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Components Part 2

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Mr P Mulholland AS Design and Technology St Joseph s HS Crossmaglen Rivets are used to make simple permanent joints between two or more pieces of metal. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Components Part 2


1
ComponentsPart 2
  • Mr P Mulholland
  • AS Design and Technology
  • St Josephs HS Crossmaglen

2
Rivets
  • Rivets are used to make simple permanent joints
    between two or more pieces of metal.
  • They can form rigid joints or hinged joints.
  • Snap Rivets are normally made out of soft iron
    which is ductile and can be easily deformed with
    a hammer to form the joint. They are available
    with three different head types countersunk,
    flat, snap and round headed.
  • Pop Rivets are made from aluminium with a central
    steel pin. A special pop rivet gun is used to
    de-form the rivet. They are especially suited to
    joining thin sheet material or where access can
    only be gained from one side.

3
Gears
  • A gear is a basic mechanism that when coupled
    together with other gears can transmit rotary
    motion and force and change the direction of
    motion.
  • Gears can be used to
  • Change direction of rotary motion
  • Change spindle speeds
  • Transmit motion through 90 degrees
  • Each gear has a shaft passing through its centre
    and the gear is fastened to the shaft by using
    cotter pins, splines or grub screws
  • When the gears are brought together their teeth
    mesh and they interlock.
  • The gear is a wheel onto which a number of teeth
    have been cut.
  • Gears should be designed to mesh together without
    jamming. This will allow force to be transmitted
    in an efficient way.

4
Spur Gears
  • Used in simple motors and gearboxes for
    childrens toys.
  • Speeds can be increased or reduced and direction
    of rotation can be changed.
  • Two spur gears together are termed a simple gear
    train. A crown wheel is another term for a single
    gear wheel.

5
Simple and Compound Gear Trains
  • A simple gear train consists of two gears meshing
    together. The input and output are in opposite
    directions
  • A compound gear train consists of two separate
    gear trains meshed together. This involves two
    gears mounted on the same shaft. In this
    arrangement, very large increases or decreases in
    speed can be achieved.

6
Rack and Pinion
  • A rack and pinion is used to change rotary motion
    into linear motion.
  • They are used on pillar drills to move the drill
    table up and down and also to move the drill down
    to the work piece.
  • The rack part of the system is a straight bar
    with teeth which mesh with the teeth on the
    pinion wheel. As the rack moves the pinion
    rotates.
  • Steering systems in cars are based on a rack and
    pinion with the track rods attached to each end
    of the steering rack and the pinion attached to
    the end of the steering column.

7
Worm and Wheel
  • Like bevel gears, worm gears are used to transmit
    force and linear motion through 90.
  • The worm gear resembles a screw thread fixed to
    the driven shaft and is at right angles to the
    driver shaft and worm wheel.
  • Large reductions or increases in speed can be
    achieved because the worm wheel is considered to
    have only one tooth.
  • They are used in food mixers to turn the blending
    whisk.
  • Worm gears are widely used in industry as they
    can be used to achieve large reductions in speed
    in a relatively compact space.

8
Bevel and Mitre Gears
  • Bevel gears have their shafts at 90 to each
    other. This allows rotational direction/forces to
    be transmitted through 90.
  • If different sized gears are used, the speed of
    rotation can be increased or decreased.
  • They are used in hand drills in school workshops.

9
Plain Bearings
  • Plain Bearing Video 1
  • Plain Bearing Video 2

10
Plain Bearings
  • A plain bearing (bush) is a support that holds a
    rotating shaft.
  • Due to friction the moving parts will wear down
    and fail or become damaged.
  • A plain bearing or bush is placed between the
    support and the moving shaft. This bearing or
    bush has a low coefficient of friction.
  • The disadvantage of using a plain bearing or a
    bush is that they will wear away over a period of
    time and will need to be replace.
  • Plain Bearings or Bushes are made from
  • Bronze
  • Nylon self lubricating
  • Ceramics porous and will soak up oil to provide
    lubrication

11
Journal Bearings
Journal Bearing Video
12
Journal Bearings
  • A journal bearing is a simple bearing in which a
    shaft, or "journal", rotates in the bearing with
    a layer of oil or grease separating the two
    parts.
  • The shaft and bearing are generally both simple
    polished cylinders with lubricant filling the
    gap. Rather than the lubricant just "reducing
    friction" between the surfaces, letting one slide
    more easily against the other, the lubricant is
    thick enough that, once rotating, the surfaces do
    not come in contact at all.
  • To top up the oil or grease it is fed into a
    small hole under pressure.
  • The casing that houses the journal bearing is
    called the journal box.

13
Ball Bearings
Ball Bearing Video 1 Ball Bearing Video 2
14
Ball Bearings
  • Most common type of bearing.
  • A ball bearing is an engineering term referring
    to a type of rolling-element bearing which uses
    balls to maintain the separation between the
    moving parts of the bearing.
  • The purpose of a ball bearing is to reduce
    rotational friction and support radial and axial
    loads.
  • It achieves this because when the balls are
    rolling they have a much lower coefficient of
    friction than if two flat surfaces were rotating
    on each other.
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