enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hydrolock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrolock

    Small boats with outboard engines and personal water crafts (PWC) tend to ingest water simply because they run in and around it. During a rollover, or when a wave washes over the craft, its engine can hydrolock, though severe damage is rare due to the special air intakes and low rotating inertia of small marine engines.

  3. Hydrostatic test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrostatic_test

    Hydrostatic tests are conducted under the constraints of either the industry's or the customer's specifications, or may be required by law. The vessel is filled with a nearly incompressible liquid – usually water or oil – pressurised to test pressure, and examined for leaks or permanent changes in shape.

  4. Hydrostatic head - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrostatic_head

    Hydrostatic head is also used as a measure of the waterproofing of a fabric, commonly in clothing and equipment used for outdoor recreation.It is measured as a length (typically millimetres), representing the maximum height of a vertical column of water that could be placed on top of the fabric before water started seeping through the weave.

  5. Hydraulic head - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_head

    Available difference in hydraulic head across a hydroelectric dam, before head losses due to turbines, wall friction and turbulence Fluid flows from the tank at the top to the basin at the bottom under the pressure of the hydraulic head. Measuring hydraulic head in an artesian aquifer, where the water level is above the ground surface ...

  6. Hydrostatics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrostatics

    Some principles of hydrostatics have been known in an empirical and intuitive sense since antiquity, by the builders of boats, cisterns, aqueducts and fountains. Archimedes is credited with the discovery of Archimedes' Principle , which relates the buoyancy force on an object that is submerged in a fluid to the weight of fluid displaced by the ...

  7. Pressure head - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure_head

    Pressure head is a component of hydraulic head, in which it is combined with elevation head. When considering dynamic (flowing) systems, there is a third term needed: velocity head. Thus, the three terms of velocity head, elevation head, and pressure head appear in the head equation derived from the Bernoulli equation for incompressible fluids:

  8. Waterproofing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterproofing

    A water-resistant garment is similar, perhaps slightly more resistant to water but also not rated to resist a specific hydrostatic head. A garment described as waterproof will have a water-repellent coating, with the seams also taped to prevent water ingress there. Better waterproof garments have a membrane lining designed to keep water out but ...

  9. Automatic lubricator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automatic_lubricator

    Hydrostatic lubricator showing sight glasses with oil drops rising through the water. The one-piece lubricator body is a gunmetal casting and incorporates the condensing chamber, the oil reservoir and the sight-glasses fitted at the front and back of the body. Passages within the body interconnect these areas.