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en>A Hubery
the original formulae given were not correct, so I produced some diagrams which are easier to comprehend
 
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Hi there, I am Sophia. What me and my family love is bungee leaping but I've been taking on new things lately. Office supervising is my occupation. Ohio is where her home is.<br><br>My blog post: [http://jplusfn.Gaplus.kr/xe/qna/78647 free tarot readings]
{{About||the screw as a fastener|screw|other uses|screw (disambiguation)}}
[[File:GearBoxRotLinScrew.gif|thumb|Animation showing the operation of a screw.  As the screw shaft rotates, the [[nut (hardware)|nut]] moves linearly along the shaft.  This is a type called a [[lead screw]].]]
[[File:Screw demonstrator.png|thumb|A machine used to demonstrate the action of a screw, from 1912. It consists of a threaded shaft through a threaded hole in a stationary mount. When the crank on the right is turned, the shaft moves horizontally through the hole.]]
 
A '''screw''' is a mechanism that converts [[rotation]]al motion to [[linear motion]], and a [[torque]] (rotational force) to a linear [[force]].<ref name="Young" >{{cite web
  | last = Young
  | first = James F.
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = Basic Mechanics
  | work = ELEC 201:Introduction to Engineering Design
  | publisher = Electrical and Computer Engineering Dept., Rice Univ.
  | year = 2000
  | url = http://www.clear.rice.edu/elec201/Book/basic_mech.html
  | doi =
  | accessdate = 2011-03-29}}</ref>  It is one of the six classical [[simple machine]]s.  The most common form consists of a cylindrical shaft with [[Helix|helical]] grooves or ridges called ''[[Screw thread|threads]]'' around the outside.<ref>{{cite book 
  | last = Morris
  | first = William, Ed.
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = The American Heritage Dictionary, New College Edition
  | publisher = Houghton Mifflin
  | year = 1979
  | location = USA
  | pages = 1167
  | url =
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 039520360}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
  | last =
  | first =
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = Screw
  | work = [http://www.howstuffworks.com/ How Stuff Works website]
  | publisher = Discovery Communications
  | year = 2011
  | url = http://science.howstuffworks.com/screw-info.htm
  | doi =
  | accessdate = 2011-03-29}}</ref>  The screw passes through a hole in another object or medium, with threads on the inside of the hole that mesh with the screw's threads.  When the shaft of the screw is rotated relative to the stationary threads, the screw moves along its axis relative to the medium surrounding it; for example rotating a [[wood screw]] forces it into wood.  In screw mechanisms, either the screw shaft can rotate through a threaded hole in a stationary object, or a threaded collar such as a [[nut (hardware)|nut]] can rotate around a stationary screw shaft.<ref name="Collins">{{cite book 
  | last = Collins
  | first = Jack A.
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors = Henry R. Busby, George H. Staab
  | title = Mechanical Design of Machine Elements and Machines, 2nd Ed.
  | publisher = John Wiley and Sons
  | year = 2009
  | location = USA
  | pages = 462–463
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=909-5C4eyUkC&pg=PA464&dq=screw+machine+lead+pitch+advantage&hl=en&ei=hdGBTaC2GOmW0QGhnLnkCA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CFEQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-470-41303-4}}</ref><ref name="Bhandari">{{cite book 
  | last = Bhandari
  | first = V. B.
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = Design of machine elements
  | publisher = Tata McGraw-Hill
  | year = 2007
  | location = New Delhi
  | pages = 202–206
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=d-eNe-VRc1oC&pg=PP12&dq=%22simple+machine%22+screw+efficiency&hl=en&ei=d2xbTcm2OtLSgQf7hL2pDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CDYQ6AEwATgK#v=onepage&q=%22simple%20machine%22%20scr&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-07-061141-6}}</ref>  Geometrically, a screw can be viewed as a narrow [[inclined plane]] wrapped around a [[cylinder (geometry)|cylinder]].<ref name="Young" />
 
Other mechanisms that use the same principle, also called screws, don't necessarily have a shaft or threads.  For example, a [[corkscrew]] is a helix-shaped rod with a sharp point, and an [[Archimedes' screw]] is a water pump that uses a rotating helical chamber to move water uphill.  The common principle of all screws is that a rotating [[helix]] can cause linear motion.
 
A screw can amplify force; a small rotational force ([[torque]]) on the shaft can exert a large axial force on a load.  The smaller the [[pitch (screw)|pitch]], the distance between the screw's threads, the greater the [[mechanical advantage]], the ratio of output to input force.  Screws are widely used in [[threaded fastener]]s to hold objects together, and in devices such as [[screw top]]s for containers, [[vise]]s,  [[screw jack]]s and [[screw press]]es.
 
==History==
The screw was one of the last of the simple machines to be invented.<ref name="Woods">{{cite book 
  | last =  Woods
  | first = Michael
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =  Mary B. Woods
  | title = Ancient Machines: From Wedges to Waterwheels
  | publisher = Twenty-First Century Books
  | year = 2000
  | location = USA
  | pages = 58
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=E1tzW_aDnxsC&pg=PA58#v=onepage&q&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-8225-2994-7}}</ref>  It first appeared in ancient [[Greece]],<ref name="Bunch">{{cite book 
  | last = Bunch
  | first = Bryan H.
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors = Alexander Hellemans
  | title = The history of science and technology
  | publisher = Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
  | year = 2004
  | location =
  | pages = 69
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=MlQ7NK9dw7IC&pg=PA19&dq=screw+history+%22simple+machine%22&hl=en&ei=idaDTczZF-iE0QHYh-3QCA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CFgQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=screw&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-618-22123-9}}</ref><ref name="Krebs">{{cite book 
  | last = Krebs
  | first = Robert E.
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors = Carolyn A. Krebs
  | title = Groundbreaking scientific experiments, inventions, and discoveries of the ancient world
  | publisher = Greenwood Publishing Group
  | year = 2003
  | location = USA
  | pages = 114
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=0H0fjBeseVEC&pg=PA114&dq=archimedean+simple+machine&hl=en&ei=kHmLTZbpLauF0QHDx8nsDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDMQ6AEwADgK#v=onepage&q=archimedean%20simple%20machine&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-313-31342-3}}</ref> and by the first century BCE was used in the form of the [[screw press]] and the [[Archimedes' screw]], but when it was invented is unknown.<ref name="Britannica">{{cite web
  | last =
  | first =
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = Screw
  | work = Encyclopedia Britannica online
  | publisher =
  | year = 2011
  | url = http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/529876/screw
  | format =
  | doi =
  | accessdate = 2011-03-24}}</ref>  Greek philosopher [[Archytas|Archytas of Tarrentum]] (428 - 347 BCE) was said by the Greeks to have invented the screw.<ref name="Woods" /><ref name="Krebs" /><ref name="Britannica" />  The Greek philosopher [[Archimedes]] is credited with inventing the Archimedes' screw water pump around 234 BCE,<ref name="Haven">{{cite book 
  | last = Haven
  | first = Kendall F.
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = One hundred greatest science inventions of all time
  | publisher = Libraries Unlimited
  | year = 2006
  | location = USA
  | pages = 6–7
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=0gBwjLTUzEMC&pg=PA7&dq=screw+history+invented&hl=en&ei=P0WKTf3WMrGE0QHtnPjsDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDoQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=screw%20history%20invented&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 1-59158-264-4}}</ref> although there is evidence it may have come from Egypt.<ref name="Britannica" /><ref name="Stewart">{{cite book 
  | last = Stewart
  | first = Bobby Alton
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors = Terry A. Howell
  | title = Encyclopedia of water science
  | publisher = CRC Press
  | year = 2003
  | location = USA
  | pages = 759
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=5cP-81xDWuwC&pg=PA759&dq=screw+invented+archimedes&hl=en&ei=oFiKTfq-C9GQ0QGK3a32DQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CFcQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=screw%20invented%20archimedes&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-8247-0948-9}}</ref>  Archimedes was first to study the screw as a machine,<ref>{{cite conference
  | first = Thomas G.
  | last = Chondros
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = The Development of Machine Design as a Science from Classical Times to Modern Era
  | booktitle = International Symposium on History of Machines and Mechanisms: Proceedings of HMM 2008
  | pages = 63
  | publisher = Springer
  | year = 2009
  | location = USA
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=Dkq6_mdW43IC&pg=PA63&dq=screw+history+invented+archimedes&hl=en&ei=AUyKTca8I4aU0QGWo-2KDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDMQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=screw%20history%20invented%20archimedes&f=false
  | doi =
  | id = 1402094841
  | accessdate = 2011-03-23}}</ref> so he is sometimes considered the inventor of the screw.<ref name="Krebs" /><ref name="Kerle">{{cite conference
  | first = Hanfried
  | last = Kerle
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors = Klaus Mauersberger
  | title = From Archimedian spirals to screw mechanisms - A short historical overview
  | booktitle = The Genius of Archimedes -- 23 Centuries of Influence on Mathematics, Science and Engineering: Proceedings of an International Conference Held at Syracuse, Italy, June 8–10, 2010
  | pages = 163–179
  | publisher = Springer
  | year = 2010
  | location =
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=65Pz4_XJrgwC&pg=PA165&dq=screw+invented+archimedes&hl=en&ei=oFiKTfq-C9GQ0QGK3a32DQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CEIQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=screw%20invented%20archimedes&f=false
  | doi =
  | isbn = 90-481-9090-8
  | accessdate = 2011-03-23}}</ref>  Greek philosophers defined the screw as one of the [[simple machine]]s and could calculate its (ideal) [[mechanical advantage]].<ref name="Usher">{{cite book 
  | last = Usher
  | first = Abbott Payson
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = A History of Mechanical Inventions
  | publisher = Courier Dover Publications
  | year = 1988
  | location = USA
  | pages = 98
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=xuDDqqa8FlwC&pg=PA196&hl=en#v=snippet&q=wedge%20and%20screw&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-486-25593-X}}</ref>  For example, [[Heron of Alexandria]] (52 CE) listed the screw as one of the five mechanisms that could "set a load in motion", defined it as an [[inclined plane]] wrapped around a cylinder, and described its fabrication and use,<ref>{{cite journal
  | last = Laufer
  | first = Berthold
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = The Eskimo screw as a cultural-historical problem
  | journal = American anthropologist
  | volume = 17
  | issue = 1
  | pages = 396–402
  | publisher = American Anthropological Association
  | location = New York
  | date = Jan-March 1915
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=lKcEAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA401&dq=%22history+of+the+screw%22&hl=en&ei=x92DTZCrI6rg0gGei6m_CA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDoQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=%22history%20of%20the%20screw%22&f=false
  | issn =
  | doi =
  | id =
  | accessdate = 2011-03-17}}</ref> including a [[Taps and dies|tap]] for cutting female screw threads.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=MlQ7NK9dw7IC&pg=PA19&dq=screw+history+%22simple+machine%22&hl=en&ei=idaDTczZF-iE0QHYh-3QCA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CFgQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=screw&f=false Bunch, Hellemans, 2004, p. 81]</ref>
 
Because they had to be laboriously cut by hand, screws were only used as linkages in a few machines in the ancient world.  Screw fasteners only began to be used in the 15th century, in clocks, after [[screw-cutting lathe]]s were developed.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=MlQ7NK9dw7IC&pg=PA19&dq=screw+history+%22simple+machine%22&hl=en&ei=idaDTczZF-iE0QHYh-3QCA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CFgQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=screw&f=false Bunch, Hellemans, 2004, p. 80]</ref> The screw was apparently applied to drilling and moving materials (besides water) around this time also, when images of [[auger]]s and drills began to appear in European paintings.<ref name="Haven" />  The complete dynamic theory of simple machines, including the screw, was worked out by Italian scientist [[Galileo Galilei]] in 1600 in ''Le Meccaniche'' ("On Mechanics").<ref name="Krebs">{{cite book
  |last=Krebs
  |first=Robert E.
  |title=Groundbreaking Experiments, Inventions, and Discoveries of the Middle Ages
  |year=2004
  |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group
  |isbn=0-313-32433-6
  |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=MTXdplfiz-cC&pg=PA163&dq=%22mechanics+Galileo+analyzed%22&hl=en&ei=wEySTbWfKpOI0QHFi4XNBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22mechanics%20Galileo%20analyzed%22&f=false
  |accessdate=2008-05-21
  |page=163}}</ref><ref name="Stephen">{{cite book 
  | last = Stephen
  | first = Donald
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors = Lowell Cardwell
  | title = Wheels, clocks, and rockets: a history of technology
  | publisher = W. W. Norton & Company
  | year = 2001
  | location = USA
  | pages = 85–87
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=BSfpFLV1nkAC&pg=PA86&dq=%22simple+machine%22+galileo&hl=en&ei=806STcPpHcq80QH66oHNBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CFIQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=%22simple%20machine%22%20galileo&f=false
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-393-32175-4}}</ref>
 
==Lead and pitch==
[[File:Lead and pitch in screws.png|thumb|upright=1.5|Lead and pitch are the same in single-start screws, but differ in multiple-start screws]]
[[File:House Jack 2.5 tons.jpg|thumb|A [[screw jack]].  When a bar is inserted in the holes at top and turned it can raise a load]]
The fineness or coarseness of a screw's threads are defined by two closely related quantities:<ref name="Bhandari" />
*The ''[[lead (engineering)|lead]]'' is defined as the linear distance the screw travels in one complete revolution (360°) of the shaft.  The lead determines the [[mechanical advantage]] of the screw; the smaller the lead, the higher the mechanical advantage.<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=IRdIAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA137</ref>
*The ''[[Screw thread#Lead, pitch, and starts|pitch]]'' is defined as the axial distance between the crests of adjacent threads.
In most screws, called "''single start''" screws, which have a single helical thread wrapped around them, the lead and pitch are equal.  They only differ in "''multiple start''" screws, which have several intertwined threads.  In these screws the lead is equal to the pitch multiplied by the number of ''starts''.  Multiple-start screws are used when a large linear motion for a given rotation is desired, for example in [[screw cap]]s on bottles, and [[ball point pen]]s.
 
==Handedness==
The helix of a screw's thread can twist in two possible directions, which is known as ''[[handedness]]''. Most screw threads are oriented so that when seen from above, the screw shaft moves away from the viewer (the screw is tightened) when turned in a [[clockwise]] direction.<ref name="McManus">{{cite book 
  | last = McManus
  | first = Chris
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = Right Hand, Left Hand: The Origins of Asymmetry in Brains, Bodies, Atoms and Cultures
  | publisher = Harvard University Press
  | year = 2004
  | location = USA
  | pages = 46
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=20oza63ZuG4C&pg=PA46&dq=screw+threads+left+right
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-674-01613-0}}</ref><ref name="Anderson">{{cite book 
  | last = Anderson
  | first = John G.
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = Technical shop mathematics, 2nd Ed.
  | publisher = Industrial Press
  | year = 1983
  | location = USA
  | pages = 200
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=BabtEFxgZ2AC&pg=PA200&dq=right-handed+left-handed+screw+thread
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 0-8311-1145-3}}</ref> This is known as a ''right-handed'' (''RH'') thread, because it follows the [[right hand grip rule]]: when the fingers of the right hand are curled around the shaft in the direction of rotation, the thumb will point in the direction of motion of the shaft. Threads oriented in the opposite direction are known as ''left-handed'' (''LH'').
 
By common convention, right-handedness is the default handedness for screw threads.<ref name="McManus" />    Therefore, most threaded parts and fasteners have right-handed threads.  One explanation for why right-handed threads became standard is that for a  [[right-handedness|right-handed]] person, tightening a right-handed screw with a [[screwdriver]] is easier than tightening a left-handed screw, because it uses the stronger [[supinator muscle]] of the arm rather than the weaker [[Pronation|pronator]] muscle.<ref name="McManus" />  Since most people are right-handed, right-handed threads became standard on threaded fasteners.  Left-handed screw threads are used in some machines and in these applications:
* Where the rotation of a shaft would cause a conventional right-handed nut to loosen rather than to tighten due to [[Precession (mechanical)|fretting induced precession]]. Examples include:
**The [[bicycle pedal|left hand pedal]] on a [[bicycle]].<ref name="McManus" /><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.sheldonbrown.com/gloss_p.html#pedal | title=Bicycle Glossary: Pedal
| accessdate=2010-10-19|last=Brown |first=Sheldon |authorlink=Sheldon Brown (bicycle mechanic) |publisher=Sheldon Brown}}</ref>
**The left-hand screw holding a [[circular saw]] blade or a [[bench grinder]] wheel on.
* In some devices that have threads on either end, like [[turnbuckle]]s and removable pipe segments. These parts have one right-handed and one left-handed thread, so that turning the piece tightens or loosens both threads at the same time.
* In some gas supply connections to prevent dangerous misconnections.  For example in gas welding the flammable gas supply line is attached with left-handed threads, so it will not be accidentally switched with the oxygen supply, which uses right-handed threads.
* To prevent the public from unscrewing them, for example left-handed [[light bulb]]s are used in some railway and [[subway station]]s.<ref name="McManus" />
* Coffin lids are said to have been traditionally held on with left-handed screws.<ref name="McManus" /><ref name="Cook">{{cite book 
  | last = Cook
  | first = Theodore Andrea
  | title = The Curves of Life
  | publisher = Constable and Co.
  | year = 1914
  | location = London
  | pages = 242
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=ea-TStM-07EC&pg=PA242&dq=%22left-handed%22+screw
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 7814678}}</ref><ref name="Oakley">{{cite book 
  | last = Oakley
  | first = Ann
  | authorlink =
  | coauthors =
  | title = Fracture: Adventures of a Broken Body
  | publisher = The Policy Press
  | year = 2007
  | location =
  | pages = 49
  | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=-pKgvK0p6skC&pg=PA49&dq=%22left-handed%22+screw
  | doi =
  | id =
  | isbn = 1861349378}}</ref>
 
==Uses==
[[File:Archimedes-screw one-screw-threads with-ball 3D-view animated small.gif|thumb|A [[screw conveyor]] uses a rotating helical screw blade to move bulk materials.]]
 
*Because of its self-locking property (see below) the screw is widely used in [[threaded fastener]]s to hold objects or materials together: the [[wood screw]], [[sheet metal screw]], [[stud welding|stud]], and [[Screw|bolt]] and [[nut (hardware)|nut]].
*The self-locking property is also key to the screw's use in a wide range of other applications, such as the [[corkscrew]], [[screw top]] container lid, [[threaded pipe]] joint, [[vise]], [[C-clamp]], and [[screw jack]].
*Screws are also used as linkages in machines to transfer power, in the [[worm gear]], [[lead screw]], [[ball screw]], and [[roller screw]].  Due to their low efficiency, screw linkages are seldom used to carry high power, but are more often employed in low power, intermittent uses such as positioning [[actuator]]s.
*Rotating helical screw blades or chambers are used to move material in the  [[Archimedes' screw]],  [[Auger|auger earth drill]],  and [[screw conveyor]].
*The [[micrometer]] uses a precision calibrated screw for measuring lengths with great accuracy.
The [[screw propeller]], although it shares the name ''screw'', works on very different physical principles from the above types of screw, and the information in this article is not applicable to it.
 
==Distance moved==
The linear distance <math>d \,</math> a screw shaft moves when it is rotated through an angle of <math>\alpha \,</math> degrees is:
:<math>d =  l \frac { \alpha }{360^\circ}  \,</math>
 
where <math>l \,</math> is the lead of the screw.  
 
The ''distance ratio'' of a [[simple machine]] is defined as the ratio of the distance the applied force moves to the distance the load moves.  For a screw it is the ratio of the circular distance ''d<sub>in</sub>'' a point on the edge of the shaft moves to the linear distance ''d<sub>out</sub>''  the shaft moves.  If ''r'' is the radius of the shaft, in one turn a point on the screw's rim moves a distance of 2π''r'', while its shaft moves linearly by the lead distance ''l''.  So the distance ratio is
 
:<math>\mbox{distance ratio} \equiv \frac {d_{in}} {d_{out}}= \frac {2 \pi r}{l}  \,</math>
 
==Frictionless mechanical advantage==
The [[mechanical advantage]] ''MA'' of a screw is defined as the ratio of axial output force ''F<sub>out</sub>'' applied by the shaft on a load to the rotational force ''F<sub>in</sub>'' applied to the rim of the shaft to turn it.  For a screw with no [[friction]] (also called an ''ideal screw''),  from [[conservation of energy]] the work done ''on'' the screw by the input force turning it is equal to the work done ''by'' the screw on the load force:   
:<math>W_{in} = W_{out} \,</math>
Work is equal to the force multiplied by the distance it acts, so the work done in one complete turn of the screw is  <math>W_{in} = 2 \pi r F_{in} \,</math> and the work done on the load is <math>W_{out} = l F_{out} \,</math>.  So the mechanical advantage is equal to the ''distance ratio'':
 
:<math>\mathrm{MA} \equiv \frac {F_{out}}{F_{in}} =  \frac {2 \pi r}{l}  \,</math>
 
It can be seen that the mechanical advantage of a screw depends on its lead, <math>l \,</math>.  The smaller the distance between its threads, the larger the mechanical advantage, and the larger the force the screw can exert for a given applied force.  However most actual screws have large amounts of friction and their mechanical advantage is less than given by the above equation.
 
===Torque form===
The rotational force applied to the screw is actually a [[torque]] <math>T_{in} = F_{in} r \,</math>.  Because of this, the input force required to turn a screw depends on how far from the shaft it is applied; the farther from the shaft, the less force is needed to turn it.  The force on a screw is not usually applied at the rim as assumed above.  It is often applied by some form of lever; for example a bolt is turned by a [[wrench]].  The mechanical advantage in this case can be calculated by using the length of the [[lever arm]] for ''r'' in the above equation.  This extraneous factor ''r'' can be removed from the above equation by writing it in terms of torque:
 
:<math>\frac {F_{out}}{T_{in}} =  \frac {2 \pi}{l}  \,</math>
 
==Actual mechanical advantage and efficiency==
Because of the large area of sliding contact between the moving and stationary threads, screws typically have large frictional energy losses.  Even well-lubricated [[jack screw]]s have [[Mechanical efficiency|efficiencies]] of only 15% - 20%, the rest of the work applied in turning them is lost to friction.  When friction is included, the mechanical advantage is no longer equal to the distance ratio but also depends on the screw's efficiency.  From [[conservation of energy]], the [[work (physics)|work]] ''W<sub>in</sub>'' done on the screw by the input force turning it is equal to the sum of the work done moving the load ''W<sub>out</sub>'', and the work dissipated as heat by [[friction]] ''W<sub>fric</sub>'' in the screw
:<math>W_{in} = W_{out} + W_{fric} \, </math>
The [[Mechanical efficiency|efficiency]] ''η'' is a dimensionless number between 0 and 1 defined as the ratio of output work to input work
 
:<math>\eta = W_{out} / W_{in} \, </math>
 
:<math>W_{out} = \eta W_{in} \, </math>
 
[[Work (physics)|Work]] is defined as the force multiplied by the distance moved, so <math>W_{in} = F_{in} d_{in} \, </math> and <math>W_{out} = F_{out} d_{out} \, </math> and therefore
 
:<math>F_{out} d_{out} = \eta F_{in} d_{in} \, </math>
 
:<math>\frac {F_{out}}{F_{in}} = \eta \frac {d_{in}}{d_{out}} \, </math>
 
:<math>\frac {F_{out}}{F_{in}} = \eta \frac {2 \pi r}{l} \qquad \, </math>  or in terms of torque  :<math>\frac {F_{out}}{T_{in}} =  \frac {2 \pi \eta}{l} \qquad \, </math>
 
So the mechanical advantage of an actual screw is reduced from what it would be in an ideal, frictionless screw by the efficiency <math>\eta \,</math>.  Because of their low efficiency, in powered machinery screws are not often used as linkages to transfer large amounts of power (except in [[lead screw]]s) but are more often used in positioners that operate intermittently.<ref name="Bhandari"/>
 
==Self-locking property==
 
The large frictional forces due to the large area of sliding contact between the threads cause most screws to be "''self-locking''", also called "''non-reciprocal''" or "''non-overhauling''".  This means that applying a torque to the shaft will cause it to turn, but no amount of axial load force against the shaft will cause it to turn back the other way, even if the applied torque is zero.  This is in contrast to some other [[simple machine]]s which are  "''reciprocal''" or "''non locking''" which means if the load force is great enough they will move backwards or "''overhaul''". Thus, the machine can be used in either direction.  For example, in a [[lever]], if the force on the load end is too large it will move backwards, doing work on the applied force.  Most screws are designed to be self-locking, and in the absence of torque on the shaft will stay at whatever position they are left.  However, some screw mechanisms with a large enough pitch and good lubrication are not self-locking and will overhaul, and a very few, such as a [[Drill|push drill]], use the screw in this "backwards" sense, applying axial force to the shaft to turn the screw.
 
[[File:Spiral-screwdriver.jpg|thumb|upright=2.0|A ''[[Screwdriver#Ratcheting screwdrivers|push drill]]'', one of the very few mechanisms that use a screw in the "backwards" sense, to convert linear motion to rotational motion.  It has helical screw threads with a very large pitch along the central shaft.  When the handle is pushed down, the shaft slides into pawls in the tubular stem, turning the bit. Most screws are "self locking" and axial force on the shaft will not turn the screw.]]
 
This self-locking property is one reason for the very large use of the screw in [[threaded fastener]]s such as [[wood screw]]s, [[sheet metal screw]]s, studs  and bolts. Tightening the fastener by turning it puts compression force on the materials or parts being fastened together, but no amount of force from the parts will cause the screw to untighten. This property is also the basis for the use of screws in [[Screw cap|screw top container lids]], [[vise]]s, [[C-clamp]]s, and [[screw jack]]s.  A heavy object can be raised by turning the jack shaft, but when the shaft is released it will stay at whatever height it is raised to.
 
A screw will be self-locking if and only if its efficiency <math>\eta \,</math> is below 50%.
 
:<math>\eta = \frac {F_{out}/F_{in}}{d_{in}/d_{out}} = \frac {F_{out}}{F_{in}} \frac {l} {2 \pi r} < 0.50  \,</math>
 
Whether a screw is self-locking depends on the pitch angle and the [[coefficient of friction]] of the threads; very well-lubricated, low friction threads with a large enough pitch may "overhaul".
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
 
{{Simple machines}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Screw (Simple Machine)}}
[[Category:Simple machines]]

Latest revision as of 15:51, 25 April 2013

29 yr old Orthopaedic Surgeon Grippo from Saint-Paul, spends time with interests including model railways, top property developers in singapore developers in singapore and dolls. Finished a cruise ship experience that included passing by Runic Stones and Church.

Animation showing the operation of a screw. As the screw shaft rotates, the nut moves linearly along the shaft. This is a type called a lead screw.
A machine used to demonstrate the action of a screw, from 1912. It consists of a threaded shaft through a threaded hole in a stationary mount. When the crank on the right is turned, the shaft moves horizontally through the hole.

A screw is a mechanism that converts rotational motion to linear motion, and a torque (rotational force) to a linear force.[1] It is one of the six classical simple machines. The most common form consists of a cylindrical shaft with helical grooves or ridges called threads around the outside.[2][3] The screw passes through a hole in another object or medium, with threads on the inside of the hole that mesh with the screw's threads. When the shaft of the screw is rotated relative to the stationary threads, the screw moves along its axis relative to the medium surrounding it; for example rotating a wood screw forces it into wood. In screw mechanisms, either the screw shaft can rotate through a threaded hole in a stationary object, or a threaded collar such as a nut can rotate around a stationary screw shaft.[4][5] Geometrically, a screw can be viewed as a narrow inclined plane wrapped around a cylinder.[1]

Other mechanisms that use the same principle, also called screws, don't necessarily have a shaft or threads. For example, a corkscrew is a helix-shaped rod with a sharp point, and an Archimedes' screw is a water pump that uses a rotating helical chamber to move water uphill. The common principle of all screws is that a rotating helix can cause linear motion.

A screw can amplify force; a small rotational force (torque) on the shaft can exert a large axial force on a load. The smaller the pitch, the distance between the screw's threads, the greater the mechanical advantage, the ratio of output to input force. Screws are widely used in threaded fasteners to hold objects together, and in devices such as screw tops for containers, vises, screw jacks and screw presses.

History

The screw was one of the last of the simple machines to be invented.[6] It first appeared in ancient Greece,[7][8] and by the first century BCE was used in the form of the screw press and the Archimedes' screw, but when it was invented is unknown.[9] Greek philosopher Archytas of Tarrentum (428 - 347 BCE) was said by the Greeks to have invented the screw.[6][8][9] The Greek philosopher Archimedes is credited with inventing the Archimedes' screw water pump around 234 BCE,[10] although there is evidence it may have come from Egypt.[9][11] Archimedes was first to study the screw as a machine,[12] so he is sometimes considered the inventor of the screw.[8][13] Greek philosophers defined the screw as one of the simple machines and could calculate its (ideal) mechanical advantage.[14] For example, Heron of Alexandria (52 CE) listed the screw as one of the five mechanisms that could "set a load in motion", defined it as an inclined plane wrapped around a cylinder, and described its fabrication and use,[15] including a tap for cutting female screw threads.[16]

Because they had to be laboriously cut by hand, screws were only used as linkages in a few machines in the ancient world. Screw fasteners only began to be used in the 15th century, in clocks, after screw-cutting lathes were developed.[17] The screw was apparently applied to drilling and moving materials (besides water) around this time also, when images of augers and drills began to appear in European paintings.[10] The complete dynamic theory of simple machines, including the screw, was worked out by Italian scientist Galileo Galilei in 1600 in Le Meccaniche ("On Mechanics").[8][18]

Lead and pitch

Lead and pitch are the same in single-start screws, but differ in multiple-start screws
A screw jack. When a bar is inserted in the holes at top and turned it can raise a load

The fineness or coarseness of a screw's threads are defined by two closely related quantities:[5]

  • The lead is defined as the linear distance the screw travels in one complete revolution (360°) of the shaft. The lead determines the mechanical advantage of the screw; the smaller the lead, the higher the mechanical advantage.[19]
  • The pitch is defined as the axial distance between the crests of adjacent threads.

In most screws, called "single start" screws, which have a single helical thread wrapped around them, the lead and pitch are equal. They only differ in "multiple start" screws, which have several intertwined threads. In these screws the lead is equal to the pitch multiplied by the number of starts. Multiple-start screws are used when a large linear motion for a given rotation is desired, for example in screw caps on bottles, and ball point pens.

Handedness

The helix of a screw's thread can twist in two possible directions, which is known as handedness. Most screw threads are oriented so that when seen from above, the screw shaft moves away from the viewer (the screw is tightened) when turned in a clockwise direction.[20][21] This is known as a right-handed (RH) thread, because it follows the right hand grip rule: when the fingers of the right hand are curled around the shaft in the direction of rotation, the thumb will point in the direction of motion of the shaft. Threads oriented in the opposite direction are known as left-handed (LH).

By common convention, right-handedness is the default handedness for screw threads.[20] Therefore, most threaded parts and fasteners have right-handed threads. One explanation for why right-handed threads became standard is that for a right-handed person, tightening a right-handed screw with a screwdriver is easier than tightening a left-handed screw, because it uses the stronger supinator muscle of the arm rather than the weaker pronator muscle.[20] Since most people are right-handed, right-handed threads became standard on threaded fasteners. Left-handed screw threads are used in some machines and in these applications:

  • Where the rotation of a shaft would cause a conventional right-handed nut to loosen rather than to tighten due to fretting induced precession. Examples include:
  • In some devices that have threads on either end, like turnbuckles and removable pipe segments. These parts have one right-handed and one left-handed thread, so that turning the piece tightens or loosens both threads at the same time.
  • In some gas supply connections to prevent dangerous misconnections. For example in gas welding the flammable gas supply line is attached with left-handed threads, so it will not be accidentally switched with the oxygen supply, which uses right-handed threads.
  • To prevent the public from unscrewing them, for example left-handed light bulbs are used in some railway and subway stations.[20]
  • Coffin lids are said to have been traditionally held on with left-handed screws.[20][23][24]

Uses

A screw conveyor uses a rotating helical screw blade to move bulk materials.

The screw propeller, although it shares the name screw, works on very different physical principles from the above types of screw, and the information in this article is not applicable to it.

Distance moved

The linear distance d a screw shaft moves when it is rotated through an angle of α degrees is:

d=lα360

where l is the lead of the screw.

The distance ratio of a simple machine is defined as the ratio of the distance the applied force moves to the distance the load moves. For a screw it is the ratio of the circular distance din a point on the edge of the shaft moves to the linear distance dout the shaft moves. If r is the radius of the shaft, in one turn a point on the screw's rim moves a distance of 2πr, while its shaft moves linearly by the lead distance l. So the distance ratio is

distance ratiodindout=2πrl

Frictionless mechanical advantage

The mechanical advantage MA of a screw is defined as the ratio of axial output force Fout applied by the shaft on a load to the rotational force Fin applied to the rim of the shaft to turn it. For a screw with no friction (also called an ideal screw), from conservation of energy the work done on the screw by the input force turning it is equal to the work done by the screw on the load force:

Win=Wout

Work is equal to the force multiplied by the distance it acts, so the work done in one complete turn of the screw is Win=2πrFin and the work done on the load is Wout=lFout. So the mechanical advantage is equal to the distance ratio:

MAFoutFin=2πrl

It can be seen that the mechanical advantage of a screw depends on its lead, l. The smaller the distance between its threads, the larger the mechanical advantage, and the larger the force the screw can exert for a given applied force. However most actual screws have large amounts of friction and their mechanical advantage is less than given by the above equation.

Torque form

The rotational force applied to the screw is actually a torque Tin=Finr. Because of this, the input force required to turn a screw depends on how far from the shaft it is applied; the farther from the shaft, the less force is needed to turn it. The force on a screw is not usually applied at the rim as assumed above. It is often applied by some form of lever; for example a bolt is turned by a wrench. The mechanical advantage in this case can be calculated by using the length of the lever arm for r in the above equation. This extraneous factor r can be removed from the above equation by writing it in terms of torque:

FoutTin=2πl

Actual mechanical advantage and efficiency

Because of the large area of sliding contact between the moving and stationary threads, screws typically have large frictional energy losses. Even well-lubricated jack screws have efficiencies of only 15% - 20%, the rest of the work applied in turning them is lost to friction. When friction is included, the mechanical advantage is no longer equal to the distance ratio but also depends on the screw's efficiency. From conservation of energy, the work Win done on the screw by the input force turning it is equal to the sum of the work done moving the load Wout, and the work dissipated as heat by friction Wfric in the screw

Win=Wout+Wfric

The efficiency η is a dimensionless number between 0 and 1 defined as the ratio of output work to input work

η=Wout/Win
Wout=ηWin

Work is defined as the force multiplied by the distance moved, so Win=Findin and Wout=Foutdout and therefore

Foutdout=ηFindin
FoutFin=ηdindout
FoutFin=η2πrl or in terms of torque  :FoutTin=2πηl

So the mechanical advantage of an actual screw is reduced from what it would be in an ideal, frictionless screw by the efficiency η. Because of their low efficiency, in powered machinery screws are not often used as linkages to transfer large amounts of power (except in lead screws) but are more often used in positioners that operate intermittently.[5]

Self-locking property

The large frictional forces due to the large area of sliding contact between the threads cause most screws to be "self-locking", also called "non-reciprocal" or "non-overhauling". This means that applying a torque to the shaft will cause it to turn, but no amount of axial load force against the shaft will cause it to turn back the other way, even if the applied torque is zero. This is in contrast to some other simple machines which are "reciprocal" or "non locking" which means if the load force is great enough they will move backwards or "overhaul". Thus, the machine can be used in either direction. For example, in a lever, if the force on the load end is too large it will move backwards, doing work on the applied force. Most screws are designed to be self-locking, and in the absence of torque on the shaft will stay at whatever position they are left. However, some screw mechanisms with a large enough pitch and good lubrication are not self-locking and will overhaul, and a very few, such as a push drill, use the screw in this "backwards" sense, applying axial force to the shaft to turn the screw.

A push drill, one of the very few mechanisms that use a screw in the "backwards" sense, to convert linear motion to rotational motion. It has helical screw threads with a very large pitch along the central shaft. When the handle is pushed down, the shaft slides into pawls in the tubular stem, turning the bit. Most screws are "self locking" and axial force on the shaft will not turn the screw.

This self-locking property is one reason for the very large use of the screw in threaded fasteners such as wood screws, sheet metal screws, studs and bolts. Tightening the fastener by turning it puts compression force on the materials or parts being fastened together, but no amount of force from the parts will cause the screw to untighten. This property is also the basis for the use of screws in screw top container lids, vises, C-clamps, and screw jacks. A heavy object can be raised by turning the jack shaft, but when the shaft is released it will stay at whatever height it is raised to.

A screw will be self-locking if and only if its efficiency η is below 50%.

η=Fout/Findin/dout=FoutFinl2πr<0.50

Whether a screw is self-locking depends on the pitch angle and the coefficient of friction of the threads; very well-lubricated, low friction threads with a large enough pitch may "overhaul".

References

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Template:Simple machines

  1. 1.0 1.1 Template:Cite web
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  16. Bunch, Hellemans, 2004, p. 81
  17. Bunch, Hellemans, 2004, p. 80
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