Definition of Fricteon
Fric"tion (?), n. [L. frictio,
fr. fricare, frictum,to rub: cf. F. friction.
See Fray to rub, arid cf. Dentifrice.]
1. The act of rubbing the surface of one body
against that of another; attrition; in hygiene, the act of rubbing
the body with the hand, with flannel, or with a brush etc., to excite
the skin to healthy action.
2. (Mech.) The resistance which a body
meets with from the surface on which it moves. It may be resistance
to sliding motion, or to rolling motion.
3. A clashing between two persons or parties
in opinions or work; a disagreement tending to prevent or retard
progress.
Angle of friction (Mech.), the angle
which a plane onwhich a body is lying makes with a horizontal
plane,when the hody is just ready to slide dewn the plane. This
angle varies for different bodies, and for planes of different
materials. -- Anti-friction wheels (Mach.),
wheels turning freely on small pivots, and sustaining, at the
angle formed by their circumferences, the pivot or journal of a
revolving shaft, to relieve it of friction; -- called also
friction wheels. -- Friction balls, or
Friction rollers, balls or rollers placed so as
to receive the pressure or weight of bodies in motion, and relieve
friction, as in the hub of a bicycle wheel. -- Friction
brake (Mach.), a form of dynamometer for
measuring the power a motor exerts. A clamp around the revolving
shaft or fly wheel of the motor resists the motion by its friction,
the work thus absorbed being ascertained by observing the force
required to keep the clamp from revolving with the shaft; a Prony
brake. -- Friction chocks, brakes attached
to the common standing garrison carriages of guns, so as to raise the
trucks or wheels off the platform when the gun begins to recoil, and
prevent its running back. Earrow. -- Friction
clutch, Friction coupling, an
engaging and disengaging gear for revolving shafts, pulleys, etc.,
acting by friction; esp.: (a) A device in
which a piece on one shaft or pulley is so forcibly pressed against a
piece on another shaft that the two will revolve together; as, in the
illustration, the cone a on one shaft, when thrust forcibly
into the corresponding hollow cone b on the other shaft,
compels the shafts to rotate together, by the hold the friction of
the conical surfaces gives. (b) A toothed
clutch, one member of which, instead of being made fast on its shaft,
is held by friction and can turn, by slipping, under excessive strain
or in starting. -- Friction drop hammer,
one in which the hammer is raised for striking by the friction of
revolving rollers which nip the hammer rod. -- Friction
gear. See Frictional gearing, under
Frictional. -- Friction machine, an
electrical machine, generating electricity by friction. --
Friction meter, an instrument for measuring
friction, as in testing lubricants. -- Friction
powder, Friction composition, a
composition of chlorate of potassium, antimony, sulphide, etc, which
readily ignites by friction. -- Friction
primer, Friction tube, a tube used
for firing cannon by means of the friction of a roughened wire in the
friction powder or composition with which the tube is filled. --
Friction wheel (Mach.), one of the
wheels in frictional gearing. See under Frictional.
- Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
- The rubbing of one object or surface against another.
- Conflict, as between persons having dissimilar ideas or interests; clash.
- (Physics): A force that resists the relative motion or tendency to such motion of two bodies in contact.
French
- friction f
- The Nuttall Encyclopedia
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