The Cyclone
Series
- Series Name
- Home and Away
Issue
Story
- Story No. within this Issue
- 3 / 4
- Summary
- Babcock and Wilcox synopsis: Despite rapid developments in the field of atomic energy, coal will be, for many years to come, a maro source of power. The Babcock Cyclone furnace, most modern method of coal-firing large power station and industrial boilers, is playing an important part in making the most efficient use of the world’s coal resources, and in addition, solves the major problem of ash-disposal from large boilers.
The film, after describing the operation of the Cyclone furnace with an animated diagram, shows Cyclones during manufacture and installation, and refers briefly to the story of research and testing behind their development. This item is a short, popular extract from the Company’s technical film "Cyclone Firing". - Keywords
- Industry and manufacture; Engineering; Animation; Fuels; Energy resources
- Written sources
- British Film Institute Databases
Synopses of the Babcock Film Magazines booklet p12. Used for synopsis
Scottish Screen Archive database Ref.1520
- Credits:
-
- Sponsor
- Babcock and Wilcox, Ltd.
- Producer
- Cyril Randell
- Producer
- Denis Ward
- Production Co.
- Technical & Scientific Films Ltd.
- Editor
- Terence Twigg
This series is held by:
Film Archive
- Name
- British Film Institute (BFI)
- For BFI National Archive enquiries:
nonfictioncurators@bfi.org.uk
For commercial/footage reuse enquiries:
footage.films@bfi.org.uk - Web
- http://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web
- Phone
- 020 7255 1444
- Fax
- 020 7580 7503
- Address
- 21 Stephen Street
London W1T 1LN - Notes
- The BFI National Archive also preserves the original nitrate film copies of British Movietone News, British Paramount News, Empire News Bulletin, Gaumont British News, Gaumont Graphic, Gaumont Sound News and Universal News (the World War II years are covered by the Imperial War Museum).
- Series held
- View all series held by British Film Institute (BFI)
How to cite this record
'The Cyclone', Home and Away Issue No. 10, 1956. https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/newsonscreen/search/index.php/story/352804 (Accessed 06 Mar 2025)