PRINCIPLES AND APPLICATIONS OF LUBRICATION WITH SOLIDS
Abstract
LONG before man learnt to make fire by the friction of wood, he experienced the burden of friction in dragging home his kill. Perhaps it is not too fanciful to suppose that the torn sides of his beast gave the first solid lubricant. Blood and mutton fat were seriously recommended as lubricants for church bell trunnions as recently as the 17th century. Indoed we still reckon fatty acids the best of all boundary lubricants. The range of man's activities has increased enormously in the present century, and particularly in the last few decades. Men have circled the earth in space; a space ship is on its way to examine another planet; terrestrial man is boring to the bottom of the earth's crust; others have descended to the depths of the ocean, and oven established a home on the floor of the Mediterranean, Speeds have increased by factors of thousands, temperatures range from near absolute zero to thousands of degrees; and a new environment of high‐intensity nuclear radiation has been created. Still, objects must move over and along each other in these exotic conditions; and to a large extent solid lubricants can provide the answer to the frictional problems.
Citation
BRAITHWAITE, E.R. and ROWE, G.W. (1963), "PRINCIPLES AND APPLICATIONS OF LUBRICATION WITH SOLIDS", Industrial Lubrication and Tribology, Vol. 15 No. 3, pp. 92-111. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb052720
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1963, MCB UP Limited