manograph means an optical device for making pressure volume diagrams for high-speed engines, involving a light-tight box or camera having at one end a small convex mirror reflecting a beam of light onto the ground glass or photographic plate at the other end. The mirror is pivoted so that it can be moved so as to copy the motion of the engine piston on a smaller scale. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Etymology
From Ancient Greek μανός (manós, “thin, rare”) + -graph.
noun
- An optical device for making pressure volume diagrams for high-speed engines, involving a light-tight box or camera having at one end a small convex mirror reflecting a beam of light onto the ground glass or photographic plate at the other end. The mirror is pivoted so that it can be moved so as to copy the motion of the engine piston on a smaller scale.“In addition to the ordinary type of indicator, the Author describes the Hospitalier and the Schultze manographs, in which the diagram is produced photographically by reflecting a beam of light from a mirror attached to a diaphragm […]”