Please consider supporting my work by buying me a coffee at www.buymeacoffee.com/francisjonesa Helps me buy bits and pieces to make these videos! Very many thanks, F-J
Excellent practical model demonstration of a Lobe Positive Displacement Pump, amazed how well you made it work with solid balls, The smoke demonstration worked better than I thought it would. All the important points of a lobe pump covered. Thank you for all the time you spent making this model and the video. Tony.
Thanks again Tony. If I had put a motor on it (it would probably have jammed!) I think the smoke demo would be less 'pulsed' due to the way I was turning the gears by hand. Bit of fun but not a build I want to repeat in the near future!
I had lots of ideas after school and ended up doing a form of Production Engineering. I then did a post graduate course so I could be qualified to teach physics. All good fun and none of this ever narrowed down the opportunities that I managed to get! Do a general engineering course and you can always specialise later unless you are really keen to do a specific one such as Mechanical or Electrical or Electronic, or Civil for example. All good courses lead to opportunities, many of which you can never plan for!
Please consider supporting my work by buying me a coffee at
www.buymeacoffee.com/francisjonesa
Helps me buy bits and pieces to make these videos!
Very many thanks, F-J
Excellent practical model demonstration of a Lobe Positive Displacement Pump, amazed how well you made it work with solid balls, The smoke demonstration worked better than I thought it would. All the important points of a lobe pump covered. Thank you for all the time you spent making this model and the video. Tony.
Thanks again Tony. If I had put a motor on it (it would probably have jammed!) I think the smoke demo would be less 'pulsed' due to the way I was turning the gears by hand. Bit of fun but not a build I want to repeat in the near future!
Pretty nice R2R ☝️
Great! Glad you liked it!
Which engineering did you do
Secondly what is the best one by your reference
I had lots of ideas after school and ended up doing a form of Production Engineering. I then did a post graduate course so I could be qualified to teach physics. All good fun and none of this ever narrowed down the opportunities that I managed to get! Do a general engineering course and you can always specialise later unless you are really keen to do a specific one such as Mechanical or Electrical or Electronic, or Civil for example. All good courses lead to opportunities, many of which you can never plan for!