Cydraulic

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Cydraulics are a catchall term for thermal hydraulic or hydrostatic lubrication systems which utilize an active cooling element to offset excessive heat build-up in due to mechanical stress.

Cydraulic lubrication systems play an obvious role in dispersing tribologic (friction-generated) heat generated at the point of mechanical contact. Conversely, the cooling in "thermal hydraulic" systems is not related to the mechanical force applied by the liquid; it's a means of managing managing waste heat generated by other systems by cooling the infrastructure itself... particularly in micro-gravity or vacuum environments where convection-dispersal cannot be counted on.[1]

Transformers with cydraulic systems

Notes

  • Cydraulics is a real albeit obscure term used primarily as an emerging buzzword for certain high-performance metal presses and braking systems where the pressures involved cause heat to build-up at a rate faster than it would normally disperse. But prior to this article's creation(Jul-01-09), despite appearing as a sales term for a variety of recent industrial products, the term was not actually defined anywhere on the internet.
    Well it is now.

References

  1. Heat rejection for all systems, open or closed, is a primary issue due to the constraints of weight and micro-gravity. The thermal hydraulic aspects of the systems must address the cooling of not only the reactor, but the power conversion and power conditioning equipment as well.Technical Information Service, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics