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・ Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Trust
・ Birmingham Conservation Trust
・ Birmingham Conservatoire
・ Birmingham Contemporary Music Group
・ Birmingham Corporation Tramways
・ Birmingham Corporation Tramways F.C.
・ Birmingham Corporation Water Department
・ Birmingham Country Club
・ Birmingham Country Club (Alabama)
・ Birmingham Country Club (Michigan)
・ Birmingham County Football Association
・ Birmingham Crematorium
・ Birmingham Daily News
・ Birmingham Deritend (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Birmingham District
Birmingham Dribbler
・ Birmingham Duddeston (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Birmingham Eagles
・ Birmingham East (European Parliament constituency)
・ Birmingham East (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Birmingham East and North Primary Care Trust
・ Birmingham EcoPark
・ Birmingham Edgbaston (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Birmingham Edgbaston by-election
・ Birmingham Edgbaston by-election, 1940
・ Birmingham Edgbaston by-election, 1953
・ Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre
・ Birmingham Erdington (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Birmingham Erdington by-election, 1936
・ Birmingham European Airways


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Birmingham Dribbler : ウィキペディア英語版
Birmingham Dribbler

Birmingham Dribbler or carpet railway describes a type of very early model railway.〔(Birmingham Dribblers ) at antiques-bible.com〕 It is a bit of a misnomer, as the railway featured a model live steam railway locomotive, but no track – the locomotive was simply run across the floor. In some cases, the front wheels were even made steerable so that they could be run in a circle without track. They first appeared in the 1840s and became very popular Victorian model railway toys.
The steam locomotives were very simple, usually made in brass, with a pair of simple oscillating cylinders driving the main wheels. They were basically a boiler mounted on wheels, although simple decoration (usually bands of lacquer) was sometimes applied. Track was not used – the boiler was filled with water, the burner lit, and when steam was being produced, the locomotive was placed on the floor and allowed to run until either the water or fuel ran out or the engine crashed into the furniture. Very quickly, after a number had exploded, simple safety valves were fitted.
They quickly gained the nickname of Birmingham Dribblers (or sometimes "Piddlers"), as large numbers of them were made in Birmingham, England, and they had the unfortunate habit of leaving a trail of water behind them as they ran across the floor. Very often this trail would be mixed with the fuel used for the burner, and there were numerous incidents of fires caused by the locomotive crashing into furniture and over-turning so that the burning fuel was spilled over the floor. As time passed, embellishments were added, such as wooden buffer beams, buffers and steam whistles.
==Recent models==

Not all Birmingham Dribblers are Victorian antiques. In the late 1970s to 1990s, a brass, self-assembly kit for a Birmingham Dribbler model was manufactured by Maxwell Hemmens Precision Steam Models of Yorkshire, UK.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.mikes-steam-engines.co.uk/scratch_built.htm )〕 Completed models are still available from John Hemmens.〔(Birmingham Dribblers from John Hemmens )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Birmingham Dribbler」の詳細全文を読む



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