Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,711 pages of information and 247,105 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Coil Clutch and Pulley Co: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "thumb| 1897. ==See Also== <what-links-here/> ==Sources of Information== <references/> {{DEFAULTSORT:}} Category: Town - Slough "
 
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[[image:Im1897Ev63-p605.jpg|thumb| 1897. ]]
[[image:Im1897Ev63-p605.jpg|thumb| 1897. ]]
of Gotha Works, Slough


1897 'IT is well known that if a rope be made fast at one
end, and be wound three or four times around a
rotating shaft, it makes a most effectual brake, provided the shaft be running in the direction to tighten
the convolutions. A slight pull applied to the tail of
the rope is multiplied several times by each turn,
until a very intense pressure is attained. It is on
this phenomenon that Lindsay's clutch, manufactured
by the Coil Clutch and Pulley Company, of Gotha
Works, Slough, is founded. For the rope coil there
is substituted, however, a helix of square steel, so
arranged that the tail end may be made to grip or
release the rotating shaft at will. If one end of such
a helix be attached to a pulley, and the other end be
made to grasp the shaft, motion can be conveyed from
the one to the other by reason of the frictional grip of
the helix on the shaft. If the parts be properly proportioned it is possible to throw such a clutch into
gear absolutely without shock, sufficient slip taking
place to render the start quite easy, while at the
same time it is absolutely certain. ...'<ref>[[Engineering 1897/05/07]]</ref>



Revision as of 16:08, 17 January 2025

1897.

of Gotha Works, Slough

1897 'IT is well known that if a rope be made fast at one end, and be wound three or four times around a rotating shaft, it makes a most effectual brake, provided the shaft be running in the direction to tighten the convolutions. A slight pull applied to the tail of the rope is multiplied several times by each turn, until a very intense pressure is attained. It is on this phenomenon that Lindsay's clutch, manufactured by the Coil Clutch and Pulley Company, of Gotha Works, Slough, is founded. For the rope coil there is substituted, however, a helix of square steel, so arranged that the tail end may be made to grip or release the rotating shaft at will. If one end of such a helix be attached to a pulley, and the other end be made to grasp the shaft, motion can be conveyed from the one to the other by reason of the frictional grip of the helix on the shaft. If the parts be properly proportioned it is possible to throw such a clutch into gear absolutely without shock, sufficient slip taking place to render the start quite easy, while at the same time it is absolutely certain. ...'[1]


See Also

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Sources of Information