sprocket feed - meaning and definition. What is sprocket feed
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What (who) is sprocket feed - definition

TOOTHED WHEEL OR COG
Drive sprocket; Sprockets; Sprocket wheels; Sprocket-wheel
  • A sprocket and [[roller chain]]
  • Leclerc]]'' [[battle tank]], 2006)
  • Moving picture mechanism from 1914.  The sprocket wheels a, b, and c engage and transport the film.  a and b move with uniform velocity and c indexes each frame of the film into place for projection.
  • 16 tooth sprocket. Do = Sprocket diameter. Dp = Pitch diameter

sprocket feed      
<printer> (Or "tractor feed", "pin feed") A method some printers use to move paper by rotating wheels with pins or studs (tractors) that engage holes along the sides of the (usually fanfold) paper. A sprocket feed printer does not slip unless the paper jams, but cannot feed standard typing paper or work with a sheet feeder like friction feed. Some paper for sprocket feed printers has the edge strips with the holes in detachable from the rest of the paper. These strips are known as chad (and other names). (1997-06-29)
Feed (Facebook)         
  • Facebook's Feed for mobile devices
FEATURE OF THE SOCIAL NETWORK FACEBOOK
News Feed (Facebook); Facebook News Feed; Facebook newsfeed; Facebook Newsfeed; Facebook news feed; Draft:News Feed; Facebook News; News Feed
Facebook's Feed, formerly known as the News Feed, is a web feed feature for the social network. The feed is the primary system through which users are exposed to content posted on the network.
Push feed and controlled feed         
  • [[Krag–Jørgensen]] bolt with push feed.
TWO COMMON MECHANISMS ON FIREARMS DESCRIBING HOW THE CARTRIDGE IS FED INTO AND EXTRACTED FROM THE CHAMBER
Controlled feed; Push feed; Controlled round feed
Push feed and controlled feed (or controlled round feed) are two main types of mechanisms used in firearms to describe how the bolt drives the cartridge into the chamber and extracts the spent casing after firing.

Wikipedia

Sprocket

A sprocket, sprocket-wheel or chainwheel is a profiled wheel with teeth that mesh with a chain, track or other perforated or indented material. The name 'sprocket' applies generally to any wheel upon which radial projections engage a chain passing over it. It is distinguished from a gear in that sprockets are never meshed together directly, and differs from a pulley in that sprockets have teeth and pulleys are smooth except for timing pulleys used with toothed belts.

Sprockets are used in bicycles, motorcycles, tracked vehicles, and other machinery either to transmit rotary motion between two shafts where gears are unsuitable or to impart linear motion to a track, tape etc. Perhaps the most common form of sprocket may be found in the bicycle, in which the pedal shaft carries a large sprocket-wheel, which drives a chain, which, in turn, drives a small sprocket on the axle of the rear wheel. Early automobiles were also largely driven by sprocket and chain mechanism, a practice largely copied from bicycles.

Sprockets are of various designs, a maximum of efficiency being claimed for each by its originator. Sprockets typically do not have a flange. Some sprockets used with timing belts have flanges to keep the timing belt centered. Sprockets and chains are also used for power transmission from one shaft to another where slippage is not admissible, sprocket chains being used instead of belts or ropes and sprocket-wheels instead of pulleys. They can be run at high speed and some forms of chain are so constructed as to be noiseless even at high speed.