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Spur Gear Pump
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Rotary Pumps
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Fluid Power - Intro to Hydraulics, Pneumatics, and how it all works
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Herringbone Gear Pump

centers  (fig,  4-1).  External  pumps  may  use  spur gears, herringbone gears, or helical gears to move the fluid. In an internal gear pump, the teeth of one  gear  project  outward,  but  the  teeth  of  the other  gear  project  inward  toward  the  center  of  the pump (fig. 4-2, view A). Internal gear pumps may be  either  centered  or  off-centered. Spur Gear Pump The spur gear pump (fig. 4-1) consists of two meshed  gears  which  revolve  in  a  housing.  The drive gear in the illustration is turned by a drive shaft which is attached to the power source. The clearances  between  the  gear  teeth  as  they  mesh  and between  the  teeth  and  the  pump  housing  are  very small. The inlet port is connected to the fluid supply line,  and  the  outlet  port  is  connected  to  the pressure line. In figure 4-1 the drive gear is turning in  a  counterclockwise  direction,  and  the  driven (idle) gear is turning in a clockwise direction. As Figure 4-2.—Off-centered internal gear pump. the  teeth  pass  the  inlet  port,  liquid  is  trapped between the teeth and the housing. This liquid is carried around the housing to the outlet port. As the teeth mesh again, the liquid between the teeth is   pushed   into   the   outlet   port.   This   action produces a positive flow of liquid into the system. A shearpin or shear section is incorporated in the drive  shaft.  This  is  to  protect  the  power  source Figure  4-1.—Gear-type  rotary  pump. 4-3

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