Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
Distance 10 metres
Time 36.02 seconds
Speed 0.278 m/s
Speed 0.999 KPH
6 6
7 5.1
8 4.5
9 4
10 3.6
11 3.3
12 3
15 2.4
20 1.8
25 1.44
36 1
40 0.9
Power and torque required to drive a pump
LPM 70
Bar 350
RPM 2700
Log (R2/R1)
Log (C1/R1)-Log(C2/R2)
Restrictor 8.9 mm
INPUT
D1 Diameter of orifice 1
D2 Diameter of orifice 2
OUTPUT
Deq Diameter of equivalent orifices
search search
pressure drop flow
1.8 mm 0.5 mm
INPUT
1 [mm]
4 [mm]
OUTPUT
0.999 [mm]
Oil viscosity calculator
Viscosity @ 40°C 36 cSt
Viscosity @ 100°C 15 cSt
Pour point -30 °C
Flash point 209 °C
New temp 60 °C
Visc @ that temp 25.8 cSt
I thought you might find some use for the attached calculator. It's a tiny little spreadsheet with a huge calculation in one of the
±10%) the viscosity of an oil at any temperature. Simply put in the viscosity at 40°C and the viscosity at 100°C (to enable the sp
oil) and then put in the temperature at which you want to know the viscosity.
Most fluid datasheets will give you the viscosities at these two temperatures, but if you haven't got the 100°C viscosity then th
Let's imagine you have the viscosity values at 40°C and 0°C.
2) Guess a typical number for the viscosity at 100°C and put that into the spreadsheet.
3) Ask the spreadsheet to calculate the viscosity at 0°C - the number it gives you will be wrong because one of your viscosity v
4) Then use the "goal seek" function to make the newly calculated viscosity at 0°C equal the datasheet value by changing the c
5) You will then have a value for the 100°C viscosity that enables the spreadsheet to work properly.
The values of pour point temperature and flash point temperature are only used to stop the calculation from giving silly answe
and see. If you don't have these two values then just put in some dummy numbers: say -100°C for pour point and 800°C for th
huge calculation in one of the cells which allows you to estimate (to within
ty at 100°C (to enable the spreadsheet to calculate the characteristics of the
ot the 100°C viscosity then the 'work around' goes like this:
heet value by changing the cell that contains the 100°C guess.
y.
lation from giving silly answers for viscosity at extremes of temperature - try it
pour point and 800°C for the flash point.