Designing a Fluid-Powered Oscillation Mechanism for Rotating Water Outlet Lines

  • Thread starter Thread starter vbsaltydog
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Fluid Oscillation
AI Thread Summary
A user seeks to design a mechanism that rotates a water outlet line 180 degrees using water pressure as the driving force. Suggestions include utilizing a butterfly valve under tension, which would allow the outlet tube to rotate as pressure builds. The rotation would reverse once the butterfly valve is fully open, with tension overcoming the water pressure. The application involves a 3/4" PVC setup pushing approximately 400 gallons per hour, requiring smooth oscillation. Researching existing lawn sprinkler mechanics may provide valuable insights for modifying or reverse engineering a suitable design.
vbsaltydog
Messages
14
Reaction score
0
I would like to rotate a water outlet line 180 degrees using the water pressure as the force driving the rotation. Does anyone know of any designs for an application like this?

Perhaps some type of a butterfly valve under tension to one side? As the pressure builds behind the closed butterfly, it opens the butterfly by rotating the outlet tube around the fixed butterfly valve. Then the rotation is reversed when the butterfly is fully open and the tension on the butterfly overpowers the water pressure?

Thanks for any ideas.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
a lawn sprinkler
 
Great idea. Do you know the mechanism design or an example. This is going to be for a 3/4" pvc pushing about 400 gph and the oscillation needs to be smooth.

Thanks for the great place to start researching.
 
howstuffworks explained the lawn sprinkler mechanics and I think I can modify one for my needs or reverse engineer it to build something given my water pressure and other variables.

Thanks again.
 
Thread 'Turbocharging carbureted petrol 2 stroke engines'
Hi everyone, online I ve seen some images about 2 stroke carbureted turbo (motorcycle derivation engine). Now.. In the past in this forum some members spoke about turbocharging 2 stroke but not in sufficient detail. The intake and the exhaust are open at the same time and there are no valves like a 4 stroke. But if you search online you can find carbureted 2stroke turbo sled or the Am6 turbo. The question is: Is really possible turbocharge a 2 stroke carburated(NOT EFI)petrol engine and...
Here's a video by “driving 4 answers” who seems to me to be well versed on the details of Internal Combustion engines. The video does cover something that's a bit shrouded in 'conspiracy theory', and he touches on that, but of course for phys.org, I'm only interested in the actual science involved. He analyzes the claim of achieving 100 mpg with a 427 cubic inch V8 1970 Ford Galaxy in 1977. Only the fuel supply system was modified. I was surprised that he feels the claim could have been...
Back
Top