horsefeather
Aerospace
- Dec 26, 2007
- 50
I'm creating a syllabus for a course I have to teach in June to hydraulics technicians regarding troubleshooting electro-hydraulic systems. It includes reading schematics, multimeter operation, electro-hydraulic devices and simple DC electrical theory. When teaching basic DC electricity one always starts with Ohm's Law - E = I X R. (Voltage equals Current times Resistance).
The analogy often used is the electromotive force (E) is analagous to pressure and current (I) is analagous to flow. There does not appear to be a analagous representation to resistance however. The closest thing to Ohm's law would be Poiseuille's law which while easy to understand, is not for the feint of heart in application.
I got to wondering why there is no identifiable flow resistance equivalent. After mulling over for a couple hours it struck me - there is no need for one. Fluid flow is dynamic with many variables, electricity is less so. Even more important from a technician standpoint, resistance is quantifiable, relatively static and easily measured.
Anyone with a couple hours of training can master a multimeter and make dynamic measurements of voltage and current or a static measurement of resistance (simple DC circuits) In fluid however, pressure and flow are easily measured, resistance to flow however requires dynamically powering up the cicuit making flow or pressure measurements and deriving the flow resistance - more trouble than it's worth. (Technically multimeter resistance measurements are performed the same way only the power is supplied by a battery and the current involved is minute).
Still it seems to me there should be a 'resistance to flow' value somewhere in the fluid power engineering.
Any comments?
The analogy often used is the electromotive force (E) is analagous to pressure and current (I) is analagous to flow. There does not appear to be a analagous representation to resistance however. The closest thing to Ohm's law would be Poiseuille's law which while easy to understand, is not for the feint of heart in application.
I got to wondering why there is no identifiable flow resistance equivalent. After mulling over for a couple hours it struck me - there is no need for one. Fluid flow is dynamic with many variables, electricity is less so. Even more important from a technician standpoint, resistance is quantifiable, relatively static and easily measured.
Anyone with a couple hours of training can master a multimeter and make dynamic measurements of voltage and current or a static measurement of resistance (simple DC circuits) In fluid however, pressure and flow are easily measured, resistance to flow however requires dynamically powering up the cicuit making flow or pressure measurements and deriving the flow resistance - more trouble than it's worth. (Technically multimeter resistance measurements are performed the same way only the power is supplied by a battery and the current involved is minute).
Still it seems to me there should be a 'resistance to flow' value somewhere in the fluid power engineering.
Any comments?