jlatshaw
Electrical
- Feb 8, 2017
- 3
Hello,
I am aware that I can trade torque for RPM using gearing, however is there a way to slow down a high torque system with the resultant being a low torque high RPM system?
Example:
Suppose that I have a bucket of water hanging on a pulley from the ceiling of a room. The rope that is attached to the bucket of water is also attached to a wheel system that is on the ground. As the bucket of water falls, it will pull on the rope which will pull on the pulley and in turn spin the wheel.
Currently, once the bucket is released it will quickly drop and the wheel will spin really fast for a second and then stop.
My question is, is there a way to engineer the wheel system such that it makes the bucket fall slowly over time without loosing a significant portion of the stored potential energy?
Any help pointing me in the right direction would be most appreciated.
Thank you,
James
I am aware that I can trade torque for RPM using gearing, however is there a way to slow down a high torque system with the resultant being a low torque high RPM system?
Example:
Suppose that I have a bucket of water hanging on a pulley from the ceiling of a room. The rope that is attached to the bucket of water is also attached to a wheel system that is on the ground. As the bucket of water falls, it will pull on the rope which will pull on the pulley and in turn spin the wheel.
Currently, once the bucket is released it will quickly drop and the wheel will spin really fast for a second and then stop.
My question is, is there a way to engineer the wheel system such that it makes the bucket fall slowly over time without loosing a significant portion of the stored potential energy?
Any help pointing me in the right direction would be most appreciated.
Thank you,
James