--a unique and effective
way to introduce engineering and how engineers think.
The book shows how the best engineering exemplifies
efficiency, economy and, where possible, elegance.
With Power, Speed, and Form, educators, first-year
engineering students, liberal arts students, and
general readers now have, for the first time in one
volume, an accessible and readable history of
engineering achievements that were vital to America's
development and that are still the foundations of
modern life.
http://press.princeton.edu/titles/8261.html
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