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instead of having onl;y one tooth exposed to the pressure of hydraulic fluid, can more teeth be exposed for more pressure surface to the meshing-gear drive.....?

2006-09-27 05:52:34 · 3 answers · asked by ljmuller 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

3 answers

nope, as you increase more teeth to it, the resultant torque increases but the speed of rotation decreases...

2006-09-27 05:59:32 · answer #1 · answered by ashwin_hariharan 3 · 0 0

Somethings wrong with this. You should have two teeth exposed to the pressure. One on each gear on the opposite side of where the gears mesh. Since the gears rotate only one tooth per gear can seal against the outer housing. There is no flow other than leakage through the meshed side of the gears.

They already have pumps/motors that are the meshed gear type that can be used as either pumps or motors. Look in the Grainger catalog online.

If you want more torque you can increase the pressure, increase the diameter of the gears, or the width of the gears. But its all already done and the pump/motors can be ordered right off the shelf.

2006-09-27 06:54:35 · answer #2 · answered by Roadkill 6 · 0 0

Are you attempting to make candied yams into non secular? ok. Candied yams are sturdy. New Jersey is on the element of long island the place i might want to flow to. New Jersey itself is worse than Iowa so i'm going to %. Iowa.

2016-12-15 15:27:21 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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