Claims
- 1. A pressure fluid motor comprising a housing of circular cross-section having a smooth, non-channeled, right-cylindrical, inner surface; a rotor concentric with said housing and having a roughened, non-channeled, right-cylindrical, outer surface, said rotor and said housing being complementary in shape and having a relatively-small, uniform clearance throughout the axial extent of said rotor and said housing; a jet orifice for introducing a pressure fluid jet into the space between said housing and said rotor; and, outlet means for venting spent pressure fluid, said jet orifice having its outermost surface tangential to the smooth, non-channeled, right-cylindrical, inner surface of said housing and a diameter greater than the clearance between said housing and said rotor, whereby a portion of said jet is jetted directly and tangentially into the space between said rotor and said housing and the balance of the jet impinges on the roughened, non-channeled, right-cylindrical surface of said rotor and is deflected by said rotor into the space between said rotor and said housing so that the jet, which initially has a diameter larger than the spacing between said housing and said rotor, is flattened to a thickness corresponding to the spacing between said housing and said rotor and fans out over the smooth, unchanneled, right-cylindrical, inner surfaces of said housing and said rotor in a free, unchanneled, fan-shaped stream, the clearance between said housing and said rotor being such that said stream imparts energy to said rotor by the drag of said stream on the roughened surface thereof, and by the lack of drag on the smooth, unchanneled, right-cylindrical, inner surface of said housing, and by its freedom for both circumferential and axial expansion.
- 2. The motor of claim 1, in which the roughened surface of said rotor is a knurled surface.
- 3. The motor of claim 1, in which the roughened surface comprises a plurality of adjacent, parallel axial grooves.
- 4. The motor of claim 1, in which the roughened surface comprises a multiplicity of adjacent unconnected depressions.
- 5. The motor of claim 1, in which the housing rotor and the housing are relatively long, as compared with the diameter of the rotor.
- 6. The motor of claim 5, in which the jet orifice is located at a point remote from the outlet means, whereby the jet fluid is constrained to flow in a helical path along the smooth, unchanneled, right-cylindrical, inner surface of the housing from the jet orifice to the outlet means.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 749,612, filed Dec. 10, 1976, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
293457 |
Feb 1932 |
ITX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
IBM Technical Disclosure Bulletin, vol. 9, No. 2, Jul. 1966. |
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
749612 |
Dec 1976 |
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