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Farm Machinery
Machinery
Hydraulic press
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<blockquote data-quote="clbarclay" data-source="post: 9012420" data-attributes="member: 6671"><p>The less flex, the safer it is. Everything is elastic to some extent. It it is so stiff it hardly compresses at all then it stores next tono energy. It it is super elastic like air the compressed to the same force then it can contain the phenomenal amount of energy.</p><p></p><p>Supporting odd shaped items in a press is where a lot of the flex can come from, rather than the frame of the press.</p><p></p><p>For pressing bushes, I would ideal turn up tooling the right size for the size of bush than trying to sit a suspension arm on a load of blocks. A working lathe is on my wishlist alongside a hydraulic press.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="clbarclay, post: 9012420, member: 6671"] The less flex, the safer it is. Everything is elastic to some extent. It it is so stiff it hardly compresses at all then it stores next tono energy. It it is super elastic like air the compressed to the same force then it can contain the phenomenal amount of energy. Supporting odd shaped items in a press is where a lot of the flex can come from, rather than the frame of the press. For pressing bushes, I would ideal turn up tooling the right size for the size of bush than trying to sit a suspension arm on a load of blocks. A working lathe is on my wishlist alongside a hydraulic press. [/QUOTE]
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