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| {{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}}
| | I am Oscar and I completely dig that title. Playing baseball is the pastime he will never quit doing. Years in the past we moved to North Dakota and I adore each working day living here. He used to be unemployed but now he is a pc operator but his promotion by no means arrives.<br><br>Here is my blog at home std testing ([http://www.egitimpark.net/siir/groups/clear-up-a-candida-with-these-tips/ Get Source]) |
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| A '''band brake''' is a primary or secondary [[brake]], consisting of a band of friction material that tightens concentrically around a cylindrical piece of equipment to either prevent it from rotating (a static or "holding" brake), or to slow it (a [[dynamic brake]]). This application is common on [[winch]] drums and [[chain saw]]s and is also used for some [[bicycle brake]]s.
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| A former application was the locking of gear rings in [[epicyclic gearing]]. In modern automatic transmissions this task has been taken over entirely by [[Clutch#Multiple_plate_clutch|multiple-plate clutches]] or multiple-plate brakes.
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| == Features ==
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| Band brakes can be simple, compact, rugged, and can generate high force with a light input force. However, band brakes are prone to grabbing or chatter and loss of brake force when hot. These problems are inherent with the design and thus limit where band brakes are a good solution.
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| == Effectiveness ==
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| One way to describe the effectiveness of the brake is as <math>e^{\mu \theta}</math>, where <math>\mu</math> is the [[coefficient of friction]] between band and drum, and <math>\theta</math> is the angle of wrap. With a large <math>\mu \theta</math>, the brake is very effective and requires low input force to achieve high brake force, but is also very sensitive to changes in <math>\mu</math>. For example light rust on the drum may cause the brake to "grab" or chatter, water may cause the brake to slip, and rising temperatures in braking may cause the coefficient of friction to drop slightly but in turn cause brake force to drop greatly. Using a band material with low <math>\mu</math> increases the input force required to achieve a given brake force, but some low-<math>\mu</math> materials also have more consistent <math>\mu</math> across the range of working temperatures.
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| == See also ==
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| * [[Bicycle brake systems#Band brake]]
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| * [[de Prony brake]], a form of band brake used for the measurement of torque and horsepower.
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| [[Category:Brakes]]
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| {{Tech-stub}}
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Latest revision as of 19:14, 16 March 2014
I am Oscar and I completely dig that title. Playing baseball is the pastime he will never quit doing. Years in the past we moved to North Dakota and I adore each working day living here. He used to be unemployed but now he is a pc operator but his promotion by no means arrives.
Here is my blog at home std testing (Get Source)