history of gear

2008-05-05 3:13 am
history of gear in english

回答 (1)

2008-05-05 9:13 am
✔ 最佳答案
Gears are about as old as any of the machinery of mankind. The oldest machine is the potter's wheel. At first time over 3000 years ago primitive gears first meshed with each other and transmitted rotary motion.

In the fourth century, BC Aristole wrote about wheels using friction between smooth surfaces to transmit motion. The earliest gears were of wooden and had teeth of really engaging pins. The early Greeks made use of metal gears with wedge shaped teeth. The Romans made considerable use of gears in their mills. In middle age stone gears were used in Sweden.

Water wheels were used to convert energy of moving water into energy that would power machines. Wooden gears connected water wheels to machines that would grind wheat and hammer metals.

Wooden gears were used all over the world by the eighteenth century. They were used in gristmills, textile mills and steel mills. The use of electric motors and steam engines created a considerable need of the gears. Few years later gears were widely used in all parts of the world in a wide number of industries. Gears were also preeminent for scientists who required more accurate clocks and using gears they made clocks with more accuracy, one of them was pendulum clock.

The industrial revolution in Britain in the eighteen-century saw an explosion in the use of metal gearing. A science of gear design and manufacture rapidly developed through the nineteenth century.

Today, the most significant new gear developments are in the area of materials. Modern metallurgy has greatly increased the useful life of industry and automotive gears. Along with this consumer electronics have driven plastic gearing to new levels of lubricant free reliability and quiet operation. Gears are also used in many machines that we use in our homes. The washing machines and electric drills are some of the machines that have gears.


收錄日期: 2021-04-21 14:22:43
原文連結 [永久失效]:
https://hk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080504000051KK02679

檢視 Wayback Machine 備份