Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Gates Poly Chain Belts Power to NHRA Season Titles

Gates Corporation is proud to have sponsored Don Schumacher Racing and John Force Racing in the past 2009 NHRA season. 

Tony Schumacher (Don Schumacher Racing) won the NHRA Top Fuel championship.  The championship is Tony's 6th - no driver has ever before won 6 Top Fuel championships.

Robert Hight (John Force Racing) won the NHRA Funny Car championship.

Gates Poly Chain belts are used to drive the superchargers on both the top fuel and funny cars, driving from the crankshaft to the supercharger (blower).

Poly Chain Belt on Supercharger Application

The supercharger NHRA racing application is incredibly harsh.  Extremely rapid acceleration and deceleration, torque pulses, torque reversals,  and very heavy shock loading make the application very tough for any belt.  The Gates Poly Chain belt handles the conditions and gets the cars down the track, providing the power transmission to drive the supercharger and pump up the car's HP.

Did you know that the same belt technology, Poly Chain GT Carbon, is a standard industrial power transmission product from Gates?  You can use the proven toughness and durability of Poly Chain GT Carbon on your challenging industrial applications - if it can handle the NHRA Top Fuel and Funny Car demands, it can handle your requirements!

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

So What is a Belt?

It may seem like a very basic question....what is a belt?  Where better to start with the first post than with the most elementary of questions?

In the most basic of terms, a belt (in the power transmission sense) is a flexible component that links two or more shafts together and transmits power and motion from one shaft to the other(s).

Belts can transmit power across a distance between shafts.  Belt drives can increase or decrease the speed at a driven shaft or set of shafts.  Belt drives can multiply the torque available at the driven shaft.

There are two broad categories for belts:  Synchronous belts and V-belts. 

Synchronous belts have teeth on the belt - you are most likely familiar with the timing belt on your car - which is a synchronous belt.

V-belts have a V shape (duh), and wedge into V shaped grooves in the pulleys (which are called "sheaves" in the industry).




That's all for this post....we'll grow and develop content as subject matter and reader interest dictates. 

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