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Fundamentals of Fluid Power Control

Fundamentals of Fluid Power Control

Fundamentals of Fluid Power Control

John Watton, Cardiff University
March 2014
Available
Paperback
9781107670181

    This exciting new reference text is concerned with fluid power control. It is an ideal reference for the practicing engineer and a textbook for advanced courses in fluid power control. In applications in which large forces and/or torques are required, often with a fast response time, oil-hydraulic control systems are essential. They excel in environmentally difficult applications because the drive part can be designed with no electrical components and they almost always have a more competitive power/weight ratio compared to electrically actuated systems. Fluid power systems have the capability to control several parameters, such as pressure, speed, position, and so on, to a high degree of accuracy at high power levels. In practice there are many exciting challenges facing the fluid power engineer, who now must preferably have a broad skill set.

    • Carefully introduces fluid power concepts and theory before discussing control applications
    • Includes coverage of computer modelling and experimental results
    • Final chapter contains five robust case studies for student practice

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Watton has extensive experience in this field in both industry and academia..highly recommended" - CHOICE

    See more reviews

    Product details

    March 2014
    Paperback
    9781107670181
    510 pages
    254 × 178 × 26 mm
    0.88kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction, applications and basic concepts
    • 2. An introduction to fluid properties
    • 3. Steady state characteristics of circuit components
    • 4. Steady state performance of drive systems
    • 5. System dynamics
    • 6. Control systems
    • 7. Some case studies.
      Author
    • John Watton , Cardiff University

      Professor John Watton began his career in industry working on the design of heat exchangers. He later entered University College Cardiff to study mechanical engineering. On completion of his PhD in fluidic control in 1969 he returned to industry as a Senior Systems Engineer working on the electrohydraulic control of guided pipe laying vehicles with Hudswell Badger Ltd, Leeds. Following a period as a Senior Lecturer in Systems Engineering and Control at Huddersfield Polytechnic, he joined Cardiff University as a Lecturer in Mechanical Engineering in 1979. He was awarded his DSc (University of Wales) for contributions to fluid power in 1996. He also received the IMechE Bramah Medal in 2000 and a special award from the Japanese Fluid Power Society in 2005, both for outstanding contributions in fluid power. He was elected as a Fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1997 and a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in 2007.