bimetallic strip - перевод на русский
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bimetallic strip - перевод на русский

STRIP USED TO CONVERT A TEMPERATURE CHANGE INTO MECHANICAL DISPLACEMENT
Bi-metalic; Bi-metal strip; Bi-metalic strip; Bimetalic; Bimetal strip; Bimetalic strip; Bimetalic strips; Bi-metallic strip; Bimetallic metal strip
  • A bimetallic coil from a thermometer reacts to the heat from a lighter, by uncoiling and then coiling back up when the lighter is removed.
  • Diagram of a bimetallic strip showing how the difference in thermal expansion in the two metals leads to a much larger sideways displacement of the strip
  • John Harrison's Memorial in Westminster Abbey, London

bimetallic strip         
биметаллическая пластинка
bimetallic         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Bimetallic (disambiguation); Bi-metallic

[baimi'tælik]

синоним

bimetal

прилагательное

общая лексика

биметаллический

bimetallic         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Bimetallic (disambiguation); Bi-metallic
bimetallic adj. биметаллический

Определение

Bimetallic
·adj Of or relating to, or using, a double metallic standard (as gold and silver) for a system of coins or currency.
II. Bimetallic ·add. ·adj Composed of two different metals; formed of two parts, each of a different metal; as, bimetallic wire; bimetallic thermometer, ·etc.

Википедия

Bimetallic strip

A bimetallic strip is used to convert a temperature change into mechanical displacement. The strip consists of two strips of different metals which expand at different rates as they are heated. The different expansions force the flat strip to bend one way if heated, and in the opposite direction if cooled below its initial temperature. The metal with the higher coefficient of thermal expansion is on the outer side of the curve when the strip is heated and on the inner side when cooled.

The invention of the bimetallic strip is generally credited to John Harrison, an eighteenth-century clockmaker who made it for his third marine chronometer (H3) of 1759 to compensate for temperature-induced changes in the balance spring. Harrison's invention is recognized in the memorial to him in Westminster Abbey, England.

This effect is used in a range of mechanical and electrical devices.