I think its the anti gravity magnetic resonance engine the UFO spaceships are using
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I didn't say kewlest or most fun. Christ.Oh FFS, Yella! Steam engine is the ultimate slow strategy Boomer answer.
I would still say internal combustion given it birthed petroleum and all the shit that has come along with petroleum being turned into a million different things.I didn't say kewlest or most fun. Christ.Oh FFS, Yella! Steam engine is the ultimate slow strategy Boomer answer.
Steam engine is the most consequential invention of all time. Horsepower and speed of transit (aside from @creepycoug figuring out Deepwater navigation with Galleons and Guns ) had remained fixed for thousands of years.Steam paved the way for IC engines and the industrial revolution
Not so fast my fren. Rockefeller became the richest man in the world based on selling Kerosene for lighting and heating before the internal combustion engine was a thing. Standard Oil was broken up in 1911 which was just a few years after the first Model T (1908).I would still say internal combustion given it birthed petroleum and all the shit that has come along with petroleum being turned into a million different things.I didn't say kewlest or most fun. Christ.Oh FFS, Yella! Steam engine is the ultimate slow strategy Boomer answer.
Don't forget that nuclear subs and Nimitz and Ford class carriers are steamships.I agree, but that's like saying Atari is better than original NES.
Spoiler…
Nintendo wrecks the shit out of Atari.
I need to pick this apart a bit…Specifically, today's high-bypass turbofans and the original 1950s turbofans. The tech improvements for turbofans (Pratt and Whitney JT3D) basically led to the jet age, and today's high-bypass engines are so amazingly efficient and reliable. Prior to 1900 the concept of traveling around the world was confined to ships and only the incredibly wealthy, all with significant risk, taking weeks or months to navigate.
Today you (or cargo) can get from virtually any inhabited place on the globe to any other within 36 hours with an incredibly high level of safety and reliability. Not just the wealthy either.
Steam turbine is acknowledged for its importance as well.
"Greatest" is subjective obviously. I'm looking at through the lens of what changed life for sapiens the most. Have you read Sapiens yet @whlinder btw? Great read.The question was greatest
The current speed and reliability of transport by high bypass turbofans is super impressive. The impact of steam turbines was probably higher as the starting point was lower. Is greatest measured by margin improvements or top end ability?
Engine performance is not completely correlated to airframe safety, but the 338 DC-7s produced killed 714 people. The nearly 2000 787s and A350s in service haven't killed a passenger.
Christ. I thought you were like an oil man or something.Google.
The engine used by the most people in history.
@YellowSnow
I like the way you use Christ! as a term of quiet rye exasperation… amusing