Dano61 said:
How do you increase torque in gerotor design other than increasing flow.
You might be referring to a gerotor pump, or a gerotor motor.
I assume it is a motor. Correct me if I am wrong.
You need to specify whether the torque is now limited by movement of the physical load, or by the available hydraulic pressure. What load is being driven? And how is the speed being regulated?
The rate of fluid flow sets the speed of a gerotor motor. Fluid flow rate does not set the torque, unless turning the load at increased speed requires higher torque, and a greater fluid pressure is available.
Dano61 said:
So length will not affect torque in a Gerotor?
If you double the length of a gerotor motor, you will double the rotor area and so double the torque for the same fluid pressure. To maintain the same speed, you will then need double the volume of fluid flowing.
That is equivalent to joining two motor shafts, while supplying the same pressure fluid to the two motors in parallel, an arrangement that will require twice the volume of fluid flow.
The torque available from a gerotor motor is proportional to the fluid pressure across that motor.
Dano61 said:
What about running 2 or 3 in series?
If the same fluid flows in series through several gerotor motors, each motor will develop less torque, since the motors will share the total pressure available.
Connecting motors in series will not increase torque. Series connection of several motors is expensive and pointless, since it will be equivalent to one motor only.