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Forging new generations of engineers

Forging new generations of engineers. Lever and Linkage Systems. Methods of Power Transmission. The 3 Classes of Levers. Each class has the fulcrum, effort and load arranged in a different way. The three classes are:. Class 1 Lever. Fulcrum between the load and the effort. Class 2 Lever.

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Forging new generations of engineers

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  1. Forging new generations of engineers

  2. Lever and Linkage Systems Methods of Power Transmission

  3. The 3 Classes of Levers • Each class has the fulcrum, effort and load arranged in a different way. • The three classes are:

  4. Class 1 Lever • Fulcrum between the load and the effort

  5. Class 2 Lever • Load between the fulcrum and the effort

  6. Class 3 Lever • Effort is between load and fulcrum

  7. ROCKER ARM • Has an input and output arm which rock around a fulcrum point • Acts as a link which transmit force or motion between moving parts • Operate usually as a first class lever • Change linear input motion to an opposed linear motion

  8. BELL CRANK • A bent first class lever that pivots at the bent point or elbow • Used to change the direction of force or motion 90 degrees or less • Used to convert rotary motion to straight line or reciprocating motion

  9. BELL CRANK • Reciprocating motion Top • pin A moves slider to right • pin B moves bell crank which moves slider to left Bottom • pins move crank; spring returns to start position

  10. DOUBLE BELL CRANK • PUSH, PULL TYPE PUSH • requires stiff connecting rods PULL • can use flexible wires,cables, ropes

  11. DIFFERENTIAL LINKAGE • Used to combine several motion inputs into a resulting output • Three pivot points, none of which are fixed but are free to float within limits • Any pivot can function as an input • A motion control mechanism rather than a means of transmitting force or power

  12. FOUR-BAR LINKAGES (Whatever the motion, each point on a moving link must move in the same PLANE, and all the links must be parallel) Types of four-bar linkages: PARALLEL LINKAGE SCISSOR LINKAGE

  13. FOUR-BAR LINKAGES • To make a four-bar linkage a usable device, one of the four links, or one of the pivots, must be fixed • Depending on the fixed pivot or link different motion outputs will occur

  14. FOUR-BAR LINKAGES • Fixed link • links pivoting from the ends of the fixed link are either input links or input and output links • the moving link opposite the fixed link is the connecting link

  15. FOUR-BAR LINKAGES • FIXED PIVOT • the point opposite the the fixed point is normally the output point • the remaining two pivot points are usually the input points

  16. PARALLEL LINKAGE • To provide parallel motion of a line or a surface as the linkage moves about two controlled pivot points • The arms remain parallel through the operation of the connecting link Eg: man lift, robot gripper

  17. SCISSOR LINKAGE • To change the direction of a linear motion input to a linear motion output that is perpendicular to the input • Large motion output (distance advantage) with a small motion input • Especially true of a series of connecting linkages • One fixed pivot point

  18. SCISSOR LINKAGE • Two pair of links of different length • Less force at input pivot point - close to pivot point • output is identical

  19. SCISSOR LINKAGE • Two pair of links of different length • More force at input pivot point - farther from pivot point • output is identical

  20. WATT STRAIGHT LINE MOTION • Does not form a parallelogram but consists of two equal length pivoting links and a connecting link • Produces a straight line motion in the connecting link

  21. TOGGLE LINKAGE Latching Non-latching

  22. TOGGLE LINKAGE • LATCHING • capable of snap action from one state to an alternate state • arm length may be different • may have a toggle stop to produce latched condition

  23. TOGGLE LINKAGE • NON-LATCHING • operated so that the two toggle arms never quite straighten • may have a toggle stop to produce latched condition e.g. rock crushers hay balers

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