MechSimulator

Centrifugal Governor Simulator

Watt • Porter • Proell — Height • Controlling Force • Sensitivity • Effort — Simulate • Explore • Practice • Quiz

Mode
Governor Type
Ball Mass (m) 2.0 kg
Arm Length (L) 0.30 m
Speed (N) 150 rpm
Sleeve Mass (M) 5.0 kg
Presets
Height (h)
0 m
Ctrl Force (Fc)
0 N
Sleeve Lift
0 m
ω (rad/s)
0 rad/s
Radius (r)
0 m
Arm Angle (θ)
0°
Sensitivity
0 %
Effort
0 N

Centrifugal Governor — Speed Regulation in Machines

Centrifugal governors are essential mechanical devices used to automatically regulate the speed of an engine or prime mover by controlling the fuel supply. They operate on the principle of centrifugal force: as the engine speed increases, the rotating balls move outward due to centrifugal force, which raises the sleeve and adjusts the throttle valve. This fundamental feedback mechanism has been central to mechanical engineering since James Watt’s steam engine era.

Governors are classified by their operating principle. Centrifugal governors (Watt, Porter, Proell, Hartnell) use the centrifugal effect of rotating masses, while inertia governors respond to changes in angular acceleration. Centrifugal governors are further divided into pendulum type (Watt) and loaded type (Porter, Proell), where additional dead weight on the sleeve improves sensitivity and control range.

How Centrifugal Governors Work

The governor consists of a spindle driven by the engine through bevel gears, arms attached to the spindle, balls at the ends of the arms, and a sleeve that slides on the spindle. When the engine speed increases, the balls fly outward, the arms rotate, and the sleeve rises. This sleeve movement is linked to the throttle valve to reduce fuel supply, thereby reducing engine speed. When speed decreases, gravity pulls the balls inward, the sleeve descends, and more fuel is supplied.

Key Formulas and Analysis

For a Watt governor, the height is given by h = g/ω², where ω = 2πN/60. The controlling force is Fc = mω²r, where m is the ball mass and r is the radius of rotation. For a Porter governor, the sleeve mass M adds to the effective loading: h = (m + M)g / (mω²). Sensitivity is defined as (N&sub2; − N&sub1;) / N_mean × 100%, where N&sub1; and N&sub2; are the minimum and maximum operating speeds. An isochronous governor has equal equilibrium speeds at all radii (zero sensitivity range).

How to Use This Simulator

In Simulate mode, select a governor type (Watt, Porter, or Proell), adjust ball mass, arm length, RPM, and sleeve mass using the sliders. The canvas displays an animated governor mechanism that responds in real time, showing the balls swinging outward as speed increases. Readout cards show height, controlling force, sleeve lift, angular velocity, radius, arm angle, sensitivity, and effort. Switch to Explore mode to study 12 governor concepts across basics, types, and analysis. Practice generates random governor problems, and Quiz tests your knowledge with 5 randomised questions.

Who Uses This Simulator?

This simulator is designed for mechanical engineering students, theory of machines trainees, dynamics of machinery instructors, and anyone studying speed regulation, governors, and engine control mechanisms. It provides visual, hands-on understanding of governor behaviour without requiring physical equipment or complex software.