Page:Timber and Timber Trees, Native and Foreign.djvu/157

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XXII.]
PINGOW.
137

Table LVIII.
Tensile Experiments.
Number
of the
specimen.
Dimensions
of
each piece.
Specific
gravity.
Weight the
piece broke
with.
Direct
cohesion on
1 square in.
  Inches.   lbs. lbs.
7 2 × 2 × 30 745 22,400 5,600
8 742 20,440 5,110
9 757 28,000 7,000
10 748 25,480 6,370
11 740 26,600 6,650
12 753 28,560 7,140
Total ... 4485 151,480 37,870
Average ... 747.5 25,246 6,311
Table LIX.
Vertical or Crushing Strain on cubes of 2 inches.
No. 13. No. 14. No. 15. No. 16. Total. Average. Ditto on
1 square
inch.
Tons. Tons. Tons. Tons. Tons. Tons.
17.125 18.625 18.125 18.750 72.625 18.156 4.539

E = 1,259690.S = 3316.

THE KRANJI, OR RED KRANJI TREE,

of which it is probable there are varieties of some other colour, is likewise found in the island of Borneo; it is a tree of straight growth and noble dimensions, and compares favourably with the Chow; it was imported in 1860–61 with the latter wood, and ultimately sent to Woolwich Dockyard to be employed for naval purposes.

The wood is red in colour, hard, heavy, exceedingly tough, and is one of the strongest with which we are acquainted, every one of the specimens, when tried transversely, taking a very heavy strain, and breaking with an unusually long fracture; the grain is close and somewhat resembles Cuba or Spanish Mahogany, but is very