Question on positive displacement piston pumps

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steves1080
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This is a very simple question but I am struggling to grasp the answer. My question is in regards to a positive displacement piston pump.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/0/0d/Axial_piston_pump.svg/686px-Axial_piston_pump.svg.png

Say you are using this machine to pump hydraulic oil from one reservoir to another. How can this work? The reason I am confused is that I understand oil as being incompressible, so my question is how can the oil travel along the rotational path as the piston chamber reduces in volume. Essentially, how is the fluid compressing during operation?

Thanks
 
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You are right that the oil is (almost) imcompressible. The oil flows into the piston chamber as it increases in volume and out again as it decreases. The inlet and outlet "holes" in the picture you posted are actually semicircular slots and the piston moves along them as it rotates.

This might help.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2mh902AP7Yw
 
Thank you for the reply. That is my question though - if the fluid is incompressible, then how can it travel along the length of these slots if the volume of each piston chamber decreases along the path of travel?
 
Oh nevermind, I just had the obvious a-ha moment. It's just moving fluid, not compressing it. I see the slots now. Thanks