Baltimore Paper - High-pressure Hydraulic Presses in Iron Works

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
R. M. Daelen
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
26
File Size:
991 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1893

Abstract

Mechanical science is severely tested by the demands of the iron manufacture for the varied apparatus needed to transport and to treat raw materials and products. Water has long been a favorite means of transmitting pressure for such purposes, because of its own incompressibility. Further advances in its use are the more to be expected, since mechanical improvements have steadily tended to overcome the difficulties formerly encountered in the employment of great hydraulic pressures. So long as the pressure is not higher than that which requires for plungers, etc., only ordinary stuffing-boxes, with hemp or other similar packing, the necessary arrangements for the production and transmission of the water-pressure without leakage are very simple. But when this limit (which is, for most purposes, 50 kilos to the square centimeter) is exceeded, new conditions of construction arise, which are met in various ways, and which justify a primary division of hydraulic presses into low-pressure and high-pressure respectively. The former are used in lifting and moving weights, and employ pressures as high (in extreme cases) as 100 kilos per square centimeter; but at this point the friction between piston and hemp-packing is so great that the use of cup-leathers is already preferable. Beyond 100 kilos it becomes a necessity. The range of practicable tight packing which follows is considerable, extending to about 1000 kilos; but "high pressure" in practice is from 100 to 600 kilos, and it is to this that the present paper applies. General Classes and Types. Hydraulic transmission at high pressure usually claims consideration in case the solid mechanism, such as levers, cams, screws, and gear-wheels, would have to be too large, would involve too much friction, or could not be suitably adapted to the speed-requirements of the working-tools. Since steam is mostly the primary carrier of
Citation

APA: R. M. Daelen  (1893)  Baltimore Paper - High-pressure Hydraulic Presses in Iron Works

MLA: R. M. Daelen Baltimore Paper - High-pressure Hydraulic Presses in Iron Works. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1893.

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