释义 |
Definition of flywheel in English: flywheelnounˈflʌɪwiːlˈflaɪˌ(h)wil A heavy revolving wheel in a machine which is used to increase the machine's momentum and thereby provide greater stability or a reserve of available power. Example sentencesExamples - A flywheel can supply power for only a short time, about one minute at most.
- Tiny cogs and flywheels rolled or flew into the corners of the room.
- This one has a 14-foot moldboard and 243 horsepower at the flywheel.
- Here a flywheel is revolved by a motor until a preset speed is reached.
- Lie, cheat, fix the rules, buy influence and ensure, always ensure, that a government's political outlook fits like a flywheel to your corporate machine.
- You aren't pushing any harder, but the flywheel is accelerating, its momentum building, its speed increasing.
- These could be created on the surface of brake rotors or on flywheels.
- They also make engine parts for automobiles; the broken part, such as a flywheel or cog, serves as the imprinted pattern for casting the solid core.
- He said the 41 ft long steam engine, with a flywheel 14 ft in diameter, was in very good condition.
- Add to that the rotational inertia of the flywheel and driveshaft, and you're well over 2,500 foot-pounds.
- On one occasion the doctor was driving down St Aubyn Street when the flywheel came off, cartwheeled away and was lost.
- In a momentary outage, the flywheel may eliminate the need for the batteries to take on the load at all.
- I'm not an advocate of external balancing, which puts a portion of the required counterweight on the flywheel and balancer.
- It chronicles which transmission plants use in-house pistons, oil pumps, and flywheels, as opposed to those purchased elsewhere.
- These are the ones with a fixed wheel and a heavy flywheel with loads of centrifugal force.
- The system uses a 120-pound flywheel that is powered by electricity; once power is cut, the flywheel continues to spin using its own momentum.
- Also, flywheels can increase vehicle efficiency in both battery powered and hybrid vehicles.
- Just as important as these fuels, however, are such innovative micropower technologies as fuel cells, turbines, and flywheels.
- In a 1,000-horsepower engine, 150 horsepower never reaches the flywheel.
- A lighter flywheel, electronic throttle and stiff driveshaft are designed to make response as quick as possible.
Definition of flywheel in US English: flywheelnounˈflīˌ(h)wēlˈflaɪˌ(h)wil A heavy revolving wheel in a machine that is used to increase the machine's momentum and thereby provide greater stability or a reserve of available power during interruptions in the delivery of power to the machine. Example sentencesExamples - In a momentary outage, the flywheel may eliminate the need for the batteries to take on the load at all.
- Lie, cheat, fix the rules, buy influence and ensure, always ensure, that a government's political outlook fits like a flywheel to your corporate machine.
- This one has a 14-foot moldboard and 243 horsepower at the flywheel.
- Just as important as these fuels, however, are such innovative micropower technologies as fuel cells, turbines, and flywheels.
- A lighter flywheel, electronic throttle and stiff driveshaft are designed to make response as quick as possible.
- It chronicles which transmission plants use in-house pistons, oil pumps, and flywheels, as opposed to those purchased elsewhere.
- In a 1,000-horsepower engine, 150 horsepower never reaches the flywheel.
- Tiny cogs and flywheels rolled or flew into the corners of the room.
- They also make engine parts for automobiles; the broken part, such as a flywheel or cog, serves as the imprinted pattern for casting the solid core.
- He said the 41 ft long steam engine, with a flywheel 14 ft in diameter, was in very good condition.
- I'm not an advocate of external balancing, which puts a portion of the required counterweight on the flywheel and balancer.
- On one occasion the doctor was driving down St Aubyn Street when the flywheel came off, cartwheeled away and was lost.
- The system uses a 120-pound flywheel that is powered by electricity; once power is cut, the flywheel continues to spin using its own momentum.
- Here a flywheel is revolved by a motor until a preset speed is reached.
- Also, flywheels can increase vehicle efficiency in both battery powered and hybrid vehicles.
- You aren't pushing any harder, but the flywheel is accelerating, its momentum building, its speed increasing.
- Add to that the rotational inertia of the flywheel and driveshaft, and you're well over 2,500 foot-pounds.
- These are the ones with a fixed wheel and a heavy flywheel with loads of centrifugal force.
- These could be created on the surface of brake rotors or on flywheels.
- A flywheel can supply power for only a short time, about one minute at most.
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