Science, asked by patelhetrameshbhai, 1 month ago

why do we calculate different mean diameters?​

Answers

Answered by sahidulislam8276
4

ANSWER:-

Mean diameter is used to calculate several formulas which are necessary to your design such as index and wire length for manufacturing reasons, or spring rate to know your spring’s force and working loads.

Coil spring mean diameter can be measured many ways. It is like your spring’s outer and inner diameters except, instead of measuring from the outside of the coil or the inside of the coil, you will measure from in between these spring dimensions; from the center of the coil’s wire. The formula and diagram to calculate coil spring mean diameter are the following.

To calculate mean diameter you must simply either subtract one wire diameter from the outer diameter or add one wire diameter to the inner diameter.

Coil Spring Mean Diameter Formula

Mean Diameter = Outer Diameter – Wire Diameter

Mean Diameter = Inner DIameter + Wire Diameter

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Answered by steffiaspinno
0

To calculate mean diameter you must simply either subtract one wire diameter from the outer diameter or add one wire diameter to the inner diameter.

Explanation:

Mean particle sizes can be used to characterise and simulate the physical, chemical, and physiological aspects of dispersed phase products and materials. Different notation methods exist for these mean diameters, which may lead to a lot of misunderstanding. This is also true of their nomenclature. The Moment-Ratio definition system is introduced in this article, while the ISO definition system is briefly evaluated. The ISO system looks to have a number of flaws. Summation (M-R system) and Integration (ISO system) across the histogram intervals can be used to determine mean particle diameters from histograms of size distributions.

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