释义 |
introscope|ˈɪntrəʊskəʊp| [f. intro- + -scope.] An instrument designed to be inserted into tubes so as to permit a visual examination of their interiors, and provided with a light source and some kind of optical system.
1937Nature 27 Feb. 380/2 Charles Baker showed an ‘introscope’, an instrument for inspecting the interiors of boiler tubes, ship shaftings, oxygen bottles and aeroplane spars, etc. By means of this instrument, it is possible to illuminate and examine microscopically surfaces which cannot easily be inspected in other circumstances. 1958Ann. Rep. Chief Insp. Factories for 1957 (Cmnd. 521) 27 Entry into the reactor vessel itself will not be possible. Accordingly,..great attention is being given to the developments of introscopes..which will allow remote inspection of internal surfaces. 1962Punch 18 Apr. 604/2 There are men who spend their best years bending pipes;..others who peer inside them, with the aid of introscopes and boroscopes capable of seeing round four or five corners. 1973A. Parrish Mech. Engineer's Ref. Bk. viii. 3 Introscopes, Endoscopes, Borescopes, etc. (The Trade name depending on the manufacturer) are forms of rigid, narrow, long industrial telescopes which introduce light and permit visual examination through small apertures e.g. down a small bore tube. They range from 2–50 mm in diameter and, in special cases, may be made from small sections up to 50 m long. |