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firebox

/fahyuhr-boks/US // ˈfaɪərˌbɒks //UK // (ˈfaɪəˌbɒks) //

火箱,火盒,火匣,火盆

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the box or chamber containing the fire of a steam boiler, furnace, etc.
    • : the furnace of a locomotive, where coal, oil, or other fuel is burned to generate steam.
    • : a box or panel with a device for notifying the fire station of an outbreak of fire.
    • : Obsolete. a tinderbox.

Examples

  • Solo StoveThe Big Green Egg’s oblong ceramic chamber draws heat from a pile of charcoal burning in a firebox below.

  • As for that grill—a steel and brick firebox built into the wooden framing that supported the patio’s roof—Skenes was well aware of the danger that might pose.

  • The live cinders from the firebox went up the chimney all night, and fell in showers on deck.

  • The earliest of the modern steam boilers to come into use was the locomotive fire tube type, with a special firebox.

  • Crown-sheetThe sheet of steel at the top of the firebox, just under the water in the boiler.

  • In a locomotive boiler the mud accumulates in the water leg, below the firebox.

  • Instead, he throws on great shovelsful of coal at a time, and has the coal up to the firebox door.