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Old 02-11-2013, 01:13 PM
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cosworth34677 cosworth34677 is offline
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Default pump question ....

is there a way to only use one pinion gear to make a pump? instead of the two i see? or do you need the two gears? im just throwing around ideas?
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Old 02-11-2013, 01:40 PM
pugs pugs is offline
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Default Re: pump question ....

Need 2 to create a pressure zone. A one rotating piece pump would be like a vane pump that has vanes that float in and out to seal and make the pressure zone.

Can also look at gerotar style pumps, like the oil pump in alot of engines. It uses a central gear and a ring gear with the centers of rotation slightly offset.

Edit: Above is for positive displacement style pumps. You can also have non- positive displacement pumps such as a centrifugal but they generally loose alot of pump efficiency as soon as you try to create any kind of pressure i.e. the pump slips.
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Last edited by pugs; 02-11-2013 at 01:52 PM.
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Old 02-11-2013, 01:55 PM
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Default Re: pump question ....

Quote:
Originally Posted by pugs View Post
Need 2 to create a pressure zone. A one rotating piece pump would be like a vane pump that has vanes that float in and out to seal and make the pressure zone.

Can also look at gerotar style pumps, like the oil pump in alot of engines. It uses a central gear and a ring gear with the centers of rotation slightly offset.

Edit: Above is for positive displacement style pumps. You can also have non- positive displacement pumps such as a centrifugal but they generally loose alot of pump efficiency as soon as you try to create any kind of pressure i.e. the pump slips.

so a centripical stype pump is not that good for our stuff?
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Old 02-11-2013, 03:21 PM
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Default Re: pump question ....

Centrifugal style pumps are good for moving fluid from one point to another, positive displacement pumps are good for creating pressure and transferring energy.
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Old 02-11-2013, 03:32 PM
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Default Re: pump question ....

ahhh cool . im trying to make use of 4 actuators i got. i have my dump bed set up of a 1-1 setup but there is no power. i was thinking of taking the bigger one to push the smaller one but i don't think that will give me anymore power
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Old 02-11-2013, 04:42 PM
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Default Re: pump question ....

now your talkin piston pump , much like a master cylinder in a hydraulic brake system . It will work well but, you must get all the air out of the system . you got a pic of what your doing ? could just be your lacking in mechanical advantage .
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Old 02-11-2013, 04:52 PM
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Default Re: pump question ....

here the setup as of now. the black ram pushes the gold one. the black one is alot bigger the the other
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Old 02-11-2013, 06:02 PM
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Default Re: pump question ....

Should work, but the little one will have less force than the servo applies on the black one. But will travel farther. If they were same size than servo force would equal dump cyl force and travels would be same.
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Old 02-11-2013, 06:34 PM
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Default Re: pump question ....

smaller size should be pushing fluid to the larger one
the small surface moves x amount and when it gets to large size it has say 10 times the surface area so it moves 1/10 amount but is 10 times stronger
i will see i can find a formula
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Old 02-11-2013, 06:53 PM
grumpygrady grumpygrady is offline
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Default Re: pump question ....

http://hydraulicspneumatics.com/othe...ower-cylinders

http://www.freestudy.co.uk/fluid%20power/cylinders.pdf

http://www.toro.com/customercare/com...df/09169sl.pdf
this one has real nice pictures lol

the third system is showing what i was trying to say earlier lol
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