• This forum is the machine-generated translation of www.cad3d.it/forum1 - the Italian design community. Several terms are not translated correctly.

does that mean anything to you?

  • Thread starter Thread starter MauroTC
  • Start date Start date

MauroTC

Guest
Hello.
Does anyone know what the term "trimming" applied to rollers or wheels means?

Specifically: I have a set design of an oven that rotates around your axis during treatment. This has an inclination of 1.5%. Looking at the axieme (the only design I have), I can't explain what prevents the oven from slipping into the slope, that is what keeps it in its place. asking who could know something (because he knew a similar oven, which adopts the same system), he replied that he did not know well how, but someone else had explained to him: "remains stable in a balance condition, by means of the trimming applied to the rollers on which the furnace rolls"; then did not deepen beyond.

Boh... I searched on the internet, but I found nothing applicable. will be a jargon of a few? :confused:
 
Turning I found this:

trimming: tight bonding made with multiple rope or chain steps.
 
Turning I found this:

trimming: tight bonding made with multiple rope or chain steps.
Yes, thank you, it's a little what I found here and there on the internet... a couple of sailor terms.
but I can't bring him back in my field. . .

it seemed (referring to that succinct explanation, accompanied by a gesture of the hands) as it was a regulation to be made to the wheels, on which the rolling rings rest, in contrast to the slipping of the furnace in the direction of the inclination.

Bah. .
 
from my parts in dialect "trincare" means "bere" term inherited most likely from the German verb trinken.

bho perhaps they wanted to say that he was spinning like a drunk:
 
from good vein, I confirm that "trincare" comes from trinken, German!
as a sailor, I confirm that the cutting is a type of ligature, complex, used in ancient sailing ships for fixing and/or repairs.
the use of this term in the industrial furnaces I miss.. .
 
Hello.
Does anyone know what the term "trimming" applied to rollers or wheels means?

Specifically: I have a set design of an oven that rotates around your axis during treatment. This has an inclination of 1.5%. Looking at the axieme (the only design I have), I can't explain what prevents the oven from slipping into the slope, that is what keeps it in its place. asking who could know something (because he knew a similar oven, which adopts the same system), he replied that he did not know well how, but someone else had explained to him: "remains stable in a balance condition, by means of the trimming applied to the rollers on which the furnace rolls"; then did not deepen beyond.

Boh... I searched on the internet, but I found nothing applicable. will be a jargon of a few? :confused:
I've never heard of it... I believe, from what you write and from what is the definition that it is a roller binding system to prevent scrolling. . .
as a rope passage on the cross section of the rollers that prevents (for friction) slipping in axial direction... I'm thinking about something else. :? ?
 
Hello.
Does anyone know what the term "trimming" applied to rollers or wheels means?

Specifically: I have a set design of an oven that rotates around your axis during treatment. This has an inclination of 1.5%. Looking at the axieme (the only design I have), I can't explain what prevents the oven from slipping into the slope, that is what keeps it in its place. asking who could know something (because he knew a similar oven, which adopts the same system), he replied that he did not know well how, but someone else had explained to him: "remains stable in a balance condition, by means of the trimming applied to the rollers on which the furnace rolls"; then did not deepen beyond.

Boh... I searched on the internet, but I found nothing applicable. will be a jargon of a few? :confused:
the cutting is used in all rotary furnaces on rollers having an inclination. serve x position the support rollers in a certain inclination x compensate for the push of the oven and keep it in balance during rotation. is a Carthonian work and need for experience
 
I happened to hear the verb "trincare" as a synonym to tighten, in the case of a screw, or tend, in the case of a rope, or tighten, in the case of a knot.
probably by analogy with seawater trimming.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
44,997
Messages
339,767
Members
4
Latest member
ibt

Members online

No members online now.
ciao
Back
Top