Books - Hiram Maxim

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The Mass Production of Death: Richard Jordan Gatling Invents the Gatling Gun and Sir Hiram Maxim Invents the Maxim Machine Gun: An entry from Gale's Science and Its Times
by Phil Gochenour
Gale (2000)
Digital
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Product Description:
This digital document is an article from Science and Its Times, brought to you by GaleĀ®, a part of Cengage Learning, a world leader in e-research and educational publishing for libraries, schools and businesses. The length of the article is 1444 words. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser. The histories of science, technology, and mathematics merge with the study of humanities and social science in this interdisciplinary reference work. Essays on people, theories, discoveries, and concepts are combined with overviews, bibliographies of primary documents, and chronological elements to offer students a fascinating way to understand the impact of science on the course of human history and how science affects everyday life. Entries represent people and developments throughout the world, from about 2000 B.C. through the end of the twentieth century.



Blood Brothers-Hardbound
by Iain Mccallum
Greenhill Books (2006)
Hardcover
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Product Description:
The life and turbulent times of two of the most prolific military inventors of all time.



Customer Review: A definitive, well-written work!:
Mr. McCallum offers a comprehensive yet entertaining glimpse into a most fascinating chapter in the history of warfare and weaponry.

Customer Review: Inventors Extraordinary:
McCallum, Iain, Blood Brothers: Hiram and Hudson Maxim - Pioneers of Modern Warfare, Chatham Publishing, London 1999, 220p, 33 photographs, 2 maps. ISBN 1 86176 096 5

The Maxim brothers were self made men from a humble New England background whose inventions span many fields of activity. They were rumbustious, even vulgar, but they had a talent for making things work. Hiram's automatic machine gun is the best known of their inventions, with variants on his design in use in several armies until well after World War II. Even the Royal Navy's multiple pompom was basically to Hiram's design. Both the Admiralty and the War Office are shown as interested and progressive in trials of the new weapons. Their reluctance to purchase in quantity seems well justified in the light of rapid developments in this field.

Both men were active on propellants for guns and both warned of the danger of cordite as then made in the United Kingdom. Hudson was largely instrumental in persuading the US Navy to adopt nitro-cellulose, which probably kept that navy clear of the disastrous explosions which afflicted ships using cordite. It was Hudson's initiatives in this field which led to the final split between the brothers, as Hiram thought that Hudson had pirated his work.

Hiram's attempts to fly were unsuccessful but very brave and well conceived. He began serious work in 1889 with the development of a light weight steam engine and boiler. Over the next few years he built an aeroplane which, in final form, had a wing span of 104 feet and weighed 8000lb with fuel, water and a crew of two. It ran on rails for take off but a second set of rails prevented it from rising too far at first. In July 1894,near Dartmouth in Kent, it did take off and seems to have travelled about 600 feet before crashing. Though work continued for a time, it was proving costly and the support of the Vickers company was withdrawn.

The book is well written, easy to read and, with numerous wives, mistresses etc., quite spicy!

Chronic Inventor: Life and Work of Hiram Stevens Maxim, 1840-1916
by James E. Hamilton
Bexley,London Borough of,Directorate of Education,Libraries & Museums (1991)
Paperback
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A Genius in the Family
by Hiram Percy Maxim
Bernhard Tauchnitz (1937)
Hardcover
Used Price: $99.48

A genius in the family;: Sir Hiram Stevens Maxim through a small son's eyes
by Hiram Percy Maxim
Harper & brothers (1936)
Paperback
Used Price: $98.82

So goes my love: Originally published as A genius in the family
by Hiram Percy Maxim
World (1946)
Unknown Binding
Used Price: $8.94

A genius in the family
by Hiram Percy Maxim
Dover Publications (1962)
Hardcover
Used Price: $9.99

Product Description:
The biography of Hiram Maxim, as told by his son. Hiram Maxim was a distinguished engineer and inventor of the first recoil-powered machinegun, among other things.



Sir Hiram Maxim, inventor of the machine gun,: A world genius and a native of Piscataquis County, Maine,
by John Francis Sprague
(1917)
Unknown Binding

Currently unavailable
So goes my love
by Hiram Percy Maxim
World Publ. Co (1936)
Unknown Binding

Currently unavailable



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