[TheForge] ALT Treadle Hammer Springs
Jerry Frost
frosty at customcpu.com
Wed Mar 21 12:59:26 EST 2007
I have a little experience with pneumatic accumulators
(spring analogs) and don't have an idea how well they'd
work on a TH.
A shock absorber defeats the purpose, they're intended
to damp rebound and you want your hammer head to
rebound.
A pneumatic accumulator doesn't need to be heavy at
all, there is a local car wash that uses them instead
of garage door springs and they're 3" PVC. The garage
doors feel a little odd but lift easily enough.
In theory pneumatic accumulators will replace
mechanical springs in any linear application. In
practice they don't do so well where they see a lot of
movement as developed heat alters their action. A few
years ago the head guy at Heavy Duty decided to replace
the relief springs on the belly blades with a gas over
hydraulic accumulator system. A belly blade used in a
city needs to be able to give when you catch an
obstacle like a high manhole, drop drain, etc. If
there's no give in the blade they tend to get torn off
doing considerable damage to all involved. Anyway, the
gas over hyd accumulators worked okay for a while but
after they got hot you couldn't lift them fast enough
to avoid problems. They'd SHOOT down but creap up.
A little experimentation would answer the question
regarding TH applications.
Frosty
-------------------------------
If it ain't forged
it ain't real.
Wrought iron is.
The FrostWorks
Meadow Lakes, AK.
http://www.artmetalradio.com/
From: "Peter Fels And Phoebe Palmer"
<artgawk at thegrid.net>
>
>
> Jeffrey Polaski wrote:
>> Now that I read the message, I see I wasn't clear.
>> I'm not sure what
>> they are called, but I was thinking of the big
>> bag-type shocks, not the
>> regular car air-shocks.
>
> Shocks per-se sort of defeat the intended use. The
> bladders are, in effect, compression springs but the
> object here is to have a smooth, efficient,
> frictionless way to make the hammer tup gravity
> neutral...and the truck bladder doesn't sound all
> that good.
> But a tightly inflated rubber ball in place of a
> compression spring might work. There's more than one
> way to use air for a spring and it'd be valuably
> valveable.
> Looking at some independent front suspensions with
> their double A arms moving in parallel and their
> supplied spring and mounts ,has me wondering if we
> aren't neglecting a ready-made treadle hammer
> mechanism?
> Yeah, you'd wanna take off the shock absorber....pf
> Those might work, too, but I'd think they would
>> wear out fairly fast.
> If you consider that 1/4 of the vehicle is riding on
> that shock, and how many times a second it goes up
> and down at freeway speeds, You'll see that wear
> isn't going to be a big factor in a TH
> application...pf
>>
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