Weird Harold wrote:Max wrote:While I am not a mechanical engineer, I can visualize a high volume turbine speed air compressor without fancy gearing. I have much more trouble getting the high speed of a steam turbine to run the low speed pumps of a hydraulic system without some pretty fancy gearing...
A high-RPM turbine driving a high-RPM pump can provide high pressure hydraulic fluid to a low-RPM motor -- or a very slow-moving actuator. The turbine + hydraulic pump is completely independent from the motors and actuators that use the pressure. In that respect, there is little difference between hydraulic and pneumatic systems. The main difference is in the compressibility of the working fluid.
IIRC the speeds for the various turbines and pumps is related to the densities of the media so a steam==>liquid connection would still require a heavy duty speed changing gear train where a steam==>air set would not. And the part about the actuators was the point I was making against pneumatic speeds being a problem. You are just reinforcing my point.
And the compressability point goes in favor of pneumatic reservoirs. A high pressure air reserve would probably be much more compact and easier to build than a similar capacity fluid accumulator. That would give a boat with such a reserve a sprint capability that could provide an (admittedly limited) tactical advantage.