ashpan

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See also: ash pan

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

ash +‎ pan

Diagram of a steam locomotive. Ashpan is #2.

Noun[edit]

ashpan (plural ashpans)

  1. A container beneath a boiler's furnace, catching ash and clinker that falls through the firebars
  2. A container that fits below the grate of a domestic fireplace.
  3. (rail transport) A large pan below the grate and firebox of a steam locomotive.
    • 1944 September and October, “New Pacific Locomotives for the L.N.E.R.”, in -Railway Magazine, page 286:
      They have been fitted with a complete rocking grate and a hopper ashpan so that the ashes can be released without the necessity for a man to go underneath the engine.
    • 1960 March, “Testing a rebuilt "Merchant Navy" Pacific of the S.R.”, in Trains Illustrated, page 167:
      A new ashpan has been fitted, however, with four bottom doors for self-emptying, and a rocking grate with twelve rocking sections.
    • 1961 January, “Talking of Trains: Flooding at Lewes”, in Trains Illustrated, page 5:
      During the day conditions worsened quickly—for example, a 2-6-0 on the Uckfield line suddenly encountered flood water high enough to enter its ashpan and extinguish its fire—until lock gates up-river at Barcombe gave way and a tidal wave rolled down the valley meeting head-on a spring tide rolling up from the coast.

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Anagrams[edit]