On April 17 the Joint Committees of the Republic of Ireland Region of the IMechE and the Mechanical and Manufacturing Division of Engineers Ireland were delighted to host the visit of Phil Peel and his wife, Gillian, to Dublin. Accompanying the president on the visit was Farah Baksh, global relationship manager.

CA Parsons No 5 Generator

The president used the visit to visit the CA Parsons No 5 Generator in Trinity College Dublin, which was Engineering Heritage Award recipient No 1 awarded in 1984 by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.

This was one of the first commercial machines based on the 1884 patent by Charles A Parsons for a steam turbine and used a dynamo as load which had  an output of 65 Amps and 100 Volts at a speed of 12,000rpm.

The turbine generator was presented to Trinity in 1911. The turbine generator was shown to Peel by Trinity’s Garrett Lyons, adjunct associate professor of mechanical engineering and Professor Stephen Spence, head of department of Mechanical, Manufacturing and Biomedical Engineering.

The department is located in the aptly named Parsons Building. Peel mentioned that as 137th president he was proud to have unveiled the 137th plaque in Malaysia earlier in his presidency.

L-R: Prof Garry Lyons, The No5 Parsons Generator, Phil Peel and Prof Stephen Spence in Trinity College Dublin

President Phil Peel beside the very first Heritage Award Plaque. 

Not to be outdone by cutting edge 19th century technology, Trinity was proud to show the visitors an example of state of the art ninth century technology in the Book of Kells which dates from about 800AD.

The Book of Kells, one of Ireland’s main tourist attractions, is a highly ornate manuscript of the four Christian Gospels using Celtic and Saxon art forms. It is located in a special display room under the Long Room Library of Trinity College. A different page is open on display each day.

L-R: Farah Baksh, Phil and Gillian Peel in The Long Room of Trinity College Dublin

In the evening the president presented his address to an audience in the lecture theatre of Engineers Ireland’s Headquarters in Clyde Road, Dublin and to the audience who had logged in online.

Among those present were the president of Engineers Ireland John Power and the director general of Engineers Ireland Damien Owens. The chair of the Republic of Ireland Region and Engineers Ireland Mechanical and Manufacturing Division, Prof Dermot Brabazon provided a vote of thanks at the end of the address in Clyde Road.

The following day the president’s party departed Dublin by train to visit the Northern Ireland branch of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in Belfast.

Phil Peel of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers and John Power of Engineers Ireland.

L-R: Damien Owens, director general, Engineers Ireland; Phil Peel, president of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers; Farah Baksh, globalisation manager IMechE; John Power, president, Engineers Ireland; and Prof Dermot Brabazon, chair of region and division.