A throttle valve to control the power of the engine, and a centrifugal governor, patented in 1788, to keep it from " running away " were very important.
12.
According to the manufacturer Hyundai, the vehicle the suspect was driving had a centrifugal governor, and was only capable of traveling 137 MPH ( 220 km / h ).
13.
He also patented the centrifugal governor and the parallel motion . the latter allowed the replacement of chains round an arch head and thus allowed its use as a rotative engine.
14.
The Saxomat consisted of two independent systems, the centrifugal clutch, and the rpms by centrifugal force, acting on spinning weights inside the clutch, similar to a centrifugal governor.
15.
Another kind of centrifugal governor consists of a pair of masses on a spindle inside a cylinder, the masses or the cylinder being coated with pads, somewhat like a drum brake.
16.
This pressure comes from a centrifugal governor proportioning valve driven from the gearbox ( on manual gearboxes-on automatic gearboxes the gearbox's internal governor pressure controls the centring pressure ).
17.
One of the most important uses of the conical pendulum was in the flyball governor ( centrifugal governor ) invented by James Watt in 1788 which regulated the speed of steam engines during the Steam Age in the 1800s.
18.
The automatic brake works by monitoring the speed using a centrifugal governor connected by gears to a large toothed gear mounted on the pinion axle next to the wheel ( i . e . it is not the pinion gear ).
19.
The spinning balls are the centrifugal governor, and as the machine runs slower the small wheel moves to the left, inserting the rod into the nearby roller and pushing it up to trigger the intake of fuel to fire the engine for one revolution.
20.
However, by 1783 the more economical Watt steam engine had been fully developed into a double-acting rotative type with a centrifugal governor, parallel motion and flywheel which meant that it could be used to directly drive the rotary machinery of a factory or mill.