Hydraulic press
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A hydraulic press is a hydraulic mechanism for applying a large lifting or compressive force. It is the hydraulic equivalent of a mechanical lever, and is also known as a Bramah press after the inventor, Joseph Bramah. Hydraulic presses are the most commonly-used and efficient form of modern press.
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[edit] How it works
The hydraulic press depends on Pascal's principle: the pressure throughout a closed system is constant. At one end of the system is a piston with a small cross-sectional area driven by a lever to increase the force. Small-diameter tubing leads to the other end of the system. A fluid, such as oil, is displaced when either piston is pushed inward. The small piston, for a given distance of movement, displaces a smaller amount of volume than the large piston, which is proportional to the ratio of areas of the heads of the pistons. Therefore, the small piston must be moved a large distance to get the large piston to move significantly. The distance the large piston will move is the distance that the small piston is moved divided by the ratio of the areas of the heads of the pistons.
For example, if the ratio of the areas is 5, a force of 100 newtons on the small piston will produce a force of 500 newtons on the large piston, and the small piston must be pushed 50 cm to get the large piston to rise 10 cm. This is how energy, in the form of work in this case, is conserved. Work is force times distance, and since the force is increased on the larger piston, the distance the force is applied over must be decreased. The work of the small piston, 100 newtons multiplied by 0.5 meter (50 cm) is 50 joules (J}, which is the same as the work of the large piston, 500 newtons multiplied by 0.1 meter (10 cm).
[edit] Trivia
- The hydraulic press is capable of applying enough pressure to crush solid aluminum into paper-thin pieces.
- The hydraulic press is used to kill or destroy the monsters and/or antagonists in the films The Fly and The Terminator.
[edit] See Also
[edit] Weblinks
Manufacturers of hydraulic presses:
Alternative to Hydraulic: