0% found this document useful (0 votes)
60 views1 page

Force and Torque Multiplication: Examples Two Hydraulic Cylinders Interconnected

Hydraulic systems allow for force or torque multiplication independent of the distance between input and output without needing mechanical gears or levers. This is done by altering the effective areas of two connected cylinders or the displacement between a pump and motor. Hydraulic ratios are often combined with mechanical force or torque ratios for optimal machine designs like boom movements and track drives in excavators. For example, a one inch cylinder exerting 10 pounds of force would exert 1000 pounds through a ten inch connected cylinder due to the hundred-fold increase in area, though the one inch cylinder must move 100 inches to move the ten inch cylinder one inch.

Uploaded by

marina890416
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
60 views1 page

Force and Torque Multiplication: Examples Two Hydraulic Cylinders Interconnected

Hydraulic systems allow for force or torque multiplication independent of the distance between input and output without needing mechanical gears or levers. This is done by altering the effective areas of two connected cylinders or the displacement between a pump and motor. Hydraulic ratios are often combined with mechanical force or torque ratios for optimal machine designs like boom movements and track drives in excavators. For example, a one inch cylinder exerting 10 pounds of force would exert 1000 pounds through a ten inch connected cylinder due to the hundred-fold increase in area, though the one inch cylinder must move 100 inches to move the ten inch cylinder one inch.

Uploaded by

marina890416
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

Force and torque multiplication[edit]

A fundamental feature of hydraulic systems is the ability to apply force or torque multiplication in an
easy way, independent of the distance between the input and output, without the need for
mechanical gears or levers, either by altering the effective areas in two connected cylinders or the
effective displacement (cc/rev) between a pump and motor. In normal cases, hydraulic ratios are
combined with a mechanical force or torque ratio for optimum machine designs such as boom
movements and trackdrives for an excavator.
Examples
Two hydraulic cylinders interconnected
Cylinder C1 is one inch in radius, and cylinder C2 is ten inches in radius. If the force exerted on C1
is 10 lbf, the force exerted by C2 is 1000 lbf because C2 is a hundred times larger in area (S = r)
as C1. The downside to this is that you have to move C1 a hundred inches to move C2 one inch.
The most common use for this is the classical hydraulic jack where a pumping cylinder with a small
diameter is connected to the lifting cylinder with a large diameter.

You might also like