Glossary entry (derived from question below)
French term or phrase:
quart de brie
English translation:
90° segment
Added to glossary by
Gregory Flanders
Feb 13, 2008 16:34
16 yrs ago
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French term
quart de brie
French to English
Tech/Engineering
Manufacturing
"Déssynchronisation des pignons d'avance (quart de brie)"
"Re-synchroniser les pignons dans le quart de brie"
I can't seem to find anything that isn't about the cheese. ;)
"Re-synchroniser les pignons dans le quart de brie"
I can't seem to find anything that isn't about the cheese. ;)
Proposed translations
(English)
4 | 90° segment | Bashiqa |
2 | (some kind of accessory ?) | Jean-Christophe Helary |
1 +1 | pie-shape | Ed Friesen |
Proposed translations
1 day 2 hrs
Selected
90° segment
Q de B is a quarter of a circle. The Brie obviously being round. Brie is often used in engineering for a whole host of items. Just to confuse you a little, I have today carried out quality control on what are called "pancakes"! I leave you to imagine what they are.
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "That's it! Thanks for the explanation."
12 mins
(some kind of accessory ?)
+1
54 mins
pie-shape
A "pignon d'avance" could be a feed gear (like on a lathe, or a film projector), or possibly a pinion driving a rack.
It could be that your authors are talking about the correct position of a pinion that is geared to a gear that is not a whole wheel, but only a sector of it (hence pie-shaped, or cheese-slice-shaped if you're French). Presumably "syncronisation" is required because there is some way of disengaging the pinion from the pie-shaped gear (which is only free to turn over a limited angle, and therefore is a sort of rocker). Does tha tmake sense? A drawing would explain all of that much more elegantly.
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Note added at 1 hr (2008-02-13 17:41:50 GMT)
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Also, it just struck me that it could be that there is a rack with a pie-shaped pinion on it. Perhaps for linear positioning over an extremely limited range of movement? I'm not a mechanical engineer so I'm guessing.
It could be that your authors are talking about the correct position of a pinion that is geared to a gear that is not a whole wheel, but only a sector of it (hence pie-shaped, or cheese-slice-shaped if you're French). Presumably "syncronisation" is required because there is some way of disengaging the pinion from the pie-shaped gear (which is only free to turn over a limited angle, and therefore is a sort of rocker). Does tha tmake sense? A drawing would explain all of that much more elegantly.
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 hr (2008-02-13 17:41:50 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
Also, it just struck me that it could be that there is a rack with a pie-shaped pinion on it. Perhaps for linear positioning over an extremely limited range of movement? I'm not a mechanical engineer so I'm guessing.
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