Engineering:Groove (engineering)
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Short description: Long and narrow indentation in a part/material, usually for other parts to fit into
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In manufacturing or mechanical engineering a groove is a long and narrow indentation built into a material, generally for the purpose of allowing another material or part to move within the groove and be guided by it. Examples include:
- A canal cut in a hard material, usually metal. This canal can be round, oval or an arc in order to receive another component such as a boss, a tongue or a gasket. It can also be on the circumference of a dowel, a bolt, an axle or on the outside or inside of a tube or pipe etc. This canal may receive a circlip, an o-ring, or a gasket.
- A depression on the entire circumference of a cast or machined wheel, a pulley or sheave. This depression may receive a cable, a rope or a belt.
- A longitudinal channel formed in a hot rolled rail profile such as a grooved rail. This groove is for the flange on a train wheel.
Grooves were used by ancient Roman engineers to survey land.[1]
See also
- Fluting (architecture)
- Gland (engineering)
- Glass run channel
- Groove (joinery)
- Grooved rail
- Labyrinth seal
- Tongue and groove
- Tread
References
- ↑ Garrison, Ervan G. (2018-12-19) (in en). History of Engineering and Technology: Artful Methods. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-44047-9. https://books.google.com/books?id=3XuCDwAAQBAJ&dq=History+of+Roman+bridges&pg=PT113.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groove (engineering).
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