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Demonstration apparatus

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probably made in Paris

Postcard of Demonstration apparatus.
000-100-104-289-C
© National Museums Scotland

Demonstration apparatus

This hydrostatic demonstration apparatus was made around 1830, probably by Nicholas Constant Pixii (1776-1861), a scientific instrument maker based in Paris. Pixii was in partnership with his son Antoine Hippolyte (1808-1835).

The apparatus shows how water can be raised by suction (suction pump) and by pressure (force pump). It is made of wood, brass and glass, with a lead-lined trough beneath into which the water eventually flows, being circulated again by the pump on the left, activated by the long handle. On a brass plate on the pillar supporting the curved iron handle is the inscription 'Pixii, Pere et Fils / Rue de Grenelle St Germain 18/ (A PARIS)'.

Nicholas Constant Pixii succeeded the Dumotiec Brothers in business in Paris in around 1815. This ingenious device would keep audiences fascinated as water flowed through each section, demonstrating various hydrostatic properties.


Record details

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Online ID: 000-100-104-289-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0098: National Museums Scotland
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  T.1984.178
Date: Around 1830
c. 1830
Material:
Dimensions:
What: Apparatus / hydraulic demonstration
Subject:
Who: Pixii and Son, Paris (Maker)
Where: France, Paris
Event:
Description: Hydraulic demonstration apparatus by Pixii and Son of Paris
References:
  • For 19th century hydrostatics, see Turner, G. L'E., Nineteenth Century Scientific Instruments. London: 1983, pp 82-95 
Translations:
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