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PNEUMATIC PISTON VALVE : PNEUMATIC PISTON


Pneumatic piston valve : Check valve specification : Ty gate valves.



Pneumatic Piston Valve





pneumatic piston valve






    piston valve
  • A piston valve is a device used to control the motion of a fluid along a tube or pipe by means of the linear motion of a piston within a chamber or cylinder.

  • A type of gas-distribution valve, in which an oscillating piston covers and uncovers circumferential openings in a cylinder.

  • (Piston valves) Piston valves are an integral part of the cylinder arrangement of a steam locomotive. They control the admission and exhaustion of steam from the cylinders, enabling a locomotive to move under its own power.





    pneumatic
  • of or relating to or using air (or a similar gas); "pneumatic drill"; "pneumatic tire"

  • Containing or operated by air or gas under pressure

  • (of certain body parts, esp. a woman's breasts) Large, as if inflated

  • (pneumatics) the branch of mechanics that deals with the mechanical properties of gases

  • (chiefly of cavities in the bones of birds) Containing air

  • (pneumatically) in a pneumatic manner; "at the present time the transmission is very often done hydraulically or pneumatically"











Hildebrand & Wolfmüller,......if this isn't antique?




Hildebrand & Wolfmüller,......if this isn't antique?





Hildebrand & Wolfmüller 1894

This is what "Yesterdays" has to tell about this 116 year old mechanical wonder;

There had been steam-driven ‘boneshakers’ on both sides of the Atlantic in the 1860s and, of course, Gottlieb Daimler’s
gasoline-engined Einspur of 1885, but the Hildebrand & Wolfmüller was the first powered two-wheeler to enter
series production; indeed, it is the first such device to which the name ‘motorcycle’ (motorrad in German) was ever applied.
(Although a true motorcycle, Daimler’s was only ever intended as a test-bed for his high-revving internal combustion engine,
and as soon as that was powerful enough he turned his attention to automobiles).

Like many of their contemporaries, the Hildebrand brothers, Henry and Wilhelm, began by experimenting with steam power
before turning to a (two-stroke) gasoline engine, the latter having been developed in partnership with Alois Wolfmüller
and his mechanic, Hans Geisenhof. The quartet’s next design was a water-cooled, four-stroke parallel twin displacing
1,488cc, which until relatively recent times was the largest power unit ever fitted to a motorcycle.
The Hildebrands were in the cycle business so their new engine was mounted in a bicycle frame of the newly developed
‘safety’ configuration.
When this proved insufficiently robust, a more integrated arrangement was devised, based on that of the
Hildebrands’ defunct steamer, and the name ‘motorrad’ registered for the new invention, which was patented in January 1894.

Steam locomotive practice was further recalled by the long connecting rods directly linking the pistons to
the rear wheel, which opened and closed the mechanical exhaust valves via pushrods actuated by a cam on the hub.
The latter contained an epicyclic reduction gear and there was no crankshaft flywheel, the solid disc rear wheel serving
that purpose.
Rubber bands assisted the pistons on the return stroke at low revs.
Fuel mixture was fed from the tank that also acted as a surface carburettor and thence via atmospheric
inlet valves to the cylinders where it was ignited by nickel hot tube, as developed by Daimler.
The box-like rear mudguard acted as a reservoir for the engine’s cooling water, while two of the frame tubes served as
the oil tank.
The tyres, manufactured under license from Dunlop by Veith in Germany, were the first of the pneumatic variety ever
fitted to a motorcycle.

Although modern in many respects, the H&W was primitive in others, most notably the brakes, which consisted of a
steel ‘spoon’ working on the front tyre, the application of which automatically closed the throttle.
The rider controlled the latter by means of a rotating thumbscrew; there was no clutch, which made starting an
athletic procedure, the machine being pushed until it fired, whereupon its rider leapt aboard while simultaneously
trying to regulate engine speed.
Despite producing only 2.5bhp at 240rpm, the H&W was capable of speeds approaching 30mph, an exciting prospect at
a time when powered road transport of any sort was still a novelty.

The H&W’s announcement was greeted with considerable enthusiasm and plans drawn up to build a factory in Munich to
produce it.
In the meantime, numerous small workshops manufactured parts for the machine, which was also licensed to the firm of Duncan,
Superbie et Cie for manufacture at its plant in Croissy, France where it would be marketed as ‘La Petrolette’.
Six Petrolettes were exhibited at the first Paris Motor Salon held in December 1895 and by 1896 some 50-or-so had
been delivered.

Despite some impressive demonstration performances by factory riders, the H&W’s shortcomings became all too apparent
once deliveries to paying customers commenced.
The crudity of the hot tube ignition meant that starting was difficult and, once under way, progress was erratic because
of the rear wheel’s poor flywheel effect.
Duncan, Superbie et Cie lost a court case against a dissatisfied customer, whereupon many others promptly
demanded their money back. Early in 1897 both the German and French ventures collapsed.
Opinion differs with regard to how many machines were produced, figures ranging from as low as 800 to as high as
2,000 being quoted.

This 1894 Hildebrand & Wolfmüller is the sole survivor of the only known machine sold to the Netherlands and
is still part of an important private collection.


Although ultimately a failure, the Hildebrand & Wolfmüller nevertheless deserves its place in history as the World’s
first ever production motorcycle.
If Motorcycling can be said to have started anywhere in particular - it started here.















machine in gallery




machine in gallery





machine version 2 - i made this to launch hollow metal boxes at each other so that i could film them colliding in mid air.
version 1, from 2008, used four rear springs from motorbikes to move levers and launch my boxes.
version 3, now in production, will use the same outlay above, pneumatic pistons, but with full metal piston bodies operated by electromagnetic valves, rather that version 2's crappy dump valves....
this machine is around 3.5m in length, running at 70psi, throwing 20-30cm tall sheet copper and steel boxes.









pneumatic piston valve







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Post je objavljen 31.01.2012. u 08:16 sati.