OFR-130(2)-85 High Reliability Miner Hydraulic System - Volume I - Part II - Section III - G Valves - Introduction

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 246
- File Size:
- 45325 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1983
Abstract
Operator efficiency and control capability along with cost effectiveness have been the quest of mining, industrial, and mobile hydraulic engineers for years. The majority of the functions in present day fluid power systems are controlled by on/off control valves. They are inexpensive and provide easy installation and operation, but they lack the quality of fine control of load flow or what is sometimes known as "feathering the load". An alternate approach to obtaining this capability is the use of electro-hydraulic servo-valves, but their implementation into a system is complex, and they are expensive. As a result, electrohydraulic systems are still used primarily in the aerospace industry. Of late, a compromise seems to have evolved between the on/ off control systems and the servo-technology is the so-called proportional flow control valves. A proportional flow control valve meters fluid to the load in proportion to the input command from the operator. In principle, it is similar to a conventional flow control valve and is tailored to meet the control requirements from the load point of view. The hydraulic system using this valve usually works in an open-loop mode with the operator closing the loop. Incorporating load-sensing mechanisms and adoption of electrical/electronic signalling into the valve make it the "ideal valve" which designers have been looking for from a techno-economic point of view.
Citation
APA: (1983) OFR-130(2)-85 High Reliability Miner Hydraulic System - Volume I - Part II - Section III - G Valves - Introduction
MLA: OFR-130(2)-85 High Reliability Miner Hydraulic System - Volume I - Part II - Section III - G Valves - Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1983.