Lewing
Jan 22, 2010, 10:38 AM
Pascal formulated the law in the 17th century - pressure exerted in a fluid acts equally in all directions.The apparatus is two vertical cylinders joined together with a fluid inside. The fluid moves freely from one cylinder to the other. The cylinders are unequal - one has an area of 1 sq.in. and the other 5 sq.in.. Pistons are placed in the cylinders and with 500lb on the larger and 100lb on the smaller there is balance. The pressure is 100psi.
If the 500lb weight is pushed down 2 ins, the smaller weight is raised 10 ins (2 x5), and vise- versa - this is mechanical gain - the basis of hydraulic jacks etc.
What is not clear from the many diagrams I have seen is if there was (say) no friction present would the 500lb weight rise back and assume its former balance. Again with no friction would the addition of another 500lbs raise the small weight and keep it there. Are we balancing the weight with the weight of the volume of the fluid.
If the 500lb weight is pushed down 2 ins, the smaller weight is raised 10 ins (2 x5), and vise- versa - this is mechanical gain - the basis of hydraulic jacks etc.
What is not clear from the many diagrams I have seen is if there was (say) no friction present would the 500lb weight rise back and assume its former balance. Again with no friction would the addition of another 500lbs raise the small weight and keep it there. Are we balancing the weight with the weight of the volume of the fluid.