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1 1.0 INTRODUCTION 2.0 BASIC GEOMETRY OF SPUR GEARS 2.1 Basic Spur Gear Geometry 2.2 The Law of Gearing 2.3 The Involute Curve 2.4 Pitch Circles 2.5 Pitch Circular Pitch Diametral Pitch Relation of Pitches 3.0 GEAR TOOTH FORMS AND STANDARDS 3.1 Preferred Pitches 3.2 Design Tables 3.3 AGMA Standards 4.0 INVOLUTOMETRY Gear Nomenclature Symbols 4.2 Pitch Diameter and Center Distance 4.3 Velocity Ratio 4.4 Pressure Angle 4.5 Tooth Thickness 4.6 Measurement Over-Pins 4.7 Contact Ratio 4.8 Undercutting 4.9 Enlarged Pinions 4.10 Backlash Calculation 4.11 Summary of Gear Mesh Fundamentals 5.0 HELICAL GEARS 5.1 Generation of the Helical Tooth 5.2 Fundamental of Helical Teeth 5.3 Helical Gear Relationships 5.4 Equivalent Spur Gear 5.5 Pressure Angle 5.6 Importance of Normal Plane Geometry 5.7 Helical Tooth Proportions 5.8 Parallel Shaft Helical Gear Meshes Helix Angle Pitch Diameter Center Distance Contact Ratio Involute Interference 5.9 Crossed Helical Gear Meshes Helix Angle and Hands Pitch T25 T25 T25 T27 T27 T28 T28 T28 T28 T29 T29 T29 T31 T37 T37 T38 T T T48 T52 T53 T53 T54 T54 T54 T55 T T55 T55 T T T21

2 Catalog D Center Distance Velocity Ratio 5.10 Axial Thrust of Helical Gears 6.0 RACKS 7.0 INTERNAL GEARS 7.1 Development of the Internal Gear 7.2 Tooth Parts of Internal Gear 7.3 Tooth Thickness Measurement 7.4 Features of Internal Gears 8.0 WORM MESH 8.1 Worm Mesh Geometry 8.2 Worm Tooth Proportions 8.3 Number of Threads 8.4 Worm and Wormgear Calculations Pitch Diameters, Lead and Lead Angle Center Distance of Mesh 8.5 Velocity Ratio 9.0 BEVEL GEARING 9.1 Development and Geometry of Bevel Gears 9.2 Bevel Gear Tooth Proportions 9.3 Velocity Ratio 9.4 Forms of Bevel Teeth 10.0 GEAR TYPE EVALUATION 11.0 CRITERIA OF GEAR QUALITY 11.1 Basic Gear Formats 11.2 Tooth Thickness and Backlash 11.3 Position Error (or Transmission Error) 11.4 AGMA Quality Classes 11.5 Comparison With Previous AGMA and International Standards 12.0 CALCULATION OF GEAR PERFORMANCE CRITERIA 12.1 Backlash in a Single Mesh 12.2 Transmission Error 12.3 Integrated Position Error 12.4 Control of Backlash 12.5 Control of Transmission Error 13.0 GEAR STRENGTH AND DURABILITY 13.1 Bending Tooth Strength 13.2 Dynamic Strength 13.3 Surface Durability 13.4 AGMA Strength and Durability Ratings T57 T57 T57 T58 T58 T59 T60 T61 T61 T62 T62 T62 T63 T63 T64 T64 T66 T66 T67 T68 T68 T70 T70 T73 T73 T76 T77 T77 T78 T78 T78 T82 T88 T88 T22 file:///c /A3/D190/HTML/D190T22.htm [9/27/2000 4:11:52 PM]

3 14.0 GEAR MATERIALS 14.1 Ferrous Metals Cast Iron Steel 14.2 Non Ferrous Metals Aluminum Bronzes 14.3 Die Cast Alloys 14.4 Sintered Powder Metal 14.5 Plastics 14.6 Applications and General Comments 15.0 FINISH COATINGS 15.1 Anodize 15.2 Chromate Coatings 15.3 Passivation 15.4 Platings 15.5 Special Coatings 15.6 Application of Coatings 16.0 LUBRICATION 16.1 Lubrication of Power Gears 16.2 Lubrication of Instrument Gears 16.3 Oil Lubricants 16.4 Grease 16.5 Solid Lubricants 16.6 Typical Lubricants 17.0 GEAR FABRICATION 17.1 Generation of Gear Teeth Rack Generation Hob Generation Gear Shaper Generation Top Generating 17.2 Gear Grinding 17.3 Plastic Gears 18.0 GEAR INSPECTION 18.1 Variable-Center-Distance Testers Total Composite Error Gear Size Advantages and Limitations of Variable-Center-Distance Testers Over-Pins Gaging 18.3 Other Inspection Equipment 18.4 Inspection of Fine-Pitch Gears 18.5 Significance of Inspection and Its Implementation T91 T91 T91 T92 T92 T92 T92 T92 T92 T99 T99 T100 T100 T100 T100 T100 T101 T101 T101 T103 T103 T103 T105 T105 T105 T105 T106 T106 T107 T107 T107 T107 T107 T108 T108 T108 T108 T23

4 19.0 GEARS, METRIC 19.1 Basic Definitions 19.2 Metric Design Equations 19.3 Metric Tooth Standards 19.4 Use of Strength Formulas 19.5 Metric Gear Standards USA Metric Gear Standards Foreign Metric Gear Standards 20.0 DESIGN OF PLASTIC MOLDED GEARS 20.1 General Characteristics of Plastic Gears 20.2 Properties of Plastic Gear Materials 20.3 Pressure Angles 20.4 Diametral Pitch 20.5 Design Equations for Plastic Spur, Bevel, Helical and Worm Gears General Considerations Bending Stress - Spur Gears Surface Durability for Spur and Helical Gears Design Procedure - Spur Gears Design Procedure Helical Gears Design Procedure - Bevel Gears Design Procedure - Worm Gears 20.6 Operating Temperature 20.7 Eftect of Part Shrinkage on Gear Design 20.8 Design Specifications 20.9 Backlash Environment and Tolerances Avoiding Stress Concentration Metal Inserts Attachment of Plastic Gears to Shafts Lubrication Inspection Molded vs Cut Plastic Gears Elimination of Gear Noise Mold Construction Conclusion T109 T122 T124 T125 T126 T126 T126 T131 T132 T139 T139 T139 T139 T140 T141 T143 T146 T146 T147 T147 T147 T150 T150 T150 T150 T151 T151 T152 T152 T152 T153 T153 T158 T24

5 1.0 INTRODUCTION This section presents a technical coverage of gear fundamentals. It is intended as a broad coverage written in a manner that is easy to follow and to understand by anyone interested in knowing how gear systems function. Since gearing involves specialty components it is expected that not all designers and engineers possess or have been exposed to all aspects of this subject However, for proper use of gear components and design of gear systems it is essential to have a minimum understanding of gear basics and a reference source for details. For those to whom this is their first encounter with gear components, it is suggested this section be read in the order presented so as to obtain a logical development of the subject. Subsequently, and for those already familiar with gears, this material can be used selectively in random access as a design reference. 2.0 BASIC GEOMETRY OF SPUR GEARS The fundamentals of gearing are illustrated through the spur-gear tooth, both because it is the simplest, and hence most comprehensible, and because it is the form most widely used, particularly in instruments and control systems. 2.1 Basic Spur Gear Geometry The basic geometry and nomenclature of a spur-gear mesh is shown in Figure 1.1. The essential features of a gear mesh are: 1. center distance 2. the pitch circle diameters (or pitch diameters) 3. size of teeth (or pitch) 4. number of teeth 5. pressure angle of the contacting involutes Details of these items along with their interdependence and definitions are covered in subsequent paragraphs. 2.2 The Law of Gearing A primary requirement of gears is the constancy of angular velocities or proportionality of position transmission, Precision instruments require positioning fidelity. High speed and/or high power gear trains also require transmission at constant angular velocities in order to avoid severe dynamic problems. Constant velocity (i.e. constant ratio) motion transmission is defined as conjugate action of the gear tooth profiles. A geometric relationship can be derived (1,7)* for the form of the tooth profiles to provide cojugate action, which is summarized as the Law of Gearing as follows: A common normal to the tooth profiles at their point of contact must, in all positions of the contacting teeth, pass through a fixed point on the line-of-centers called the pitch point. Any two curves or profiles engaging each other and satisfying the law of gearing are conjugate Curves. *Numbers in parenthesis refer to references at end of text. T25

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7 2.3 The Involute Curve There are almost an infinite number of curves that can be developed to satisfy the law of gearing, and many different curve forms have been tried in the past. Modem gearing (except for clock gears) based on involute teeth. This is due to three major advantages of the involute curve: 1. Conjugate action is independent of changes in center distance. 2. The form of the basic rack tooth is straight-sided, and therefore is relatively simple and can be accurately made; as a generating tool ft imparts high accuracy to the cut gear tooth. 3. One cutter can generate all gear tooth numbers of the same pitch. The involute curve is most easily understood as the trace of a point at the end of a taut string that unwinds from a cylinder. It is imagined that a point on a string, which is pulled taut in a fixed direction, projects its trace onto a plane that rotates with the base circle. See Figure 1.2. The base cylinder, or base circle as referred to in gear literature, fully defines the form of the involute and in a gear it is an inherent parameter, though invisible. The development and action of mating teeth can be visualized by imagining the taut string as being unwound from one base circle and wound on to the other, as shown in Figure 1.3a Thus, a single point on the string simultaneously traces an involute on each base circles rotating plane. This pair of involutes is conjugate, since at all points of contact the common normal is the common tangent which passes through a fixed point on the line-of-centers. It a second winding/unwinding taut string is wound around the base circles in the opposite direction, Figure 1.3b, oppositely curved involutes are generted which can accommodate motion reversal. When the involute pairs are properly spaced the result is the involute gear tooth, Figure 1.3c. 2.4 Pitch Circles Referring to Figure 1.4 the tangent to the two base circles is the line of contact, or line-of-action in gear vernacular. Where this line crosses the line-of-centers establishes the pitch point, P. This in turn sets the size of the pitch circles, or as commonly called, the pitch diameters. The ratio of the pitch diameters gives the velocity ratio: Velocity ratio of gear 2 to gear 1 = Z = D 1 (1) D 2 T27

8 2.5 Pitch Essential to prescribing gear geometry is the size, or spacing of the teeth along the pitch circle. This is termed pitch and there are two basic forms Circular pitch A naturally conceived linear measure along the pitch circle of the tooth spacing. Referring to Figure 1.5 it is the linear distance (measured along the pitch circle ar between corresponding points of adjacent teeth. it is equal to the pitch-circle circumference divided by the number of teeth: p c = circular pitch = pitch circle circumference = Dπ (2) number of teeth N Diametral pitch A more popularly used pitch measure, although geometrically much less evident, is one that is a measure of the number of teeth per inch of pitch diameter. This is simply: expressed as: P d = diametral pitch = N (3) D Diametral pitch is so commonly used with fine pitch gears that it is usually contracted simply to "pitch" and that it is diametral is implied Relation of pitches: From the geometry that defines the two pitches it can be shown that they are related by the product expression: P d x P e = π (4) This relationship is simple to remember and permits an easy transformation from one to the other. T28

9 3.0 GEAR TOOTH FORMS AND STANDARDS involute gear tooth forms and standard tooth proportions are specified in terms of a basic rack which has straight-sided teeth for involute systems. The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the American Gear Manufacturers Association (AGMA) have jointly established standards for the USA. Although a large number of tooth proportions and pressure angle standards have been formulated, only a few are currently active and widely used. Symbols for the basic rack are given in Figure 1.6 and pertinent standards for tooth proportions in Table 1.1. Note that data in Table 1.1 is based upon diametral pitch equal to one. To convert to another pitch divide by diametral pitch. 3.1 Preferred Pitches Although there are no standards for pitch choice a preference has developed among gear designers and producers. This is given in Table 1.2. Adherence to these pitches is very common in the fine- pitch range but less so among the coarse pitches. 3.2 Design Tables For the preferred pitches it is helpful in gear design to have basic data available as a function of the number of teeth on each gear, Table 1.3 lists tooth proportions common to a given diametral pitch, as well as the diameter of a measuring wire. Table 1.6 lists pitch diameters and the over-wires measurement as a function of tooth number (which ranges from 18 to 218) and various diametral pitches, including most of the preferred fine pitches. Both tables are for 20 pressure-angle gears. 3.3 AGMA Standards In the United States most gear standards have been developed and sponsored by the AGMA. They range from general and basic standards, such as those already mentioned for tooth form, to specialized standards. The list is very long and only a selected few, most pertinent to fine pitch gearing, are listed in Table 1.4. These and additional standards can be procured from the AGMA by contacting the headquarters office at 1500 King Street; Suite 201; Alexandria, VA (Phone: ). a = Addendum b = Dedendum c = Clearance h k = Working Depth h t = Whole Depth P c = Circular Pitch r f = Fillet Radius t = circular Tooth Thickness φ = Pressure Angle Figure 1.6 Extract from AGMA (ANSI B ) T29

10 TABLE 1.1 TOOTH PROPORTIONS OF BASIC RACK FOR STANDARD INVOLUTE GEAR SYSTEMS Tooth Parameter 1. System Sponsors 2. Pressure Angle 3. Addendum 4. Dedendum 5. Whole Depth 6. Working Depth 7. Clearance. 8. Basic Circular Tooth Thickness on Pitch Line 9. Fillet Radius In Basic Rack 10. Diametral Pitch Range 11. Governing Standard: ANSI AGMA Symbol in Rack Fig. 1.6 φ a b h t h k C t r f /2º Full Depth involute System ANSI & AGMA 14-1/2 1/P 1.157/P 2.157/P 2/P 0.157/P /P 1-1/3 x not specified B º Full Depth involute System ANSI 20 1/P 1.157/P 2.157/P 2/P 0.157/P /P X not specified B º Coarse-Pitch involute Spur Gears AGMA /P 1.250/P 2.250/P 2.000/P 0250/P π/2p 0.300/P not specified º Fine-Pitch involute System ANSI & AGMA /P 1.200/P /P /P 0.200/P /P not standardized not specified B TABLE 1.2 PREFERRED DIAMETRAL PITCHES Class Pitch Class Pitch Class Pitch Class Pitch Coarse 1/ Medium- Coarse Fine Ultra-Fine TABLE 1.3 BASIC GEAR DATA FOR 20 P.A. FINE-PITCH GEARS Diameter Pitch Diameter of Measuring Wire* Circular Pitch Circular Thickness Whole Depth Addendum Dedendum clearance Note: Outside Diameter for N number of teeth equals the Pitch Diameter far (N+2) number at teeth. *For wire diameter basic wire system. T

11 General spurs And Helicals Non-Spur AGMA 390 AGMA 2000-A88 AGMA 201 AGMA 207 AGMA 2005-B88 AGMA 203 AGMA 374 TABLE 1.4 SELECTED LIST OF AGMA STANDARDS Gear Classification Handbook Gear Classification And Inspection Handbook Tooth portions For Coarse-Pitch Involute Spur Gears Tooth Proportions For Fine-Pitch Involute Spur Gears And Helical Gears Design-Manual For Bevel Gears Fine-Pitch On-Center Face Gears For 20 Involute Spur Pinions Design For Fine-Pitch Worm Gearing 4.0 INVOLUTOMETRY Basic calculations for gear systems are included in this section for ready reference in design. More advanced calculations are available in the listed references GEAR NOMENCLATURE* ACTIVE PROFILE is that part of the gear tooth profile which actually comes in contact with the profile of its mating tooth along the line of action. ADDENDUM (a) is the height by which a tooth projects beyond the pitch circle or pitch line; also, the radial distance between the pitch circle and the addendum circle (Figure 1.1); addendum can be defined as either nominal or operating. AXIAL PITCH (pa) is the circular pitch in the axial plane and in the pitch surface between corresponding sides of adjacent teeth, in helical gears and worms. The term axial pitch is preferred to the term linear pitch. (Figure 1.7) AXIAL PLANE of a pair of gears is the plane that contains the two axes. In a single gear, an axial plane may be any plane containing the axis and a given point. BASE DIAMETER (D b = gear, and d b = pinion) is the diameter of the base cylinder from which involute tooth surfaces, either straight or helical, are derived. (Figure 1.1); base radius (R b = gear, r b = pinion) is one half of the base diameter. BASE PITCH (p b ) in an involute gear is the pitch on the base circle or along the line-of-action. Correspcndng sides of involute gear teeth are parallel curves, and the base pitch is the constant and fundamental distance between them along a common normal in a plane of rotation. (Figure 1.8) BASIC RACK is a rack that is adopted as the basis for a system of interchangeable gears. BACKLASH (B) is the amount by which the width of a tooth space exceeds the thickness of the engaging tooth on the pitch circles. As actually indicated by measuring devices, backlash may be *Portions of this section are repented with permission from the Barber-Colman Co., Rockford, Ml. T31

12 determined variously in the transverse, normal, or axial planes, and either in the direction of the pit circles or on the line-of-action. Such measurements should be corrected to corresponding values a transverse pitch circles for general comparisons. (Figure 1.9) CENTER DISTANCE (C), Distance between axes of rotation of mating spur or helical gears. CHORDAL ADDENDUM (a c ) is the height from the top of the tooth to the chord subtending the circular-thickness arc. (Figure 1.10) CHORDAL THICKNESS (t c ) is the length of the chord subtending a circular-thickness arc. (Figure 1.10) CIRCULAR PITCH (p c ) is the distance along the pitch circle or pitch line between corresponding profiles of adjacent teeth. (Figure 1.1) CIRCULAR THICKNESS (t) is the length of arc between the two sides of a gear tooth on the p4 circle, unless otherwise specified. (Figure 1.10) CLEARANCE-OPERATING (c) is the amount by which the dedendum in a given gear exceeds addendum of its mating gear. (Figure 1.1) CONTACT RATIO (Spur) is the ratio of the length-of-action to the base pitch. CONTACT RATIO (Helical) is the contact ratio in the plane of rotation plus a contact portion a tributted to the axial advance. DEDENDUM (b) is the depth of a tooth space below the pitch line; also, the radial distance beta, the pitch circle and the root circle. (Figure 1.1); dedendum can be defined as either nominal or operating. DIAMETRAL PITCH (P d ) is the ratio of the number of teeth to the number of inches in the pitch diameter. There is a fixed relation between diametral pitch (P d ) and circular pitch (p c ): p c = π / P d FACE WIDTH (F) is the length of the teeth in an axial plane. FILLET RADIUS (r,) is the radius of the fillet curve at the base of the gear tooth. In generated this radius is an approximate radius of curvature. (Figure 1.13) FULL DEPTH TEETH are those in which the working depth equals 2000" diametral pitch GENERATING RACK is a rack outline used to indicate tooth details and dimensions for the design of a hob to produce gears of a basic rack system. HELIX ANGLE (ψ) is the angle between any helix and an element of its cylinder. In helical gears a worms, it is at the pitch diameter unless otherwise specified. (Figure 1.7) INVOLUTE TEETH of spur gears, helical gears, and worms are those in which the active portion of the profile in the transverse plane is the involute of a circle. T32

13 LEAD (L) is the axial advance of a helix for one complete turn, as in the threads of cylindrical worms and teeth of helical gears. (Figure 1.11) LENGTH-OF-ACTION (Z A ) is the distance on an involute line of action through which the point of contact moves during the action of the tooth profiles. (Figure 1.8) LEWIS FORM FACTOR (Y, diametral pitch; y c, circular pitch). Factor in determination of beam strength of gears. LINE-OF-ACTION is the path of contact in involute gears. It is the straight line passing through the pitch point and tangent to the base circles. (Figure 1.12) LONG- AND SHORT-ADDENDUM TEETH are those in which the addenda of two engaging gears are unequal. MEASUREMENT OVER PINS (M). Distance over two pins placed in diametrically opposed tooth spaces (even number of teeth) or nearest to it (odd number of teeth). NORMAL CIRCULAR PITCH, P cn, is the circular pitch in the normal plane, and also the length of the arc along the normal helix between helical teeth or threads. (Figure 1.7) NORMAL CIRCULAR THICKNESS (t n ) is the circular thickness in the normal plane. In helical gears. it is an arc of the normal helix, measured at the pitch radius. NORMAL DIAMETRAL PITCH (P dn ) is the diametral pitch as calculated in the normal plane. NORMAL PLANE is the plane normal to the tooth. For a helical gear this plane is inclined by the helix angle, ψ, to the plane of rotation. OUTSIDE DIAMETER (D o gear, and d o = pinion) is the diameter of the addendum (outside) circle (Figure 1.1); the outside radius (R o gear, r o pinion) is one half the outside diameter. PITCH CIRCLE is the curve of intersection of a pitch surface of revolution and a plane of rotation. According to theory, it is the imaginary circle that rolls without slip with a pitch circle of a mating gear. (Figure 1.1) PITCH CYLINDER is the imaginary cylinder in a gear that rolls without slipping on a pitch cylinder or pitch plane of another gear. PITCH DIAMETER (D = gear, d = pinion) is the diameter of the pitch circle. In parallel shaft gears, the pitch diameters can be determined directly from the center distance and the number of teeth by proportionality. Operating pitch diameter is the pitch diameter at which the gears operate. (Figure 1.1) The pitch radius (R = gear, r pinion) is one half the pitch diameter (Figure 11). PITCH POINT is the point of tangency of two pitch circles (or of a pitch circle and pitch line) and is on the line-of-centers. Also, for involute gears, it is at the intersection of the line-of-action and a straight line connecting the two gear centers. The pitch point of a tooth profile is at its intersection with the pitch circle. (Figure 1.1) PLANE OF ROTATION is any plane perpendicular to a gear axis. T33

14 PRESSURE ANGLE (φ), for involute teeth, is the angle between the line-of-action and a line tangent to the pitch circle at the pitch point. Standard pressure angles are established in connection with standard gear-tooth proportions. (Figure 1.1) PRESSURE ANGLE NORMAL (φ n ) is the pressure angle in the normal plane of a helical or spiral tooth PRESSURE ANGLE OPERATING (φ r ) is determined by the specific center distance at which the gears operate. It is the pressure angle at the operating pitch diameter. STUB TEETH are those in which the working depth us less than diametral pitch TIP RELIEF is an arbitrary modification of a tooth profile whereby a small amount of material is removed near the tip of the gear tooth. (Figure 1.13) TOOTH THICKNESS (T) Tooth thickness at pitch circle (circular or chordal Figure 1.1). TRANSVERSE CIRCULAR PITCH (P t ) is the circular pitch in the transverse plane. (Figure 1.7) TRANSVERSE CIRCULAR THICKNESS (t t ) is the circular thickness in the transverse plane. TRANSVERSE PLANE is the plane of rotation and, therefore, is necessarily perpendicular to the go axis. TRANSVERSE PRESSURE ANGLE (φ t ) is the pressure angle in the transverse plane. UNDERCUT is the loss of profile in the vicinity of involute start at the base circle due to tool cutter action in generating teeth with low numbers of teeth. Undercut may be deliberately introduced to facilitate finishing operations. (Figure 1.13) WHOLE DEPTH (h t ) is the total depth of a tooth space, equal to addendum plus dedendurn, also equal to working depth plus clearance. (Figure 1.1) WORKING DEPTH (h k ) is the depth of engagement of two gears; that is, the sum of their addenda. T34

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18 4.1.2 Symbols The symbols used in this section are summarized below.this is consistent with most gear literature and the publications of AGMA and ANSI. SYMBOL NOMENCLATURE & DEFINITION B backlash, linear measure along pitch circle a addendum B LA backlash, linear measure along line-of-action b dedendum a B backlash in arc minutes c clearance C center distance d pitch diameter, pinion change in center distance d pin diameter, for over-pins w measurement C o operating center distance e eccentricity C std standard center distance h k working depth D pitch diameter h t whole depth D b base circle diameter m p contact ratio D o outside diameter n number of teeth, pinion D R root diameter n w number of threads in worm F face width p a axialpitch K factor; general p b base pitch L length, general; also lead of worm p c circular pitch M measurement over-pins p cn normal circular pitch N number of teeth, usually gear r pitch radius, pinion N c critical number of teeth for no undercutting r b base circle radus, pinion N v virtual number of teeth for helical gear r t fillet radius P d diametral pitch r o outside radius, pinion P dn normal diametral pitch t tooth thickness, and for general use for tolerance p t horsepower, transmitted y c Lewis factor, circular pitch R pitch radius, gear or general use γ pitch angle, bevel gear R b base circle radius, gear θ rotation angle, general R o outside radius, gear λ lead angle, worm gearing R T testing radius µ mean value T tooth thickness, gear v gear stage velocity ratio W b beam tooth strength φ pressure angle Y Lewis factor, diametral pitch φ ο operating pressure angle Z mesh velocity ratio ψ helix angle (Wb = base helix angle; operating helix angle) ω angular velocity invφ involute function 4.2 Pitch Diameter and Center Distance As already mentioned in par. 2.4, the pitch diameters for a meshing gear pair are tangent at a point on the line-of-centers called the pitch point. See figure 1.4. The pitch point always divides the line of centers proportional to the number of teeth in each gear. Center distance = C = D 1 + D 2 = N 1 + N 2 (5) 2 2P d

19 and the pitch-circle dimensions are related as follows: D 1 = R 1 = N 1 (6) D 2 R 2 N Velocity Ratio The gear ratio, or velocity ratio, can be obtained from several different parameters: Z = D 1 = N 1 = ω 1 (7) D 2 N 2 ω 2 The ratio, Z, in this equation is the ratio of the angular velocity of gear 2 to that of gear Pressure Angle The pressure angle is defined as the angle between the line- of-action (common tangent to the base circles in Figs. 1.3 and 1.4) and a perpendicular to the line-of-centers. See Figure From the, geometry of these figures, it is obvious that the pressure angle varies (slightly) as the cen distance of a gear pair is altered. The base circle is related to the pressure angle and pitch dinmeter by the equation: D b = D cos φ where D and φ are the standard values or alternately, (8) D b = D cos φ where D and φ are the exact operating values. This basic formula shows that the larger the pressure angle the smaller the base circle. Thus, for standard gears, 14½ pressure angle gears have base circles much nearer to the roots of teeth than 20 gears. It is for this reason that 14 ½ gears encounter greater undercutting problems than 20 gears. This is further elaborated on in section Tooth Thickness This is measured along the pitch circle. For this reason it is specifically called the circular tooth thickness. This is shown in Figure 1.1. Tooth thickness is related to the pitch as follows: T = P c = π (9) 2 2P d T38

20 The tooth thickness (T 2 ) at a given radius, R 2, from the center can be found from a known value (T 1 ) and known pressure angle (θ 1 ) at that radius (R 1 ), as follows: T 2 = T 1 R 2-2R 2-2R 2 (inv θ 2 - inv θ 1 ) (10) R 1 where: inv θ =tan θ - θ = involute function. To save computing time involute-function tables have been computed and are available in the references. An abridged liting is given in Table Measurement Over-Pins Often tooth thickness is measured indirectly by gaging over pins which are placed in diametrically opposed tooth spaces, or the nearest to it for odd numbered gear teeth. This is pictured in Figure For a specified tooth thickness the over-pins measurement, M, is calculated as follows: For an even number of teeth: M = D cos θ + d w (11) cos θ 1 For an odd number of teeth M = D cos θ cos 90º + d w (12) cos θ 1 where the value of θ 1 is obtained from inv θ 1 = T + invθ + d w - π (13) D D cos θ Ν Tabulated values of over-pins measurements for standard gears are given in Table 1.6. This provides a rapid means for calculating values of M, even for gears with slight departures trom standard tooth thicknesses. When tooth thickness is to be calculated from a known over-pins measurement, M, the equations can be manipulated to yield: T = D ( π + inv θ c - inv θ - d w ) (14) N D cos θ where: cos θ c = D cos θ (15) 2R c for an even number of teeth: R c = M - d w (16) 2 and for an odd number of teeth: R c = M - d w (17) 2 cos 90º N T39

21 TABLE 1.5 INVOLUTE FUNCTONS Inv θ = tan θ - θ for values of θ from 10º to 40º Degrees θ Minutes T40

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25 f T42

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27 T43

28 4.7 Contact Ratio To assure smooth continuous tooth action, as one pair of teeth ceases contact a succeeding pair of teeth must already have come into engagement. It is desired to have as much overlap as possible. A measure of this overlapping action is the contact ratio. This is a ratio of the length of the line-of-action to the base pitch. Figure 1.16 shows the geometry. The length-of-action is determined from the intersection of the length-of-action arid the outside radii. The ratio of the length-of-action to the base pitch is determined from: m p = (R o ² - R b ²) +(r o ² - r b ²) - Csin φ (18) P c COS φ It is good practice to maintain a contact ratio of 1.2 or greater. Under no circumstances should the ratio drop below 1.1, calculated for all tolerances at their worst-case values. A contact ratio between 1 and 2 means that part of the time two pairs of teeth are in contact and during the remaining time one pair is in contact. A ratio between 2 and 3 means 2 or 3 pairs of teeth are always in contact. Such as high contact ratio generally is not obtained with external spur gears, but can be developed in the meshing of an internal and external spur gear pair or specially designed non-standard external spur gears. 4.8 Undercutting From Figure 1.16 it can be seen that the maximum length of the line-of-contact is limited to the length of the common tangent. Any tooth addendum that extends beyond the tangent points (T and T') is not only useless, but interferes with the root fillet area of the mating tooth. This results in the typical undercut tooth, shown in Figure The undercut not only weakens the tooth with a wasp-like waist, but also removes some of the useful involute adjacent to the base circle. From the geometry of the limiting length-of-contact (T-T', Figure 1.16) it is evident that interference is first encountered by the addenda of the gear teeth digging into the mating-pinion tooth flanks. Since addenda are standardized by a fixed ratio (1/P d ) the interference condition becomes more severe as the number of teeth on the gear increases. The limit is reached when the gear becomes a rack. This is a realistic case since the hob is a rack-type cutter. The result is that standard gears with T44

29 tooth numbers below a critical value are automatically undercut in the generating process. The limiting number of teeth in a gear meshing with a rack is given by the expression: N c = 2 (19) sin²φ This indicates the minimum number of teeth free of undercutting decreases with increasing Pressure angle. For 14½º the value of N c is 32, and for 20 it is 18. Thus, 200 pressure angle gears with low numbers of teeth have the advantage of much less undercutting and, therefore, are both stronger and smoother acting. 4.9 Enlarged Pinions Undercutting of pinion teeth is undesirable because of losses of strength, contact ratio and smoothness of action. The seventy of these faults depends upon how far below N, the tooth number is. Undercutting for the first few numbers is small and in many applications its adverse effects can be neglected. For very small numbers of teeth, such as ten and smaller, and for high-precision applications, undercutting should be avoided. This is achieved by pinion enlargement (or correction as often termed), wherein the pinion teeth, still generated with a standard cutter, are shifted radially ourward to form a full involute tooth free of undercut The tooth is enlarged both radially and circumferentially. Comparison of a tooth form before and after enlargement is shown in Figure The details of enlarged pinion design, mating gear design and, in general, profile-shifted gears is a large and involved subject beyond the scope of this writing. References 1, 3, 5 and 6 offer additional information. For measurement and inspection Figure 1.18 Comparison of such gears, in particular, consult reference Backlash Calculation Up to this point the discussion has implied that there is no backlash. If the gears are of standard tooth proportion design and operate on standard center distance they would function ideally with neither backlash nor jamming. Backlash is provided for a variety of reasons and cannot be designated without consideration of machining conditions. The general purpose of backlash is to prevent gears from jamming and making contact on both sides of their teeth simultaneously. A small amount of backlash is also desirable to provide for lubricant space and differential expansion between the gear components and the housing. Any error in machining which tends to increase the possibility of jamming makes it necessary to increase the amount of backlash by at least as much as the errors. Consequently, the smaller the amount of backlash, the more accurate must be the machining of the gears. Runout of both gears, errors in profile, pitch, tooth thickness, helix angle and center distance all are factors to consider in the specification of the amount of backlash. On the other hand, excessive backlash is objectionable, particularly if the drive is frequently reversing or if there is an overrunning load. The amount of backlash must not be excessive for the requirements of the job, but it should be sufficient so that machining costs are not higher than necessary. In order to obtain the amount of backlash desired, it is necessary to decrease tooth thickness (see Figure 1.19). This decrease must almost always be greater than the desired backlash because of T45

30 the errors in manufacturing and assembling. Since the amount of the decrease in tooth thickness depends upon the accuracy of machining, the allowance for a specified backlash will vary according to the manufacturing conditions. It is customary to make half of the allowance for backlash on the tooth thickness of each gear of a pair, although there are exceptions. For example, on pinions having very low numbers of teeth, it is desirable to provide all of the allowance on the mating gear so as not to weaken the pinion teeth. In spur and helical gearing, backlash allowance is usually obtained by sinking the hob deeper into the blank than the theoretically standard depth. Further, it is true that any increase or decrease in center distance of two gears in any mesh will cause an increase or decrease in backlash. Thus, this is an alternate way of designing backlash into the system. In the following we give the fundamental equations for the determination of backlash in a single gear mesh. For the determination of backlash in gear trains, it is necessary to sum the backlash of each mated gear pair. However, to obtain the total backlash for a series of meshes it is necessary to take into account the gear ratio of each mesh relative to a chosen reference shaft in the gear train. For details see Reference 5. Backlash is defined in Figure 1.20a as the excess thickness of tooth space over the thickness of the mating tooth. There are two basic ways in which backlash arises: Tooth thickness is below the zero-backlash value; and the operating center distance is greater than the zero-backlash value. If the tooth thickness of either or both mating gears is less than the zero-backlash value, the amount of backlash introduced in the mesh is simply this numerical difference: B = T std - T act = T (20) where: B = linear backlash measured along the pitch circle (Figure 1.20b) T std = no backlash tooth thickness on the operating-pitch circle, which is the standard teeth thickness for ideal gears T act = actual tooth thickness T46

31 When the center distance is increased by a relatively small amount, C, a backlash space develops between mating teeth, as in Figure The relationship between center distance increase and linear backlash, B LA, along the line of action, is: B LA = 2( C)sin φ (21) This measure along the line-of-action is useful when inserting a feeler gage between teeth to measure backlash. The equivalent linear backlash measured along the pitch circle is given by: B = 2( C) tan φ (22a) where: C = change in center distance φ = pressure angle Hence, an approximate relationship between center distance change and change in backlash is: C= B for 14½ pressure-angle gears C= B for 20 pressure-angle gears (22b) (22c) T47

32 Although these are approximate relationships they are adequate for most uses. Their derivation, limitations, and correction factors are detailed in Reference 5. Note that backlash due to center distance opening is dependent upon the tangent function of the pressure angle. Thus, 20 gears have 41% more backlash than 14½º gears, and this constitutes one of the few advantages of the lower pressure angle. Equations 22 are a useful relationship, particularly for converting to angular backlash. Also for fine-pitch gears the use of feeler gages for measurement is impractical, whereas an indicator at the pitch line gives a direct measure. The two linear backlashes are related by: B LA (23) B = cos φ The angular backlash at the gear shaft is usually the critical factor in the gear application. As seen from Figure 1.20a this is related to the gear s pitch radius as follows: B (24) a B = 3440 (arc minutes) R 1 Obviously, angular backlash is inversely proportional to gear radius. Also, since the two meshing gears are usually of different pitch diameters, the linear backlash of the measure converts to different angular values for each gear. Thus, an angular backlash must be specified with reference to a particular shaft or gear center Summary of Gear Mesh Fundamentals The basic geometric relationships of gears and meshed pairs given in the above sections are summarized in Table 1.7. T48

33 TABLE 1.7 SUMMARY OF FUNDAMENTALS SPUR GEARS To Obtain From Known Symbol and Formula Pitch diameter Number of teeth and pitch D = N = N P c P d π Circular Pitch Diametral pitch Number of teeth Outside diameter Diametral pitch or number of teeth and pitch diameter Circular pitch or number of teeth and pitch diameter Pitch and pitch diameter Pitch and pitch diameter or pitch and number of teeth P c = π = πd P d N P d = π = N P c D N =DP d = D P c D o =D + 2 = N+2 P d P d Root diameter Pitch diameter and dedendum D R = D - 2b Base circle diameter Pitch diameter and pressure angle D b =D cos φ Base pitch Circular pitch and pressure angle P b = P c cos φ Tooth thickness at standard pitch diameter Addendum Center distance Contact ratio Circular pitch Diametral pitch Pitch diameters Or number of teeth and pitch Outside radii, base radii, center distance and pressure angle T std = P c = πd 2 2N a = 1 P d C=D 1 +D 2 =N 1 +N 2 =P c (N1+N2) 2 2P d 2π mp = (R o ²-R b ²) ½ +(r o ²-r b ²) ½ -C sin φ P c cos φ Backlash (linear) From change in center distance B = 2 ( C) tan φ Backlash (linear) From change in tooth thickness B = T Backlash (linear) along line of acvon Linear backlash along pitch cirde B LA = B cos φ Backlash, angular Linear backlash ab = 6880 B (arc minutes) D Minimum number of teeth for no undercutting Dedendum Pressure angle Pitch diameter and root diameter ( D R ) N = 2 sin² φ b = ½(D-D R ) Clearance Addendum and dedendum c = b - a Working depth Addendum h k = 2a Pressure angle ( standard ) Operating pressure angle Base circle diameter and pitch diameter Actual operating pitch diameter and base circle diameter T49 φ =cos -1 D b /D φ =cos -1 D b /D'

34 TABLE 1.7 CONT. - SUMMARY OF FUNDAMENTALS HELICAL GEARING To Obtain From Known Symbol and Formula Normal circular pitch Transverse circular pitch P cn = P c cos ψ Normal diametral pitch Transverse diametral pitch P dn = P d cos ψ Axial pitch Circular pitches P a = P c cot ψ = P cn sin ψ Normal pressure angle Transverse pressure angle tan φ n = tan φ cos ψ Pitch diameter Number of teeth and pitch D = N = N P d P dn cos ψ Center distance (parallel shafts) Center distance (crossed shafts) Number of teeth and pitch Number of teeth and pitch C = N 1 + N 2 2 P dn cos ψ C = 1 ( N 1 + N 2 ) 2 P dn cos ψ 1 cos ψ 2 Shaft angle (Crssed shafts) Helix angles of 2 mated gears θ = ψ 1 + ψ 2 Addendum Dedendum Pitch; or outside and pitch diameters Pitch diameter and root diameter (D R ) a = 0.5 ( D o - D ) = 1 P d b = 0.5 ( D - D R ) Clearance Addendum and dedendum c = b-a Working depth Addendum h k = 2a Transverse pressure angle Pitch helix angle Lead Base circle diameter and pitch circle diameter Number of teeth, normal diametral pitch and pitch diameter Pitch diameter and pitch helix angle INVOLUTE GEAR PAIRS cos φ t = D b / D cos ψ = N P n D L = π D cos ψ To Obtain Symbols Spur or Helical Gears ( g gear; p = pinion) Length of action Z A Z A = (C² - (R b +r b )²) ½ (maximum) Z A = (R o ²-R b ²) ½ (r o ²-r b ²-C sin φ r ) ½ Start of active profile SAP SAP p = -(R o ²-R b ²) ½ SAP g = Zmax-(r o ²-r b ²) ½ Contact ratio R c Rcg = ((SAP)² + Rb²) ½ ; R cp = ((SAP)² + r b ²) ½ T50

35 TABLE 1.7 CONT. - SUMMARY OF FUNDAMENTALS WORM MESHES To Obtain From Known Symbol and Formula Pitch diameter of worm Number of teeth and pitch d w = n w P cn p sin λ Pitch diameter of worm gear Lead angle Number of teeth and pitch Pitch, diameter, teeth D g = N g P cn π cos λ λ = tan -1 n w = sin -1 n w P cn P d d w pd w Lead of worm Number of teeth and pitch L = n w p c = n w p cn cos λ Normal circular pitch Transverse pitch and lead angle P cn = P c cos λ Center distance Pitch diameters C = d w + D g 2 Center distance Pitch, lead angle, teeth C = P cn [ N g + n w ] 2π cos λ sin λ Velocity ratio Number of teeth Z = Ng n w BEVEL GEARING To Obtain From Known Symbol and Formula Velocity ratio Number of teeth Z = N 1 N 2 Velocity ratio Pitch diameters Z = D 1 D 2 Velocity ratio Pitch angles Z = sin γ 1 sin γ 2 Shaft angle Pitch angles Σ = γ 1 + γ 2 T51

36 5.0 HELICAL GEARS The helical gear differs from the spur gear in that its teeth are twisted along a helical path in the axial direction. It resembles the spur gear in the plane of rotation, but in the axial direction it is as if there were a series of staggered spur gears. See Figure This design brings forth a number of different features relative to the spur gear, two of the most important being as follows: 1. tooth strength is improved because of the elongated helical wrap around tooth base support. 2. contact ratio is increased due to the axial tooth overlap. Helical gears thus tend to have greater load-carrying capactiy than spur gears of the same size. Spur gears, on the other hand, have a somewhat higher efficiency. Helical gears are used in two forms: 1. Parallel shaft applications, which is the largest usage. 2. Crossed-helicals (or spiral gears) for connecting skew shafts, usually at tight angles. 5.1 Generation of the Helical Tooth The helical tooth form is involute in the plane of rotation and can be developed in a manner similar to that of the spur gear. However, unlike the spur gear which can be viewed essentially as two dimensional, the helical gear must be portrayed in three dimensions to show changing axial features. Referring to Figure 1.23, there is a base cylinder from which a taut plane is unwrapped, analogous to the unwinding taut string of the spur gear in Figure 12. On the plane there is a straight line AB, which when wrapped on the base cylinder has a helical trace A o B o. As the taut plane is unwrapped any point on the line AB can be visualized as tracing an involute from the base cylinder. Thus, there is an infinite series of involutes generated by line AB, all alike, but displaced in phase along a helix on the base cylinder. Again a concept analogous to the spur-gear tooth development is to imagine the taut plane being wound from one base cylinder on to another as the base cylinders rotate in opposite directions. The result is the generation of a pair of conjugate helical involutes. If a reverse direction of rotation is assumed and a second tangent plane is arranged so that it crosses the first, a complete involute helicoid tooth is formed. T52

37 5.2 Fundamental of Helical Teeth In tho piano of rotation the helical gear tooth is involute and all of the relationships govorning spur gears apply to the helical. However, tho axial twist of the teeth introduces a holix anglo. Since the helix angle varies from the base of the tooth to the outside radnjs, the helix angle, w~ is detned as the angle between the tangent to the helicoidal tooth at the intersection of the pitch cylinder and the tooth profile, and an element of the pitch cylinder. See Figure The direction of the helical twist is designated as either left or right. The direction is defined by the right-hand rule. 5.3 Helical Gear Relationships For helical gears there are two related pitches: one in the plane of rotation and the other in a plane normal to the tooth. In addition there is an axial pitch. These are defined and related as follows: Referring to Figure 1.25, the two circular pitches are related as follows: P cn = P c cos ψ = normal circular pitch (25) The normal circular pitch is less than the transverse or circular pitch in the plane of rotation, the ratio between the two being equal to the cosine of the helix angle. Consistent with this, the normal diametral pitch is greater than the transverse pitch: P dn = P d = normal diametral pitch (26) cos ψ The axial pitch of a helical gear is the distance between corresponding points of adjacent teeth measured parallel to the gears axis see Figure Axial pitch, p1. is related to circular pitch by the expressions: P a = P c cot ψ = P cn = axial pitch (27) sin ψ T53

38 5.4 Equivalent Spur Gear The true involute pitch and involute geometry of a helical gear is that in the plane of rotation. However, in the normal plane, looking at one tooth, there is a resemblance to an involute tooth of a pitch corresponding to the normal pitch. However, the shape of the tooth corresponds to a spur gear of a larger number of teeth, the exact value depending on the magnitude of the helix angle. The geometric basis of deriving the number of teeth in this equivalent tooth form spur gear is given in Figure The result of the transposed geometry is an equivalent number of teeth given as: NV = N (28) cos³ψ This equivalent number is also called a virtual number because this spur gear is imaginary. The value of this number is its use in determining helical tooth strength. 5.5 Pressure Angle Although strictly speaking, pressure angle exists only for a gear pair, a nominal pressure angle can be considered for an individual gear. For the helical gear there is a normal pressure angle as well as the usual pressure angle in the plane of rotation. Figure 1.28 shows their relationship, which is expressed as: tan φ = tan φn (29) cos ψ 5.6 Importance of Normal Plane Geometry Because of the nature of tooth generation with a rack-type hob, a single tool can generate helical gears at all helix angles as well as spur gears. However, this means the normal pitch is the common denominator, and usually is taken as a standard value. Since the true involute features are in the transverse plane, they will differ from the standard normal values. Hence, there is a real need for relating parameters in the two reference planes. T54 f

39 5.7 Helical Tooth Proportions These follow the same standards as those for spur gears. Addendum, dedendum, whole depth and clearance are the same regardless of whothor measured in tho piano of rotation er the normal piano. Pressure angle and pitch are usually specified as standard values in tho normal plane, but there are times when they are specified standard in the transverse plane. 5.8 Parallel Shaft Helical Gear Meshes Fundamental information for the design of gear meshes is as follows: Helix angle Both gears of a meshed pair must have the same helix angle. However, the helix directions must be opposite, i.e., a left-hand mates with a right-hand helix Pitch diameter This is given by the same expression as for spur gears, but if the normal pitch is involved it is a function of the helix angle. The expressions are: D = N = N (30) P d P dn cos ψ Center distance Utilizing equation 30, the center distance of a helical gear mesh is: C = ( N 1 +N 2 ) (31) 2 P dn cos ψ Note that for standard parameters in the normal plane, the center distance will not be a standard value compared to standard spur gears. Further, by manipulating the helix angle (ψ) the center distance can be adjusted over a wide range of values. Conversely, it is possible a. to compensate for significant center distance changes (or erçors) without changing the speed ratio between parallel geared shafts; and b. to alter the speed ratio between parallel geared shafts without changing center distance by manipulating helix angle along with tooth numbers Contact Ratio The contact ratio of helical gears is enhanced by the axial overlap of the teeth. Thus, the contact ratio is the sum of the transverse contact ratio, calculated in the same manner as for spur gears (equation 18), and a term involving the axial pitch. (m p ) total = (m p ) trans + (m p ) axial (32) where T55

40 New Page 4 (m p ) trans = value per equation 18 (m p ) axial = F = F tan ψ = F sin ψ P a P c P cn and F = face width of gear Involute interference Helical gears cut with standard normal pressure angles can have considerably higher pressure angles in the plane of rotation (see equation 29), depending on the helix angle. Therefore, referring to equation 19, the minimum number of teeth without undercutting can be significantly reduced and helical gears having very low tooth numbers without undercutting are feasible. 5.9 Crossed Helical Gear Meshes These are also known as spiral and screw gears. They are used for interconnecting skew shafts, such as in Figure They can be designed to connect shafts at any angle, but in most applications the shafts are at right angles Helix angle and hands The helix angles need not be the same. However, their sum must equal the shaft angle: ψ 1 + ψ 2 = θ (33) where: ψ 1, ψ 2 = the respective helix angles of the two gears θ = shaft angle (the acute angle between the two shafts when viewed in a direction parallel ing a common perpendicular between the shafts) Except for very small shaft angles, the helix hands are the same Pitch Because of the possibility of ditferent helix angles for the gear pair, the transverse pitches may not be the same. However, the normal pitches must always be identical. T56 file:///c /A3/D190/HTML/D190T56.htm [9/30/ :10:44 AM]

41 5.9.3 Center Distance The pitch diameter of a crossed-helical gear is given by equation 30, and the center distance becomes: C = 1 ( N 1 + N 2 ) (34) 2P dn cos ψ 1 cos ψ 2 Again it is possible to adjust the center distance by manipulating the helix angle. However, both gear helix angles must be altered consistently in accordance with equation Velocity ratio Unlike spur and parallel shaft helical meshes the velocity ratio (gear ratio) cannot be determined from the ratio of pitch diameters, since these can be altered by juggling of helix angles. The speed ratio can be determined only from the number of teeth as follows: velocity ratio Z = N 1 (35) N 2 or if pitch diameters are introduced the relationship is: Z = D 1 cos ψ 1 (36) D 2 cos ψ Axial Thrust of Helical Gears In both parallel-shaft and crossed shaft applications helical gears develop an axial thrust load. This is a useless force that loads gear teeth and bearings and must accordingly be considered in the housing and bearing design. In some special instrument designs this thrust load can be utilized to actuate face clutches, provide a friction drag, or other special purpose. The magnitude of the thrust load depends on the helix angle and is given by the expression: W T =W t tanψ (37) where: W T = axial thrust load W t = transmitted load The direction of the thrust load is related to the hand of the gear and the direction of rotation. This is depicted in Figure When the helix angle is larger than about 20, the use of double helical gears with opposite hands (Figure 1.30b) or herringbone gears (Figure 1.30a) is worth considering. T57

42 6.0 RACKS Gear racks (Figure 1.31) are important components in that they are a means of converting rotational motion into linear motion. In theory the rack is a gear with infinite pitch diameter, resulting in an involute profile that is essentially a straight line, and the tooth is of simple V form. Racks can be both spur and helical. A rack will mesh with all gears of the same pitch. Backlash is computed by the same formula as for gear pairs, equation 22. However, the pressure angle and the gears pitch radius remain constant regardless of changes in the relative position of the gear and rack. Only the pitch line shifts accordingly as the gear center is altered. See Figure INTERNAL GEARS A special feature of spur and helical gears is their capability of being made in an internal form, in which an internal gear mates with an ordinary external gear. This offers considerable versatility in the design of planetary gear trains and miscellaneous instrument packages. 7.1 Development of the Internal Gear The gears considered so far can be imagined as equivalent pitch circle friction discs which roll on each other with external contact If instead, one of the pitch circles rolls on the inside of the ether, it forms the basis of internal gearing. In addition, the larger gear must have the material forming the teeth on the convex side of the involute profile, such that the internal gear is an inverse of the common external gear, see Figure 1.33a. The base circles, line of action and development of the involute profiles and action are shown in Figure 1.33b. As with spur gears there is a taut generating string that winds and unwinds between the base circles. However, in this case the string does not cross the line of centers, and actual contact and involute development occurs on an extension of the common tangent. Otherwise, action parallels that for external spur gears. T58

43 7.2 Tooth Parts of Internal Gear Because the internal gear is reversed relative to the external gear, the tooth parts are also reversed relative to the ordinary (external) gear. This is shown in Figure Tooth proportions and standards are the same as for external gears except that the addendum of the gear is reduced to avoid trimming of the teeth in the fabrication process. T59

44 Tooth thickness of the internal gear can be calculated with equations 9 and 20, but one must remember that the tooth and space thicknesses are reversed, (see Figure 1.35). Also, in using equation 10 to calculate tooth thickness at various radii, (see Figure 1.36), it is the tooth space that is calculated and the internal gear tooth thickness is obtained by a subtraction from the circular pitch at that radius, Thus, applying equation 10 to Figure 1.36, 7.3 Teeth Thickness Measurement In a procedure similar to that used for external gears, tooth thickness can be measured indirectly by gaging with pins, but this time the measurement is "under" the pins, as shown in Figure Equations 11 thru 13 are modified accordingly to yield: For an even number of teeth: M= 2 ( R c - d w ) (38) 2 For an odd number of teeth: M = 2(R c cos 90º - d w ) (39) N 2 inv φ 1 =inv φ + π - T - d w N D Dcos φ where: R c = cos φ R cos φ 1 T60

45 7.4 Features of Internal Gears General advantages: 1. Lend to compact design since the center distance is less than for external gears. 2. A high contact ratio is possible. 3. Good surface endurance due to a convex profile surface working against a concave surface. General disadvantages: 1. Housing and bearing supports are more complicated, because the external gear nests within the internal gear. 2. Low velocity ratios are unsuitable and in many cases impossible because of interferences. 3. Fabrication is limited to the shaper generating process, and usually special tooling is required. 8.0 WORM MESH The worm mesh is another gear type used for connecting skew shafts, usually 90º, see Figure Worm meshes are characterized by high velocity ratios. Also, they offer the advantage of the higher load capacity associated with their line contact in contrast to the point contact of the crossed-helical mesh 8.1 Worm Mesh Geometry The worm is equivalent to a V-type screw thread, as evident from Figure The mating worm-gear teeth have a helical lead. A central section of the mesh, taken through the worm s axis and perpendicular to the wormgear s axis, as shown in Figure 1.39, reveals a rack-type tooth for the worm, and a curved involute tooth form for the wormgear. However, the involute features are only true for the central section. Sections on either side of the worm axis reveal non-symmetric and non-involute tooth profiles. Thus, a worm-gear mesh is not a true involute mesh. Also, for conjugate action the center distance of the mesh must be an exact duplicate of that used in generating the wormgear. To increase the length of action the wormgear is made of a throated shape to wrap around the Worm. T61

46 8.2 Worm Tooth Proportions Worm tooth dimensions, such as addendum, dedendum, pressure angle, etc., follow the same standards as those for spur and helical gears. The standard values apply to the central section of the mesh, (see Figure 1.40a). A high pressure angle is favored and in some applications values as high as 25º and 30 are used. 8.3 Number of Threads The worm can be considered resembling a helical gear with a high helix angle. For extremely high helix angles, there is one continuous tooth or thread. For slightly smaller angles them can be two, three, or even more threads. Thus, a worm is characterized by the number of threads, n w. 8.4 Worm and Wormgear Calculations Referring to Figure 1.40b and recalling the relationships established for normal and transverse pitches in Par.5, the following defines the geometry of worm mesh components. T62

47 8.4.1 Pitch Diameters, Lead snd Lead Angle Pitch diameter of worm = d w = n w P cn (40) π sin λ Pitch diameter of wormgear = D g = N g P cn (41) π cos λ where: n w = number of threads of worm L = lead of worm = n w p c = n w P cn cos λ λ = lead angle = tan -1 n w P d d w P cn = P c cos λ = sin -1 n w P cn πd w Center Distance of Mesh c = d w + D g = P cn [ N g + n w ] (42) 2 2π cos λ sin λ T63

48 8.5 Velocity Ratio The gear ratio of a worm mesh cannot be calculated from the ratio of the pitch diameters. It can be determined only from the ratio of tooth numbers: velocity ratio = Z = no. teeth in worm gear = N g (43) no. threads in worm 9.0 BEVEL GEARING For intersecting shafts, bevel gears offer a good means of transmitting motion and power. Most transmissions occur at right angles (Figure 1.41), but the shaft angle can be any value. Ratios up to 4:1 are common, although higher ratios are possible as well. 9.1 Development and Geometry of Bevel Gears Bevel gears have tapered elements because they can be generated by rolling cones, their pitch surfaces lying on the surface of a sphere. Pitch diameters of mating bevel gears belong to frusta of cones, as shown in Figure In the full development on the surface of a sphere, a pair of meshed bevel gears and a crown gear are in conjugate engagement as shown in Figure The crown gear, which is a bevel gear having the largest possible pitch angle (defined in Figure 1.43), is analogous to the rack of spur gearing, and is the basic tool for generating bevel gears. However, for practical reasons the tooth form is not that of a spherical involute, and instead, the crown gear profile assumes a slightly simplified form. Although the deviation from a true spherical involute is minor, it results in a line of action having a figure-s trace in its extreme extension, see Figure This shape gives rise to the name "octoid" for the tooth form of modem bevel gears. T64

49 T65

50 9.2 Bevel Gear Tooth Proportions Bevel gear teeth are proportioned in accordance with the standard system of tooth proportions used for spur gears. However, the pressure angle of all standard design bevel gears is limited to 200. Pinions with a small number of teeth are enlarged automatically when the design follows the Gleason system. Since bevel-tooth elements are tapered, tooth dimensions and pitch diameter are referenced to the outer end (heel). Since the narrow end of the teeth (toe) vanishes at the pitch apex (center of reference generating sphere) there is a practical limit to the length (face) of a bevel gear. The geometry and identification of bevel gear parts is given in Figure Velocity Ratio The velocity ratio can be derived from the ratio of several parameters: where: velocity ratio = Z = N 1 = D 1 = sin γ 1 (44) N 2 D 2 sin γ 2 γ = pitch angle (Figure 1.45) T66

51 In the simplest design the tooth elements are straight radial, converging at the cone apex. However, it is possible to have the teeth curve along a spiral as they converge on the cone apex, resulting in greater tooth overlap, analogous to the overlapping action of helical teeth. The result is a spiral bevel tooth. In addition, there are other possible variations. One is the zerol bevel, which is a curved tooth having elements that start and end on the same radial line. Straight bevel gears come in two variations depending upon the fabrication equipment. All current Gleason straight bevel generators are of the Ceniflex form which gives an almost imperceptible convexity to the tooth surfaces. Older machines produce true straight elements.. See Figure 1.46a. Straight bevel gears are the simplest and most widely used type of bevel gear for the transmission of power and/or motion between intersecting shafts. Straight-bevel gears are recommended: 1. When speeds are less than 1000 fpm at higher speeds, straight bevel gears may be noisy. 2. When loads are light, or for high static loads when surface wear is not a critical factor. 3. When space, gear weight, and mountings are a premium. This includes planetary gear sets, where space does not permit the inclusion of rolling-element bearings. In this case ground gears are a necessity. Other forms of bevel gearing include the following: Conii1ex gears (Figure 1.46b) are made in special straight-bevel gear-cutting machines that crown the sides of the teeth in their lengthwise direction. The teeth, therefore, tolerate small amounts of misalignment in the assembly of the gears and some displacement of the gears under load without concentrating the tooth contact at the ends of the teeth. As a result, these gears are capable of transmitting heavier loads than the straight bevel gears under the same operating conditions. Spiral bevels (Figure 1.46c) have curved oblique teeth which contact each other gradually and smoothly from one end to the other. Imagine cutting a straight bevel into an infinite number of short face-width sections, angularly displace one relative to the other, and one has a spiral bevel gear. Well-designed spiral bevels have two or more teeth in contact at all times. The overlapping tooth action transmits motion more smoothly and quietly than with straight bevel gears. Zerol bevels (Figure 1.46d) have curved teeth similar to these of the spiral bevels, but with zero spiral angle at the middle of the face width; and they have lithe end thrust. Both spiral and Zerol gears can be cut on the same machines with the same circular face-mill cutters or ground on the same grinding machines. Both are produced with localized tooth contact which can be controlled for length, width, and shape. Functionally, however, Zerol bevels are similar to the straight bevels and thus carry the same ratings. In fact, Zerols can be used in the place of of straight bevels without mounting changes. Zerol bevels are widely employed in the aircraft industry, where ground-tooth precision gears are generally required. Most hypoid cutting machines can cut spiral bevel, Zerol or hypoid gears. The material in this paragraph has been reprinted with the permission of McGraw Hill Book Co., Inc., New York, N.Y. from Design of Bevel Gears by W. Coleman, Gear Design and Applications, N. Chironis, Editor, McGraw Hill, New York, N.Y. 1967, p.57. T67

52 10.0 GEAR TYPE EVALUATION The choice of gear type is dependent upon a number of considerations involving physical space and shaft arrangement, load, gear ratio, and desired precision or quality level. A general guide is to choose the simplest gear type that can accomplish the objectives. Spur gears are the first choice if they can do the job, as they are the easiest to make. That means they are the least expensive and, if required, can be made to the highest precision. Helical gears are slightly more complicated than straight spurs, but are the choice if loads and speeds are demanding. Helicals are superior to spurs in load capacity. Also, they offer avoidance of undercutting in small tooth number pinions; and helicals can be designed to neatly span non-standard center distances. Crossed helicals are an acceptable skew shaft drive only if the loads are small. Worm gearing and bevels offer right angle drives for skew and intersecting shafts respectively. Each offers special features and advantages if needed. Internal gears can fill a real need nicely, but they should only be used when the application requires their unique feature. Special gears such as spiroid, helicon beveleid and face should be avoided as much as possible because of limited features, complex forms to produce and inspect, limited fabrication sources, and relative high cost. Table 1.8 summarizes comments and evaluations of the various gear types CRITERIA OF GEAR QUALITY In addition to the sizing of gear parameters, it is necessary to ensure that their specifications and manufacture result in the desired gear quality, This includes not only tolerances, but an understanding of what compromises gear quality Basic Gear Formats Specification of a gear requires a drawing that shows details of the gear body, the mounting design, face width, any special features, and the fundamental and essential gear data. This gear data can be efficiently and consistently specified on the gear drawing in a standardized block format. The format varies in accordance with gear type. A typical data block for standard fine-pitch spur gears is given in Figure Formats for coarse pitch gears, helical gears and other gear types are given in detail in the appendix of Ref. 5. T68

53 Type Precision Rating Spur excellent Parallel shafting High speeds and loads Highest efficiency Helical good Parallel shafting Very high speeds and loads Efficiency slightly less than spur mesh Crossed - helical Internal spur Bevel Worm mesh Specials (face, Spiroid, Helicon, Beveloid) poor fair fair to good fair to good poor to fair TABLE 1.8 SUMMARY AND EVALUATION OF GEAR TYPES Features Applications Comments Regarding Precision Applicable to all types of trains and a wide range of velocity ratios, Skewed shafting Point contact High sliding low speeds light load. Parallel shafts High speeds High loads Intersecting shafts High speeds High loads Right - angle skew shafts High velocity ratio High speeds and loads Low efficiency Most designs nonreversible Intersecting and skew shafts Modest speeds and loads Most applicable to high speeds and loads; also used wherever spurs are used. Relatively low velocity ratio; low speeds and light loads only. Any angle skew shafts. Internal drives requiring high speeds and high loads; offers low sliding and high stress loading; good for high capacity, long tie. Used In planetary gears to produce large reduction ratios. Suitable for 1:1 and higher velocity ratios and for rightangle mashes (and other angles) High velocity ratio Angular meshes High loads Simplest tooth elements offering max - imum precision. First choice, recom - mended for all gear meshes, except where very high speeds and loads or special features of other types, such as right - angle drive, cannot be avoided. Equivalent quality to spurs except for complication of helix angle. Recommended for all high- speed and high-load meshes. Axial thrust component must be accommodated. To be avoided for precision meshes. Point contact limits capacity and precision. Suitable for right - angle drives if A less expensive substitute for bevel gears. Good lubrication essential because of point contact and high sliding action. Not recommended for precision meshes because of design, fabricabon, and inspection limitations. Should only be used when internal feature is necessary. Good choice for right-angle drive, particularly low ratios. However, comptcaled tooth form and fabrication limits achievement of precision. Should be located at one of the less critical meshes of the train. Worm can be made to high precision, but worm gear has inherent limitations. To be considered for average precision meshes, but can be of high precision with care. Best choice for combination high velocity ratio and right- angle drive. High sliding requires excellent lubrication. Special cases To be avoided as precision meshes. Sig - nificant nonconjugate action with depart ure from nominal center distance and shaft angles. Fabrication requires special equipment and inspection is limited. T69 f

54 11.2 Tooth Thickness and Backlash One of the most important criteria of gear quality is the specification and control of tooth thickness. As mentioned in Par. 4.10, the magnitude of tooth thickness and its tolerance is a direct measure of backlash when the gear is assembled with its mate. Although it is possible to set the tooth thickness and tolerance to any value within a wide range, convenient quality classes have been established by AGMA in Gear Classification and Inspection Handbook (ANSI/AGMA A88 ). This information is reproduced in Table 1.9. The previous issue of this specification, (390.02), offered a more detailed table of backlash allowance and tolerance which is still a useful design guide. See Table Although no longer part of current AGMA standards, it is consistent with Table 1.9. Note that the data in Table 1.9 is for unassembled spur and helical gears; i.e. an individual gear. Backlash for a meshed gear pair due to tooth thickness tolerance will be the sum of two values from Table 1.9, Most often the same tolerance is applied to each gear of a meshed pair Position Error (or Transmission Error) In many precision gear applications the transmission of motion from shaft-to shaft must have a high degree of linearity. This is known by several names: transmission linearity, angular transmission accuracy, and index accuracy. Theoretically, involute gears will function perfectly. However, in practice there are deviations from ideal motion transmission due to involute profile variations, spacing errors, pitch line runout, and radial out-of-position. Combinations of all these errors cause a net position error, which is transmitted to the instrument or machine involved. T70

55 The single most important criterion of the above position errors is the total composite error of the gear (TCE). This is defined simply as the maximum variation in center distance as the gear is rolled, intimately meshed with a master gear, on a variable-center-distance fixture. The device has one floating center, and as the gears are rolled any eccentricity, tooth-to-tooth variation, and profile deviation results in center distance variation. This variation can be measured and plotted, as shown in Figure 1.48.TheTCE parameter encompasses the combination of run out and tooth-to-tooth errors as indicated in Figure The latter, which is essentially the variation over a tooth cycle, is known as tooth-to-tooth composite error (TTCE). Control of TCE and TTCE is achieved by specifying maximum values. Since TCE includes TTCE it is only necessary to specify both when a finer control of the TFCE is desired. The relationship between TCE and transmission error, ET, is adequately approximated by the expression: E T = E tc sin θ, where θ = angular position of the gear (45) 2 This relationship indicates that the position error fluctuates sinusoidally between maximum lead and lag values. *TABLE1.9 TOOTH THICKNESS TOLERANCE, (t T ) (ALL TOLERANCE VALUES IN INCHES) FOR UNASSEMBELED SPUR AND HELICAL GEARS Quality Diametral Tolerance Codes Number Pitch A B C D and thru

56 *Extracted from AGMA Standard 2000-ABB, Gear Classification and Inspection Handbook Tolerances and Measuring Methods for Unassembled Spur and Helical Gears, with permmision of the publisher, American Gear Manufacturers Association, 1500 King Street, Alexenderia, Virginia T71

57 Equation 45 yields a linear position error measured in inches along the pitch circle. If an angular transmission error, a E T, is desired it is necessary to divide by the pitch radius of the gear. Thus: a E T = E tc sin q (radians) = 3440 E tc sin θ (arc minutes) (46) 2R D The above defines the error of a single gear. In practice, one is interested in the total error of a mesh arising from errors of both gears. Concerning only the maximum error (in order to avoid the complexity of phase angles*), the peak total mesh error is: maximum peak error = ( a E T ) mesh = (E tc ) 1 +(E tc ) (arc minutes) (47) R 1,2 where: subscripts 1 and 2 represent each of the meshing gears; and R 1 and R 2 are the respective pitch radii. These yield the angular error for the respective gear center of the particular pitch radius being used, as shown in equation 47. **TABLE 1.10 AGMA BACKLASH ALLOWANCE AND TOLERANCE COARSE- PITCH GEARS Center Distance ( Inches ) Normal Dlametral Pitches Up to Over 5 to Over 10 to Over 20 to Over 30 to Over 40 to O Over 50 to Over 80 to Over 100 to Backlash Designation A B C D E Normal Diametral Pitch Range 20 thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru thru 200 FINE - PITCH GEARS Tooth Thinning to Obtain Backlash Allowance Tolerance ( per gear) ( per gear ) to to to to Zero 0 to to to to to to to to to to to to.0001 Resulting Approximate Backlash (par mesh) Normal Plane.004 to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to.0002 *See Reference 5 for the case of considering phase angles. **Extracted from AGMA Gear Classification Manual AGMA , September 1964 T72

58 11.4 AGMA Quality Classes Using criteria that are indicators and measures of gear quality, the AGMA has established a convenient standardization that forms a continuous spectrum of quality classes ranging from the crudest to the most precise gears. For all gears, coarse and fine pitches, them am 13 classes numbered 3 through 15. AGMA Gear Classification and Inspection Handbook (ANSI/AGMA 2000-A88) specifically defines various gear quality parameters for these 13 classes. This includes tolerance ranges for runout, pitch, profile, lead, total composite error, and tooth-to-tooth composite error. These values are for spur and helical gearing. In addition, them are separate table values for rack and pinions, bevel and hypoid gears, and fine pitch worm gearing. Also presented are class tolerances of key parameters for spur and helical inspection master gears Comparison with previous AGMA and International Standards It is assumed that the present AGMA Gear Classification and Inspection Handbook (ANSI/AGMA A88) is readily available to all those who wish to obtain additional information and tables related to this subject. Many designers, however, may not have access to the tables published in previous AGMA and AGMA standards. For this reason, Tables 1.10A and 1.10B are presented. Furthermore, as a result of increased international trade and the influx of metric gears, it is useful to compare different national gear standard values. Such a comparison giving approximate equivalence of values is given in Table 1.10 C. T73

59 AGMA Quality No TABLE 1.10A FINE-PITCH GEAR TOLERANCES FOR AGMA QUALITY CLASSES No. of Teeth Diametral Tooth-to-Teeth And Pitch Composite Pitch Diameter Range Tolerance Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to Over 20 teeth. 2 to Over 20 teeth, 4 & over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth,up to Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth, 4" & over Up to 20 teeth Inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to l.999" Over 20 teeth, 2" to Over 20 teeth, 4 & over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to l.999 Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth,4 & over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth, 4 & over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to l.999 Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth,4 &over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth,4 & over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth, 4 &over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth,upto Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth, 4 & over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over20 teeth,4 & over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth, up to1.999 Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth, 4 & over Up to 20 teeth inclusive Over 20 teeth,upto Over 20 teeth, 2 to Over 20 teeth, 4 & over 20 to to to to to to48 20 to to to to to to to to to to64 20 to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to Total Composite Tolerance *From AGMA Gear Classification Manual for Spur, Helical and Heningbone Gears. AGMA , Sept T74

60 TABLE 1.10B COMPARISON OF NEW AND PREVIOUS FINE-PITCH AGMA QUALITY CLASSES* PREVIOUS FINE-PITCH SYSTEM, AGMA FINE-PITCH SYSTEM, AGMA AGMA Quality No. Tooth-to-Tooth Composite Error Total Composite Error AGMA Quality No. Commercial or 6 Commercial or 7 Tooth-to-Tooth Composite (Error) Tolerance or or Total Composite (Error) Tolerance or or Commercial Commercial Precision or or or Precision Precision or or or * Extracted from AGMA Gear Classification Manual AGMA , Sept For more current standard, consult ANSI/AGMA 2000-A88, March TABLE 1.10C QUAUTY NUMBER COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT NATIONAL GEAR STANDARDS W. Germany Japan DIN JIS International ISO T75 U.S.A. AGMA

61 12.0 CALCULATION OF GEAR PERFORMANCE CRITERIA Essential to proper application of gears is the derivation of values of performance criteria Most important are: backlash, transmission error and total position error. In evaluating a gear mesh, its performance depends not only on specific gear parameters, but also on many installation and design features such as bearings, shafting, and housing Backlash In a Single Mesh All sources of backlash must be identified and combined in order to obtain the total backlash for the mesh. Sources can be grouped according to the following categories: I. Design backlash allowance 1. Gear size allowance any reduction of tooth thickness (or testing radius) below nominal value 2. Center distance any increase in center distance above nominal value II. III. Major tolerances 1. Gear size tolerance (tooth thickness or testing radius) 2. Center distance tolerance Gear center shift due to secondary sources 1. Fixed bearing eccentricities a. Outer-race eccentricity of ball bearing b. Inside-diameter and outside-diameter runout of sleeve bearing 2. Racial clearances due to tolerances and allowances a. Racial play of ball bearing b. Fit between shaft and bearing bore c. Fit between outside diameter of beating and housing bore IV. V. Backlash sources which are functions of gear rotation 1. Total composite error 2. Clearance between gear bore and shaft 3. Runout at point of gear mounting 4. Eccentricity of rotating race of ball beating Miscellaneous sources 1. Dimensional changes due to thermal expansion or contraction 2. Deflections: teeth, gear body, shaft, and housing A more complete and detailed coverage of these backlash sources is given in Reference 5. From the above listing of backlash sources, those which contribute significantly can be evaluated and summed. Thus, the total backlash for a mesh is expressed as: B mesh = Σ B (48) When using equation 48, it should be noted that all sources of radial backlash, such as center- distance tolerance and racial shift due to eccentricities, must be converted to backlash measured along the pitch circle in accordance with equation 22a prior to addition of sources such as tooth- thickness tolerances, etc. Also, note that sources of backlash can be divided into two categories: those of constant magnitude; and those the magnitude of which varies with gear rotation. The latter sources are associated with runout. Thus, backlash can be expressed as follows: T76

62 B = B c + B v (49) where: B c = constant backlash B v = variable backlash 12.2 Transmission Error The sources of transmission error originate both from the gears and their installation. Some of these are also sources of backlash. The list of usual sources is as follows: I. Position error in the individual gears 1. Total composite error a. Single-cycle errors (pitch-line runout) b. High-frequency tooth-to-tooth composite errors (TTCE) II. Installation errors 1. Runout sources a. Clearance between gear bore and shaft b. Runoutat point of gear mounting c. Eccentricity of rotating race of ball bearing d. Miscellaneous runouts: component shaft composite gear assembly 2. Miscellaneous error sources a. Shaft couplings b. Material creep of shaft and bearings The above errors are converted to angular-position error in the same manner as TCE is converted by equation 46. Thus, the total transmission error for each mesh is proportional to the sum of all eccentricity error sources: a (E T ) mesh = ± 3440 ΣE i (arc minutes) (50) R where: E i = eccentricity (one half runout value) of error contributors A more detailed explanation and analysis of transmission error can be obtained from Reference Integrated Position Error Backlash and transmission error should be distinguished from functional considerations which are not necessarily related to gear performance. For example, in a servomotor gear train, backlash may be very important, whereas position error may be immaterial. Alternatively, in a unidirectional position sensor gear-train, backlash may be of little concern, while transmission error might be critical. Often however, positional accuracy is most important in the overall accuracy of gear trains. In such cases, backlash combines with transmission error to yield an integrated position error (IPE). In essence the T77

63 errors. However, this combination is not necessarily simple since many of the transmission-error sources are identical to those associated with variable backlash. In addition, transmission error varies between maximum lead and lag values. Details of the integration are beyond the scope of this coverage, but can be found in Reference 5. The basic equation for the peak value is: (peak) IPE = E i = ±(E T + B c ) (51) 2 where: B c = backlash constant with rotation E T = transmission error (± peak value) 12.4 Control of Backlash In the many cases in which it is necessary to minimize backlash, a proper control must be chosen. The direct approach of narrowing all allowances and tolerances on sources is effective. Accordingly, precision gear qualities are specified, particularly with regard to testing radius (tooth thickness) and TCE. However, there are practical limitations since cost increases exponentially with precision. Some method of circumventing extremes of precision must be used. An alternate means of controlling backlash is to use adjustable centers or to spring-load the gears by one of several different designs. In this regard, the spring-loaded scissor gear has particular merit since all backlash is continually eliminated. However, it is limited to low torque applications. Consult Reference 5 for an in-depth coverage of various types of backlash control and elimination schemes Control of Transmission Error The methods available for controlling transmission error are much more limited than the means for controlling backlash. The most effective is the direct control of errors by specification of close tolerances. This means precision categories for TCE, TTCE, and for installation components such as shafting and ball bearings. In special cases, such as when the gear ratio of the mesh is unity, it is possible to calibrate the gears to match pitchline runouts to provide cancellation of error. However, besides being costly and not foolproof, this method is very limited since it requires not only a 1:1 gear ratio, but also identical runout errors for both gears GEAR STRENGTH AND DURABILITY Gear failure can occur due to tooth breakage or surface failure in the form of fatigue and wear. The first is referred to as tooth strength and the latter as durability. Strength is determined in terms of tooth-beam stresses for both static and dynamic conditions, following well established formulas and procedures. Durability ratings are evaluated in terms of surface stresses including the influence not only of dynamics, but also of material combinations, lubrication and a considerable number of empirically derived factors Bending Tooth Strength Tooth loading produces stresses that can ultimately result in tooth breakage. This is not a prevalent T78

64 type of failure because mechanical properties of gear materials are well known, and the design equations are sufficiently accurate. The analysis of bending stresses is as follows: In transmitting power, the driving, force acts along the line-of-action, and the tooth senses a moving force acting from the tip to the base, as shown in Figure The load can be resolved into a tangential force, W1, causing bending, and a normal force, WN, causing compression. These are shown in Figure 1.50 along the corresponding net stresses. Based upon the above static analysis, Wilfred Lewis, in 1892, presented his expression for tooth beam strength which is now reknowned as the classic Lewis equatien: W t = SFY P d As a static beam resisting a fixed load in position and magnitude, this equation is usually adequate. However, it does not take into account the dynamics of meshing teeth. In that regard, later investigators have modified and improved the original Lewis equation. Beam Strength (Figure 1.51) Improved results can be obtained by use of Barth s modified Lewis formula, which takes velocity into consideration but not wear. Impact and fatigue stresses become more pronounced as pitch-line velocity increases. The formula includes a velocity factor and is satisfactory for commercial gears at pitch-line velocities up to 1,500 fpm: W t = SFY ( 600 ) P d 600+V where: W t = transmitted load (52) S = maximum bending tooth stress, at the root outer fibers. F = face width of gear Y = Lewis factor P d = diametral pitch V = velocity of the pitch point in feet per minute. For non-metallic gears, the velocity factor is changed from ( 600 ) to ( ) 600+V 200+V The Lewis factor is dimensionless and independent of tooth size, and a function only of shape. Lewis factors for standard teeth are given in Table A safe stress level depends upon the material and the number of stress cycles to which the teeth are subjected. This can be evaluated from an S-N curve, modified Goodman diagram, Soderberg line, or equivalent data. Reference 6 contains helpful information on fatigue stress analysis. Table 1.12 gives safe stresses for a number of engineering materials. An estimate for the maximum allowable bending stress, S in equation 52, can then be obtained by multiplying the stress given in Table 1.12 by two factors: a service factor given in Table 1.13 and a lubrication factor given in Table Use of a proper limiting stress value, S e in equation 52, results in a calculated tooth load, W0, based on beam strength. For acceptable designs, W b >= W t The tangentially transmitted load is calculated from the transmitted horsepower as follows: where: P W t = 126,000 P t = transmitted horsepower (53) t N DN r = gear speed in revolutions per minute r D = gear pitch diameter T79

65

66 T80

67 D190 Catalog TABLE 1.11 LEWIS Y FACTORS No. of Teeth Full Depth Involute 14½ o o No. of Teeth Rack Full Depth Involute 14½ o o TABLE 1.12 SAFE STRESSES** Safe beam stress or static stress of materials for gears (values of s w for use in the modified Lewis equations) Material* Cast iron, ordinary Cast iron, good grade Semisteel Cast steel Forged carbon steel : SAE 1020 casehardened SAE 1030 not treated 1035 not treated 1040 nat treated 1045 not treated 1045 hardened 1050 hardened Alloy steels: Ni, SAE 2320, casehardened Cr-Ni, SAE 3245, heat treated Cr-Van. SAE 6145, heat treated Manganese bronze, SAE 43 Gear bronze. SAE 62 Phosphor bronze, SAE 65 Aluminum bronze, SAE 68 Rawhide Fabrnil Bakelite Micarta Safe Stress s w 8,000 10,000 12,000 20,000 18,000 20,000 23,000 25, , ,000 65,000 67, ,000 12,000 15,000 6,000 6,000 6,000 6,000 Ultimate Strength s w ,000 36,000 65,000 55,000 60,000 70,000 80, , , , , , ,000 36, ,000 bending 18,000 bending Yield Stress s w 36, ,000 38,000 45, ,000 60,000 80, , ,000 30,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 * For materials not given in this table the safe stress can be taken as 1/3 of the ultimate strength. **Repinted with permission from: Doughtie, Valiance, Kreisle: Design of Machine Members, McGraw Mill Co. 1964, p.268. T81

68 D190 Catalog Type of Load Steady Light shock medium shock Heavy shock TABLE 11.3 SERVICE FACTORS 8-10 hr per day Type of Service 24 hr Intermittent, per day 3 hr per day TABLE 1.14 LUBRICATION FACTORS Type of Lubrication Submerged in oil Oil drip Grease Intermittent Lubrication Lubrication Factor The loading conditions assumed by the original Lewis equation are very conservative. A modification that results in a more realistic situation was made by Dudley (Reference 3), that takes into account multiple teeth sharing load. When the contact ratio factor is added as well, the modified Lewis equation becomes: W t = m p SFY ( 600 ) for steel gears (54) P d 600+V where the contact ratio m takes into account the fact that when the load is at the tip of the tooth, it is shared by a second pair of teeth. The following tables are useful in determining gear load ratings: Table 1.15 : Ratings for steel spur gears Tables 1.16 & 1.17 : Ratings for small-pitch spur gears Table 1.18 : Ratings for hardened steel helical gears Tables 1.19 & 1.20 : Ratings of worms and worm gears Dynamic Strength Equations 52 and 54 give adequate results for gear meshes that are in a static situation. When gears are in action, however, tooth loading is greater than the static value due to dynamic effects. In a gear system, dynamic forces arise from a combination of the masses involved, their elasticity and the forcing function representing the prescribed motion. Inaccuracies in gear-tooth profiles cause accelerations and decelerations during gear action which reflect as inertia forces, and can greatly exceed static tooth loading. The severity of dynamic forces is a function of pitch-line velocity and tooth errors.an accurate prediction of dynamic forces is very difficult. Various factors and formulas have beer, devised to increase the static tooth force to a value that safety represents the dynamic condition. A T82

69

70

71 NOTE: All charts are based on 30,000 p.s.i. yield stress. For other yield stress values multiply gear by thickness matetial stress ratio. Example: 72 pitch 140 teeth brass gear torque is 200 in. oz. Table for 72 pitch yields face width for these conditions. Multiplied by 1.5 stress ratio, the final face width of is obtained. TABLE 1.17 STRESS RA11OS FOR VARIOUS GEAR MATERIALS** Gear Material Yield Stress, psi Stress Ratio 3140 Steel *70, ,000 * Stainless Steel 416 *50, ,000 * Aluminum Alloy 24 S-T4 40,000 Stainless Steel , Phosphor Bronze 20, SAE , Brass 20, Phenolic 8, Nylon 6, * depends upon heat treatment. **By permission, Product Engineering, October 1955 TABLE 1.18 RA11NGS FOR HARDENED STEEL HELICAL GEARS** Number of Teeth Horsepower at Various R.P.M.* 24 D.P. - 1/4" Face 20 D.P. - 3/8" Face *Above ratings are for gears used on PARALLEL SHAFTS. Perpendicular shaft applications are not recommended for transmission of power. **Reprinted by permission from Browning Manufacturing - Cat. No. 6. T85

72

73 D190 Catalog

74 dynamic factor DF is used to modify static tooth strength equations 52 and 54, such that: W d =W t * DF (55) and for acceptable designs: w b >=w d With the aid of empirical data. Buckingham established the dynamic increment of the transmitted force as a function of: profile errors; acceleration forces; elasticity properties; forces required to deform the teeth an amount equivalent to the tooth errors; and pitch line velocity. His simplified equation is: For spur gears: w d = w t +.05V(FC+W t ).05V +(FC+W t ) ½ (56) and for helical gears: w d = w t +.05V(FC Cos 2 +W t )Cos.05V +(FC Cos 2 +W t ) ½ (57) where: V = pitch line velocity in feet per minute F = active face width in inches C = deformation factor Values of the factor C for common material combinations and a range of tooth error (action errors) is presented in Table These errors can be equated to total composite and tooth-to-tooth composite errors. Materials, Pinion and Gear Cast Iron & Cast Iron Steel & Cast Iron Steel & Steel Cast Iron & Cast Iron Steel & Cast Iron Steel & Steel Cast Iron & Cast Iron Steel & Cast Iron Steel & Steel TABLE 1.21 VALUES OF DEFORMA11ON FACTOR C T87 Tooth Form ½ o o full depth 20 o stub tooth Error in Action, Inches ,600 2,400 3,200 4,000 1,100 2,200 3,300 4,400 5,500 1,600 3,200 4,800 6,400 8, ,140 1, ,180 1,720 1,660 2,280 3,320 1,720 2,360 3,440 2,490 3,420 4,980 2,580 3,540 5,160 3,320 4,560 6,640 3,440 4,720 6,880 4,150 5,700 8,300 4,300 5,900 8,600

75 13.3 Surface Durability The Lewis formula and its modification to Incorporate dynamic conditions is limited to beam-stress analysis. In addition, there are stresses generated in the surface layers of the teeth by the direct crushing action of the forces. These stresses can exceed the material limits and can result in pitting, scoring, scuffing, seizing and plastic deformation. Pitting This is the removal of small bits of metal from the surface, due to fatigue, thereby leaving small holes or pits. This is caused by high tooth loads leading to excessive surface stress, a high local temperature due to high rubbing speeds, or inadequate lubrication. Minute cracking of the surface develops, spreads and ultimately results in small bits breaking out of the tooth surface. Scoring This is a heavy scratch pattern extending from tooth root to tip. It appears as if a heavily-loaded tooth pair has dragged foreign matter between sliding teeth. It can be caused by lubricant failure, incompatible materials and overload. Scuffing This is a surface destruction composed of plastic material flow plus superimposed gouges and scratches caused by loose metallic particles acting as an abrasive between teeth. Both scoring and scuffing are associated with welding (or seizing) and plastic deformation. Frequently it is difficult to distinguish among the several types of failure as there is considerable intermingling. There have been many attempts to derive expressions for calculating safe surface stress. The Buckingham durability equations based on Hertzian contact stresses and the work of others can be found in the references. All of the various design equations and procedures are closely related to specific empirical data and experience. The AGMA equations are in wide use in the United States AGMA Strength and Durability Ratings The AGMA rating formulas again represent a combinations of analysis, approximations, and empirical data. A complete treatment of AGMA practices is too extensive for this discussion and only an introductory survey is offered. More details are available from AGMA literature and Chapter 11 of Reference 6. The AGMA formulas pertain to strength and surface durability, with dynamic and other effects induded. The equations are: Tooth Strength (bending stress): S t = W t K o. P d. K s K m (58) K v F J Surface Durability: S c = C p W t C o. C s. C t C m (59) C v df l These equations relate stress to load, size and stress parameters. The calculated stresses must be less than the allowable stress values of the material, which in turn depend on the nature of the application. The allowable stresses are as follows: Allowable surface durability stress: S t =< S a t K L (60) K r K r T88

76 Allowable surface durability stress: S c =< S ac C L C H (61) C R C T Definition of terms in the above equations is given in Table Tooth strength, equation 58, is essentially a modification of the Lewis formula. The extent of departure and tie improved accommodation to actual performance is dependent upon the coefficients associated with each term The surface durability equation is related to the well established Hertzian contact-stress formula. Again, coefficients in the above equations are intended to relate the theory more closely to actual gear-tooth behavior. The meaning of the coefficients in the above equations are as follows: Load distribution factors C m &K m These factors concern phenomena that cause non-uniform load distribution across the gear width: profile errors, eccentricity of mounting, non-parallelism of shafts and defiections and distortions. The effect of these errors is to cause a load concentration. Overload factors K m & C o TABLE 1.22 DEFINITIONS OF SYMBOLS IN AGMA RATING FORMULAS Term Strength Durability LOAD: Transmitted Load Dynamic Factor Overload Factor SIZE: Pinion Pitch Diameter Net Face Width Transverse Diameteral pitch Size Factor STRESS DISTRIBUTION: Load Distribution Factor Geometry factor Surface Condition factor W t K v K o -- F P d K o K m J -- W t C v C o d F -- C o C m I C f STRESS: Caiculated Stress Allowable Stress Elastic Coetficient Hardness-Ratio Factor Life Factor Temperature Factor Factor of Safety S t S at K L K t K R S c S ac C P C H C L C T C R T89

77 Dynamic factors K v & C v These relate to speed and gear errors which lead to dynamic loading. As pitch-line velocity increases, the dynamic load increment increases linearly. However, the dynamic effects of tooth errors is much more complex. Tooth-to-tooth errors, which arise in a variety of forms, have a different dynamic effect than runout errors. Also, elastic tooth deflections cause apparent errors. Life factors K L & C L These factors are primarily intended to take into account performance of gears the life of which can be finite. Factors of safety K R & C R Although factors of safety are old in engineering practice, in this case they identify the degree of reliability sought in a clear fashion. Temperature factors K T & C T These factors modify the design in accordance with adverse temperature effects on lubricant performance. Usually this factor does not become significant until temperature exceeds 200 F. Surface factors C P C H & C P The three durability factors, C,, C & C for surface condition, hardness ratio and elastic coefficient rates the resistance of the gear-tooth surface to wear. Size factors K S & C S These reflect the non-uniformity of material characteristics, such as hardness, and the dimensional parameters of the gear. The latter include: diameter, face width, tooth size and ratio of case depth to tooth size. Geometry factors J & I These relate to the tooth proportions, primarily concerning radii of curvature and parameters controlling load sharing. They are somewhat akin the Lewis Y factors. For standard tooth proportions, these have fixed values. Allowable stress S at & S ac This is the rated stress value of the material as specified by the manufacturer or standards, or obtained from material testing. This value takes into account cyclic stressing and is the nominal endurance stress rating of the material. Numerical values of factors Specific factor values are available from AGMA publications, or duplicated extracted information. Procedures for determining these factors are given in the AGMA literature. When conditions are such that a given factor is unimportant or insufficient information exists for its adequate evaluation it is usually safe to equate the factor to unity. In most cases, this results in a conservative or mid-value rating. Evaluations of equations The above information constitutes an outline of the procedures offered by AGMA for determining strength and durability ratings. As an outline it cannot include detail;and to apply the procedures the reader should refer to the references. Additional design equations The AGMA beam strength and durability equations have been custom modified and refined by a number of gear designers and manufacturers, creating a variety of design techniques and equations. Often this may be proprietary information, but will be available for specific use with customers needs. In addition, there are a host of varied design equations used by T90

78 lou near designers foreign gear designers. This multiplicity of equations underlines that gear strength and durability is not an exact engineering science, but rather is empirical and experience dependent. Also, the user should be aware that most gear equations and empirical results pertain to coarse pitch gears. The literature offers much less about tine pitch instrument gearing. Computer programs The AGMA design equations involving various parameters are defined with specific detail in the standard. Several of these equation terms are subject to design modification, but are complexly derived. Examples are geometry factors (I & J) which are alterable by profile modifications. Many computer programs have been generated which efficiently handle these complex calculations. In addition to strength and durabtity design, software exists for the entire gear and gear train design including the selection of gear type, pitch, geometry and materials. Programs are purchasable from a number of universities and software houses GEAR MATERIALS In order for gears to achieve their intended performance, life and reliability, the selection of a suitable gear material is very important. Often not all design requirements are compatible. High load capacity requires a tough, hard material which is difficult to machine; whereas high precision favors materials that are easy to machine and, therefore, have lower strength and hardness ratings. Light weight and small size favors light non-ferrous materials, while high capacity requires the opposite. Thus, tradeoffs and compromise are required to achieve an optimum design. Gear materials vary widely, ranging from ferrous metals, through the many non-ferrous and light-weight metals, to the various plastics. The gear designer and user faces a myriad of choices. The final slection should be based upon an understanding of material properties and application requirements Ferrous Metals Despite the introduction of many new exotic metals and plastics with impressive characteristics, ferrous metals are still the most widely used far gears, because they offer high strength, response to heat treatment and low cost. Cast iron and steel, carbon steels and alloy steels are in common use Cast Iron is widely used for large gears where it is advantageous to save machining costs by molding the gear blank. Cast steels also offer this advantage together with higher tensile and yield strengths, but cast iron is superior under dynamic conditions, providing excellent internal damping properties Steels are divided into two main divisions: plain carbon and alloy. The carbon steels offer low cost reasonably easy machining and ability to be hardened. A major disadvantage is the lack of resistance to corrosion. When elements other than carbon are added to the iron, the steel is termed "alloy steel". These cover a wide range from low-grade types to special high alloys offering exceptionally high strengths. Stainless steels are contained within this large category. Alloy steels offer a wide range of heat treatment properties that makes the category of alloy steels the most versatile. Stainless Steels are divided into two types: the so called 300 series true stainless steels, which resist nearly all corrosive conditions; and the 400 series, which although not truly stainless, offer less corrosion resistance only in certain environments (such as certain acids and salt water) and are otherwise considered stainless. The further significant distinction between the two series is that the 300 series generally are much more difficult to machine, non-magnetic and non-heat-treatable, although somewhat responsive to cold working. The 400 series are magnetic, almost every alloy is T91 file:///c /A3/D190/HTML/D190T91.htm [9/27/2000 6:49:31 PM]

79 heat treatable and have a much better index of machinability corresponding to some of the carbon steels. Table 1.23 lists mechanical properties of typical gear steels. Table 1.24 presents relative machinability of various steels Non-Ferrous Metals The commonly used non-ferrous materials are the aluminum alloys and bronzes. Zinc diecast alloys are used also. Non-ferrous metals generally or selectively offer good machinability, light weight, corrosion resistance and are non-magnetic Aluminum as a gear material has the special feature of light weight, and moderately good strength for the low weight It is also corrosion resistant and easy to machine. A major disadvantage is the large coefficient of thermal expansion compared to steels. Many aluminum alloys differ in ease of forming, machining and casting. Aluminum alloys respond to cold working and heat treatment Mechanical properties for several alloys are given in Table Bronzes have long been used for gear materials. They possess favorable frictional and wear properties when mating with steel gears. They are particularly advantageous in worm meshes and crossed-helical meshes because of the large amount of sliding. Bronzes are extremely stable and offer excellent machinability. The material can be cast, but bar stock and forgings are superior. Chief disadvantages are the high specific weight (highest of the gear materials) and relatively high cost. There are many bronze alloys, but only a few are extensively used for gears. These are the four alloys listed in Table This table also lists brasses that are used for low load fine pitch gears Die Cast Alloys Many high-volume low-cost gears are produced by the die-cast process. Most are produced in alloys of aluminum and zinc, and a few in bronze and brass. Properties of alloys suitable for gears are given In Table Sintered Powder Metal This is a process of molding fine metal powder and alloying ingredients under high pressure and then firing to fuse the mass. It is a high-production means of producing relatively high-strength gears at low cost. Metals used for gears are iron-based mixtures, bronzes and brasses. Powder metals are expensive, but offsetting this the scrap losses are very small. Properties of sintered powder alloys suitable for gears is presented in Table Plastics Plastics gears offer quiet operation, wear resistance, damping, lightweight, non-corrosiveness, minimum or no lubrication and low cost. On the debit side, they are difficult to machine to high precision and are subject to large temperature-induced dimensional changes and instability. Gears can be directly finish molded with teeth, entirely machined from bar and plate stock, or cut from molded blanks. Phenolic laminates have bases of either paper, linen, or cotton cloth with relative strengths in that order. They offer relatively good strength and in cotton-canvas base are suitable for large gears and high loads. Properties for gear phenolics are given in Table T92

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82 Aluminum Alloys: Wrought: 2011-T T T H T6 Material (ASTM No.) TABLE 1.25 COMPARATIVE PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS Tensile Strength (psi) ,000 38,000 45,000 Yield Strength (psi) ,000 73,000 31,000 40, Cycles Endurance Limit(psi) 18,000 19,000 23,000 18,000 14,000 Elongation (%in 2") Hardness Brirtell 100 Brinell 120 Brinell 150 Brinell 68 Brinell 95 Cast: 195-T6 356-T6 Bronzes: Aluminum Bronze-B150-2 (annealed) Phosphor Bronze- B139C Silicon Bronze - B98B (Hard) Manganese Bronze - B138-A Brasses: Free Cutting -B16 Yellow B-36-8 Naval - B124-3 (¼H) Cartridge - B ,000 40, ,000 80,000 65,000 80,000 55,000 61,000 70,000 72,000 24,000 27,000 60,000 45,000 35,000 65,000 44,000 50,000 48,000 52,000 8,000 13,000 28,000 31,000 25,000 17,000 20,000-16, , Brinell 75 Brinell 90 Rockwell B90 Rockwell B80 Rockwell B80 Brinell 80 Rockwell B75 Rockwell B70 Rockwell B80 Rockwell B80 Data for brasses end bronzes is for 1/2 hard temper condition unless noted otherwise. 1 Endurance limit at 3x10 8 cycles 2 Endurance limit at 5x10 7 cycles Material TABLE 1.26 PROPERTIES OF DIE-CASTING ALLOYS SUITABLE FOR GEARS Nominal Composition (%) Tensile Strength (psi) Yield Strength (psi) Shear Strength (psi) Compressive Strength (psi) 10 8 Cycles Endurance Limit (psi) Elongation (% in 2") Hardness (Brinell) Aluminum Alloys: Si 5 Si, 4 Cu 8.5 Si, 3.5 Cu 37,000 40,000 31,000 18,000 24,000 31,000 28,000 23,000 31,000 21,000 25,000 Magnesium Alloys ASTM-AZ91 9 AI,0.2 Zn 0.13 Mn 33,000 22,000 20,000 22,000 Zinc: ASTM-xxiii (Zamak 3) ASTM-xxv (Zamak 5) 3.5 to 4.3Al,0.1 Cu (max),.03 to.08mg 3.5 to 4.3Al,0.75 Cu,.03 to.08mg 41,000 47,000 31,000 38,000 Taken from: Michalec, G.W., i redsion Gearing, Wiley 1968 T95 60,000 87,000 19,000 21,000 10,000-14,000 6,900 8,

83 Name Iron-Copper Alloy TABLE 1.27 TYPICAL SINTERED POWDER GEAR ALLOYS Ultimate Apparent Specification Tensile Composition(%) Hardness Designation Strength (Rockwell) (psi) Copper 7-11 Iron-remainder Iron 94,0 min. Copper-Steel Alloy Copper Other 2.0 max. Iron 95.5 min. Silicon 0.3 max. Carbon-Steel Alloy Aluminum 0.2 min Other 3.0 Alloy Steel AISI 4630 Iron High Density Phosphor Bronze Beryllium Copper Carbon 0.30 Manganese 0.50 Silicon 0.25 Nitrogen 1.7 Molybdenum 2.5 Iron balance Iron Copper 0.15 Silicon 0.20 Aluminum 0.15 Other 1.60 Copper 87.0 Min. Tin Phosphor Other 1.5 max. Beryllium 1.5 Cobalt 0.25 Copper balance SAE Type 3 ASTM B ASTM B310-58T Class A Type II SAE Type 6 Class C ASTM B310-58T 40,000 H-95 60,000 B-56 50,000 A-40 Z2* 160,000 C-35 ASTM B309-58T Class A SAE Type 1 Class A ASTM B202-58T Type 1 Class A Mil B 5687A Type 1 Comp.A 150P t 52,000 A-60 30,000 H-75 75,000 to 100,000 B-85 Comments Offers a controlled amount of porosity suitable for lubricant Impregnation Good for Gear applications subject to high impact Excellent wear resistance The highest strength sintered powder material Good gear material for impact, strength and hardness. High density allows it to be case hardened by carburizing or nitriding One of the strongest sintered bronzes A maximum strength beryllium alloy * Designation of Keystone Carbon Co. t Designation of The Brush Beryllium Co. Taken from: Michalec. G.W., "Precisjon Gearing". Wiley 1966 T96

84 Catalog D190 TABLE 1.28 PROPERTIES OF PLASTIC MATERIALS Property Tensile Strength Yield Strength Compressive Strength. psi Water Absorption % (24 hrs.) Saturation % Density- lbs/in3 Modules of Elasticity. psi (Flexural) Coefficient of Linear Thermal Expansion of NYLON ASTM Type 66 ASTM Type 6 0.2% Moisture 2.5 % Moisture 0.2% Moisture 2.8% Moisture , x x x x , to x to 5.4x10-5 Data at 70o F Property Yield Strength - psi Shear Strength - psi Compressive Stress - 1% deformation - psi Water Absorption %(24 hrs) Saturation % Density- lbs/in 3 Modules of Elasticity. psi (Flexural) Coefficient of Linear Thermal Expansion o F Data at 70 o - 75 o F Registered trade name of E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. Properties Base Kraft Paper Paper DELRIN* , x x , x x 10-5 PHENOLIC LAMINATES NEMA Grade X XXX C L Cotton Canvas Fabric Fine Weave Cotton Linen Fabric Tensile Strength - psi Lengthwise Crosswise Flexural Strength - psi Lengthwise Crosswise Compressive Strength - psi Flatwise Modules of Elasticity. psi (Flexural) Lengthwise Crosswise Water Absorption %(24 hrs) Coefficient of Linear Thermal Expansion o F Lengthwise Crosswise 21,000 17,000 26,000 24,000 36, x x x x ,000 13,000 14,000 12,000 32, x x x ,500 9,500 22,000 18,000 37, x x x x ,500 11,000 23,000 18,000 35, x x x x 10-5 T97

85 Catalog D190 Ferrous: Cast Irons Cast Steels Plain-Carbon Steels Alloy Steels Stainless Steels: 300 Series 400 Series Nonferrous: Aluminum Alloys Brass Alloys Bronze Alloys Magnesium Alloys Nickel Alloys Titanium Alloys Die-Cast Alloys Sintered Powder Alloys Nonmetalic: Delrin Phenolic Laminates Nylons Teflon (Fluorocarbon) TABLE 1.29 SUMMARY OF MATERIAL FEATURES AND APPLICATIONS Obtainable Precision Material Outstanding Features Applications Rating Low cost, good machining,high Internal damping Low cast, high strength Good machining, heat - treatable Heat treatable, highest strength durability High corrosion resistance, non magnetic. nonhardenable Hardenable, magnetic. moderate stainless steel properties Light weight. noncorrosive, excellent machinability Low cost, noncorrosive, excellent machinability Excellent machinability, low friction, and good compatibility with steel mates Extreme light weight,poor corrosion resistance Low coefficient of thermal expansion, poor machinability High strength for moderate weight, corrosion resistant Low cost, no precision, low strength Low cost, low quality, moderate strength Wear resistant, long life, low water absorption Quiet operation, highest strength plastic Low friction, no lubricant, high water absorption Low friction, no lubricant Large-size, moderate power rating, commercial gears Power gears, medium ratings Power gears, medium ratings Severest power requirements Extreme corrosion, low power ratings Low to medium power ratings, moderate corrosion Extremely light-duty instrument gears Low-cost commercial equipment Commercial quality Commercial quality Commercial to medium precision Precision and high and precision Precision High precision Mates for steel power gears High prectsion Special lightweight, low-load uses Special thermal cases Special lightweight strength High production, low quality,commercial High production, low quality commercial Long life, low noise, low loads Medium loads, low noise Long life, low noise, low loads Special low friction Taken from: Michalec, GW., "Precision Gearing", Wiley 1966 T98 High precision Medium precision Medium precision Commercial grade Medium precision applications Low-grade commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial

86 Nylon has good wear resistance, even when operating without lubricant. A major disadvantage is instability in the presence of moisture and humidity. Delrin* is similar to nylon in many respects, but is super or with regard to rigidity, dimensional stability, and resistance to moisture. Properties are listed in Table These comments and data apply in particular to gears machined from plastic stock. Alternately, a greater volume of plastic gears are produced by molding. This subject is covered in detail in Par Application, and General Comments For large gears and power applications, the ferrous materials are used. The greater the load and durability requirements, the more essential are the high-alloy steels. Plain carbon steels are in common use for low-quality commercial gears. An exception in the ferrous group are the stainless steels. These are predominantly used in the small-gear, fine-pitch instrument fields because of their corrosion resistance. For fine-pitch precision applications, stainless steels are excellent. Although the 400 series is easier to machine and can have superior properties as a result of heat treatment, the 303 type of stainless steel has reasonable machinability and offers superior corrosion resistance. In addition, when used in conjunction with aluminum housings, its coefficient of thermal expansion matches that of aluminum much better than the 400 series. The aluminum alloys, particularly 2024-T4, are excellent instrument gear materials when used within their strength ratings. Aluminums have no value as a power gear material and should not be used beyond low-load instrument-type applications. Bronze is excellent for worm gears through the full range from light loads to power applications. It is also appropriate far use in spur and helical meshes that have high velocity and/or significant loading. Plastic materials are best suited for small gears of the instrument and light commercial product variety. Their poorer machining characteristics and greater instability make them undesirable for precision applications. Their quiet operation and minimal lubrication requirements render them particularly attractive far consumer products. A summary of material features is presented in Table FINISH COATINGS Thin finish coatings are often applied to metal gears for protection against the environment or for decorative purposes. The type of finish chosen is related to the material, corrosive conditions, and level of gear quality and precision. Finish coatings on the active surfaces of gear teeth must accomplish their objectives without altering dimensions, profile, or surface finish. This limits coatings to thin coverings of oxides or a substance that permanently adheres to the base, and not all are suited to extend over the active tooth surfaces Anodize An excellent finish for aluminum gears is anodize. This is an artificially induced thin, but even and hard coating of oxide. The thickness of the coating can be varied by process control, and can be troublesome in the maintenance of close tolerances. Consequently, anodizing of precision aluminum gears is usually limited to the gear blank prior to tooth cutting. * Registered trade name of E.I. dupont de Nemours and Co. T99

87 Catalog D190 Because the oxide film is somewhat porous. it can be impregnated with dyes of various colors. Anodized gears possess not only improved appearance, but also other significant protection against many corrosive atmospheres and salt sprays Chromate Coatings Applicable to aluminum, bronze, zinc and magnesium, these are low-temperature dip-bath processes that produce a chemical film of chromate which is extremely thin and does not alter dimensions. However, the thin film has little wear resistance and offers corrosion protection only against non-abrasive environments. Coating color varies with the particular metal and alloy. Most often there is an iridescent color, which generated the common trade name Iridite, Dyes can be added to produce a wide assortment of colors. Because there is no dimensional change, chromating can be applied to all gears, including precision, after tooth cutting Passlvatlon This is not a coating, in the strict sense, but a conditioning of the surface. It is particularly applicable to stainless steels. The process is essentially a low strength nitric acid dip. It results in an invisible oxide film that develops the "stainless" property, removes "tramp iron" and reduces the metal s anodic potential in the galvanic series. Passivation causes no dimensional changes and does not discolor or otherwise alter the natural surface. If anything, it prevents random staining due to "free iron" particles left from machining. All quality stainless steel gears can be passivated after complete machining since dimensions and stability are unaffected Plating. The common electroplating materials, such as cadmium, chromium, nickel and copper, are not suitable for gear surfaces since they alter dimensions. Also, susceptibility to localized buildup precludes their use on any precision part. Use of these platings should be limited to the application of coatingt prior to cutting of the teeth and of any other gear dimensions requiring close tolerances Special Coatings In recent years, special extra thin precision coatings have been developed and are available under different commercial names, Some claim surface hardness, wear resistance, low coefficient of friction, anti-corrosive qualities, etc. There are many successful applications on record. Each case however should be investigated and tested Application of Coating. It is advisable to finish coat all gears which operate in a corrosive environment or must meet the requirements of military equipment applications. In addition, appearance considerations may compel a protective finish. Aluminum gears are best protected when anodized in a natural color but not on the tooth surfaces. A chromate coating is adequate for many applications and is acceptable in many military equipment specifications. T100

88 Catalog D190 Passivation of stainless steels is a necessity for good practice and military equipment standards. Even for non-military applications, this is advisable to preclude discolorations from free iron particles and minimization of galvanic interaction with other parts. Bronze gears could be chromate coated after cutting or cadium plated in the blank state, followed by chromating after tooth generation. Table 1.30 summarizes features of the various coatings LUBRICATION Lubrication serves several purposes, but its basic and most important function is to protect the sliding and rolling tooth surfaces from seizing, wear, and other phenomena associated with surface failure by film separation. This is particularly pertinent to power gearing. In addition, lubrication aids all gearing in that it reduces friction and protects against corrosion Lubrication of Power Gear. Power gear trains require sealed housings with a lubricant bath. Depending on the magnitude of the transmitted power and speed, it may be necessary to use a circulating system with lubricant cooling. Lubricant can be supplied as a liquid bath or fine spray. Lubrication of small, low-power gear trains can be accomplished with a grease pack in some cases. Many consumer home products are so lubricated Lubrication of instrument Gear. Because of their much smaller size and capacity, generally lower speeds, and small or negligible power transmission, instrument gear lubrication is very different from that of power gears. Often, the lubricants main purpose is to reduce friction. Instrument gears that are relatively highly loaded and working near full capacity require equally good lubrication systems as power gears. The difference is that, in these extremely low powers, the heat dissipation is not a problem, therefore the unit can be packed and sealed without concern for lubricant circulation, filtering, etc. The lightly loaded gear trains can be of the open variety, in which a thin lubricant film is brushed on the teeth during assembly and reapplied only as maintenance and usage dictate. In such applications, it is important that gear speeds are not so great that the lubricant is flung away by centrifugal force. Also, the lubricant should have a minimum "Spreading" rating. For this reason, greases are often favored. Open housing gear trains are subject to contamination and it is advisable to guard against excessive exposure. Instruments, the outer enclosures of which must often be removed far maintenance of other items, should be.worked on in clean and controlled environments. Where prolonged or uncontrollable exposure occurs, temporary or permanent inner dust covers for the gear train are recommended. This is particularly advisable in hybrid electronic instrument boxes in which the danger of solder splatter and other debris is high Oil Lubricants Oils are the most common lubricants and come in various-types. The compounding of oils provides combinations and generation of various properties. The most basic lubricant is petroleum to which animal, vegitable and synthetic oils and additives are combined to yield specific properties. T101

89 Catalog D190

90 Catalog D190 Oils offer a wider range of operating speeds than greases. Also, they are easier to handle and are more effective because of their liquid nature Grease Grease is a combination of liquid and solids, in which the latter serve as a reservoir for the liquid lubricant as well as imparting certain of their own properties. Grease has the advantage of remaining in place and not spreading as oils, and has a much lower evaporation rate. Also, it can provide a lubricant film at heavy loads and at low speeds Solid Lubricants In recent years a number of "dry fllm" lubricants have been developed. These have the advantages of wide temperature range, no dispersion, and no evaporation. Hence, they are well suited for space and other vacuum applications; and they are easier to use in open gearing since they do not contaminate as rapidly as oils and grease. However, most solid films alter dimensions significantly - and some drastically. The latter cannot be tolerated in quality gearing. Dry-film lubricants represent a one-shot application of lubricant that must last the life of the gears, despite a continual eroding and wearing away of the film from the start of its use Typical Lubricants The choice of lubricants is very wide. Military specifications govern most types and classes of lubricants, to which many manufacturers products qualify. Table 1.31 is a list of typical gear oils and grease lubricants and their applications GEAR FABRICATION The fabrication of a complete gear normally includes most or all of the following operations: 1. Blank fabrication 2. Tooth generation 3. Refining of tooth shape (shaving, grinding, honing) 4. Heat treatment 5. Deburring and cleaning 6. Finish Coating Although it is not necessary to apply all six operations to every gear, the basic operations 1, 2, and determine the quality level of a gear. Blank fabrication involves all the general and special features of the gear body. Tooth generation involves only machine-cut or around gears, as in other fabrication methods, the teeth and body are formed simultaneously. The refining operation (shaving, grinding, or honing) is a special means of improving quality, particularly in high-volume production. Heat treatment is limited to gears requiring surface hardness and/or strength. Deburring and cleaning is essential for all gears irrespective of method of manufacture or quality. Finish coats are limited to certain materials and environments requiring corrosion protection or improved appearance. Modern methods of producing gear teeth cover a wide variety: T103

91 Catalog D190 Table 1.31 Typical Gear Lubricants Lubricant Type Oils: Petroleum oil Diester oil Military Specification MIL-L-644B MIL-L-6085A Useful Temp. Range (o F) -10 to to 350 Remarks Good general purpose lubricant. General purpose, low starting torque, stable over a wide temperature range. Applications All quality gears having a narrow range of operating temperature. Precision instrument gears and small machinery gears. Diester oil MIL-L-7808C -67 to 400 Suitable for oil spray or mist system, at high temperature. Best load carrier of silicone oils, widest temperature range. High speed gears. Power gears requiring wide temperature ranges. Silicone oil Greases Diester Oil- lithium soap MIL-L-7808C MIL-G-7421A -100 to to 200 Particularly suited for low starting torques, low temperatures. Moderately loaded gears. Diester Oil- lithium soap MIL-G-3278A -67 to 250 General purpose light grease. Precision instrument gears, and generally lightly loaded gears. Petroleum oil- sodium soap Silicone oil- non-soap Silicone oil- lithium soap Solid Lubricants Molybdenum disulfide(mos 2 ) powder Graphite in resin binder MoS 2 in resin binder MIL-L-3545 MIL-G B MIL-G A MIL-M7866A -20 to to to to 750;> 20O0 in vacuum -100 to to 450 High temperature only. Good high temperature features. High temperature use only. Highly stable, radiation resistant, useable in vacuum over wide temp. range. Application by spray and baking up to 3500 F. Film thickness.0003 to.001 in. Application by spray and baking up to 350 o F. Film thickness.0003 to.001 in. Stable in vacuum. High speed and high loads. High temperature, moderately loaded gear trains. Light to moderately loaded gears, low speeds. Light duty precision gears. Low precision and commercial quality gears. Light loads. Space gear trains and vacuum. T104

92 Catalog D Machine cut 2. Grinding 3. Casting 4. Molding 5. Forming (drawing, extruding, rolling) 6. Stamping Each method offers special characteristics relating to quality, production quantity, cost, material and application Generation of Gear Teeth Machining constitutes the most important method of generating gear teeth. It is suitable for high precision gears in both small and large quantities Rack generation This is the basic method of producing involute teeth. The rack cutter forms conjugate tooth profiles on the blank as the rack and blank are given proper relative motion by the drive mechanism of the generating machine. As the rack traverses the gear blank, it is reciprocated across the blank face. Cutting edges on the rack teeth generate mating conjugate teeth on the blank. The chief disadvantage of this method is that the rack has a limited length which necessitates periodic indexing. This limits both operating speed and accuracy Hob generation This is the most widely used method of cutting gear teeth. It is similar to rack generation except that the rack is in the form of a worm. Referring to Figure 1.39, the central section of the hob is identical to that of the worm and gear. The differences are that the thread of the hob is axially gashed or fluted in several places so as to form cutting edges, while the sides and top of these teeth are relieved behind the gash surface to permit proper cutting action. This arrangement, in eftect, gives an infinitely long rack so that cutting is both steady and continuous. To generate the full Width of the gear, the hob slowly traverses the face of the gear as it rotates. Thus, the hob has a basic rotary motion and a unidirectional traverse at right angles. Both movements are relatively simple to effect, resulting in a very accurate process. A further advantage of hobbing is that the hob can be swiveled relative to the blank axis. This permits cutting helical gears of all angles with the same tooling. With regard to accuracy, hobbing is superior to the other cutting processes. Gears can be directly hobbed to ultra-precision tolerances without resorting to any secondary refining processes Gear shaper generation This process, unlike the other two, employs a gear-shaped cutter instead of a rack or the equivalent. Uke a rack cutter, a given gear-shaped cutter is conjugate to all tooth numbers of that pitch. Thus, a gear made as a cutting tool can generate the teeth of a blank when the two are rotated at proper speeds. The cutting tool can be imagined as a gear that axially traverses the blank with a reciprocating axial motion as it rotates. The teeth on the gear cutter are appropriately relieved to form cutting edges on one face. Although the shaping process is not suitable for the direct cutting of ultra-precision gears and generally is not as highly rated as hobbing, it can produce precision quality gears. Usually it is a more rapid process than hobbing. Two outstanding features of shaping involve shouldered and internal gears. Compound gears and shaft gears frequently are designed so compactly that a hob cutter interferes with adjacent material. In such cases, shaping can be used since the stroke of the gear-shaped cutter requires very little round space on one side of the gear. For internal gears, the shaping process is the only basic method of tooth generation. The shaping process can be used for the generation of helical gears. However, each helix angle requires special tooling. Therefore, with regard to helical gears, shaping is not as convenient and is T105

93 Catalog D190 more expensive than hobbing Top generating This is a fabrication option utilizing cutters that finisb-.cut the outside diameter of the teeth simultaneously with the cutting of the tooth profiles. It can be used in both the hobbing and shaping processes, although more prevalent in hobbing and among the fine pitches. The main advantages of topping are: 1. Liberal tolerances can be applied to the outside diameter of the blank. 2. The deburring problem is reduced. 3. The gear can be nested on its outside diameter for machining modifications of the body should such a speaal need arise Gear Grinding Although grinding is often associated with quantity fabrication of high quality gears as a secondary refining operation, it is also a basic process for producing hardened gears. In addition, many high-precision fine-pitch gears have their teeth entirely ground from the blank state. Gear-tooth grinding can involve either form grinding or the generating process. The latter is basically more accurate because the dressing of the grinding wheel involves a straight-sided tooth. There are a number of distinct advantages to ground gears. These are listed as follows: 1. Achievement of high precision is possible because the process can remove very little material in the final pass. 2. Grinding results in a much finer surface finish than any machining process. 3. Hardened steel alloys can be ground. 4. Residual surface stresses are minimal. Being able to use heat-treatable hard steel alloys raises the bending stress and surface endurance stress levels by very significant amounts. See Table Often it is the difference between a reliable and unreliable gear. In particular, case hardened, carburized or nitrided gears offer outstanding strengths and performance. They are typically used for the most demanding tasks, such as aircraft drives. Ground gears superior load carrying capacity is not only due to the hardened alloys higher mechanical properties, but also because of the finer surface finish. A fine finish enables maintenance of a good continuous oil film versus boundary lubrication and breakthrough. The result is higher load capactry along with reduced wear and longer useful life. Although there are distinct advantages for ground gears, there are some limitations and disadvantages. These are: 1. Grinding is limited to ferrous materials. 2. Hard metals grind better than soft ones. 3. Grinding of helicals and worms has limitations that possibly involve profile deviations and removal. 4. Pro-grind hobbing requires special protruberance hobs to provide grind wheel clearance at the root 5. Gear grinding machinery is scarcer than hobbing machines. 6. Grinding is a secondary operation which increases total gear cost Despite involving higher cost and other limitations, ground gears are always superior in precision and strength. T106

94 Catalog D Plastic Gears These can be produced by the normal hobbing and shaping processes. In addition, they can be produced by various molding techniques. The latter methods are not accurate as cut gears due to shrinkage, mold variations, and flow inconsistencies. Regardless of method, the fabrication of plastic gears suffers in comparison with metal gears due to temperature instability, material flow, and generally poorer cutting qualities. Attainable quality is less than for metals and varies with the particular plastic. See Section 20.10, which deals with plastic gears in greater detail GEAR INSPECTION The performance of a gear can be assured only by confirmation of its critical dimensions and parameters. With increasing gear precision, adequate and proper inspection has become a paramount requirement. There are many aspects of gear inspection and the subject is too large for complete coverage in this discussion. However, two of the most basic and important inspection criteria, which will be discussed in the following paragraph, are total composite error (TCE) and tooth thickness Varlable-Center-Distance Testers Both TCE and tooth thickness can be measured by means of roll testing with a variable-center-distance fixture. There are many varieties, but essentially all consist of a fixture having two parallel shafts (or precision centers), one fixed arid the other floating on smooth, low-friction ways. The test gear is mounted on one shaft while an accurate known quality master gear is mounted on the other shaft. The pair is held in intimate contact by spring loading or the equivalent. As the test gear is rotated, tooth-to-tooth errors and runout are revealed as a variation in the center distance of the pair. This variation can be sensed, amplified and displayed as a dial reading or recorded on a chart. See Figure Sensitivity of the measurement is on the order of 50 to 100 millionths of an inch. The unique feature of gear roll testing is that the inspection parallels the gear in its actual usage. Thus, roll testing is a functional inspection Total Composite Error The TCE is dearly revealed in roll testing and its components can be identified. Referring to Figure 1.48, it is evident that the magnitude of runout and TTCE can be extracted. From this, the gear quality can be judged. Also, when parameters are out of tolerance, the fabricator can identify the source of the difficulty and take appropriate corrective action Gear Size If the center distance setting of the roll tester is carefully established, the absolute readings are an indication of tooth thickness. Thus, in Figure 1.48, the mean line of the trace is a measure of tooth thickness. The high and low readings indicate the extreme variation of tooth thickness at the nominal pitch radius. Changes in center-distance are an indirect measure of tooth thickness and must be converted with the aid of equation Advantages and Limitations of Variable-Center-DIstance Testers The functional test of a gear is desirable as it reveals characteristics that occur in the real application. Also, the method is rapid and, therefore, suitable for production gear inspection. Ability to obtain a hard copy record is also a distinct advantage. Rolling of the gears is not usually relied upon for the determination of. pitch radius. For the measurement of TCE and TTCE, however, roil testing gives excellent results. Repeatability arid absolute measure are usually good, being in the order of.0001 inch. On the other hand, size measurement is not as reliable as an absolute measure. This is due to the nature of the fixture and the integration of several error sources in the calibration process. A repeatability of.0002 inch is considered good, and often it is even better. T107

95 Catalog D Over-Pin. Gaging The equations relating tooth thickness and a measurement over cylindrical pins or rolls inserted between the teeth were given in Paragraph 4.6. This is a widely used method for gaging gears during fabrication (while they are still in the gear generating machine) and during final inspection. Accuracy of the over-pins measurement is on the order of.0001 inch. A major disadvantage of over-pins gaging is the inability to correlate precisely with variable-center-distance measurements. This is because over-pins gaging is insensitive to pitch-line runout. On the other hand, rolling a gear necessarily involves the TCE and its runout component. The best correlation is obtained by equating the over-pins measurement to the average value of center distance found in the roll test. Apart from the correlation problem, over-pins measurements by themselves are inadequate because the undetected runout can be out-of-control causing interference with its mate. It is necessary, therefore, to control and to inspect runout Other Inspection Equipment In addition to the basic inspection methods and equipments described in Paragraphs 18.1 and 18.2, other special-purpose equipment is available. This includes involute-profile form checkers, tooth-spacing gages and runout checkers. Also, for high precision gears, equipment is available for inspecting the position error of individual gears and the transmission error of a gear train Inspection of Fine-Pitch Gear. Because of their small dimensions, fine-pitch gears do not easily lend themselves to the kind of detailed tooth measurements suitable for large, coarse-pitch gears. Hence, fine-pitch gears are almost exclusively inspected by functional testing on a variable-center-distance fixture. Over-pins measurements are also used, but generally are restricted to a reference measurement, This is primarily used in the fabrication process as a set-up dimension, and in inspection departments which are not equipped to roll test gears Significance of Inspection and its Implementation The inspection operation is essential to obtaining a quality product. In effect, it is a policing operation that ensures conformance to dimensional tolerances and other drawing specifications. The effort, care and cost of inspection are related to the quality level. Precision-gear inspection demands a much greater effort than that for low quality gears. Equipment must be of the best grade, calibrated periodically and restricted to use by qualified personnel. Control of temperature environment is essential for measurements on the order of.0001 inches. The cleanliness of equipment, gears and working area are also very important. T1O8

96 Catalog D190 GEAR DESIGN - METRIC 19.0 GEARS, METRIC 19.1 Basic Definition. Metric gearing is distinguished not only by different units of length, but also by its own unique design standard. Historically, metric gears arose as a result of a different approach to the standardization of tooth proportions and this constitutes a major obstacle to the adoption of the metric system by the American gear industry. In the inch system diametral pitch was created as a convenient means far relating pitch diameters to center distance. Thus, diametral pitch is defined as: P d = N = number of teeth per inch of pitch diameter (62) D where: N = number of teeth D = pitch diameter P d = diametral pitch From this relationship there are particular integer - values of diametral pitch that yield integer values for center distance in inches. Thus 8, 16, 32 and 64 diametral pitches, to mention only some, can be associated with tooth numbers which can result in center distances equal to an integral multiple of one inch and/or convenient fractions of an inch. In the metric system the module is analogous to pitch, and is defined as: m = D = amount of pitch diameter per tooth, in millimeters. (63) N This defines the module as analogous to the reciprocal of diametral pitch. However, the module is a dimension (length of pitch diameter per tooth); whereas diametral pitch is the number of teeth to a unit length of pitch diameter. Again convenient center distances in metric measure are obtained by choosing integer module values and/or selected fractional values. One consequence is that each system (inch diametral pitch and metric module) has adopted preferred standard values which are non - interchangeable. It should be noted that the term diametral pitch is associated with the inch system. In the metric system the nearest analogue to pitch is termed "module", and the word pitch is reserved for tooth spacing along the pitch circle. In the inch system, the tooth spacing measure is more accurately called "circular" pitch. If the equations for diametral pitch and module are solved for pitch diameter and these values equated by introducing the conversion factor 25.4, we obtain: P d * m=25.4 (64) This shows that inch diametral pitch and the metric module are related by the decimal factor It is obvious that conversion results in decimal values, often awkward numbers, for one or the other measure. It follows that convenient values in one system will not be convenient values in the other. For this reason each system (inch diametral pitch and metric module) has adopted preferred standard values which are non-interchangeable. Table 1.32 lists the commonly used pitches/modules of both systems, with preferred values in bold-face type. Corresponding equivalent values are given, but these are of no help since odd valued pitches and modules are usually not tooled for. It becomes obvious, therefore, that direct replacement of conventional inch gearing with metric gearing is impossible. The best that can be done is to shift to the nearest standard module when converting from the inch system. One should keep in mind, however, the preferred module sizes which exist in different countries. The degree of non-correspondence between pitch and module is best measured by the circular pitch and the circular tooth thickness. These values are given in inches and millimeters in Table T109

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99 Catalog D190 As a consequence, metrification of gearing requires a completely new design with regard to gear dimensions and center distances. This in turn involves new gear cutting tools. Preferred module sizes in the United States are established only for the coarser gears by means of IS( recommendation R54 (see Table 1.33). Judging by their acceptance by the industrialized metric countries, the following modules are expected to be preferred for the finer gears: 0.3,0.4,0.5, 0.8, 1.0 To facilitate work with these modules we have computerized the basic relationship: D = m * N and created Table 1.34 for number of teeth, N ranging from 5 through 205. The pitch diameters are calculated in Table 1.34 both in millimeters and inches. We expect this tab to be of great help to designers in developing a feel for metric gear sizes and for determining center distances. The subject of measurement over pins was dealt with in section 4.6. For inch-size gears Table 1.8 listed the over-wire measurements. Similarly for module-type gears, computerized Table 1.34 was produced. This lists both pitch diameters as well as over-wire measurements in both millimeters and inches. TABLE 1.33 Modules and Diametral Pitches of Cylindrical Gears for General and Heavy Engineering * (ISO Recommendation R ) Modules m Diametral Pitches P I II III I II (3.25) (3.75) (6.5)

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109 Catalog D Metric Design Equations Some of the gear design equations are dimensionless and are derived from geometric proportions and relationships. These equations will not be affected by the use of metric units as opposed to inch units since the units cancel. lt is important, however, that the same units are used consistently throughout. When this is not the case the problem of metriflcation can be approached in two steps. The first step is to express the present inch-base units in metrics and to modify the constants and coefficients accordingly. This procedure will yield results expressed in the form presently used in engineering practice in industrialized metric countries. The second step is to express these results in Si units which differ slightly from the conventional metric units. Thls is true for stress calculations but does not affect gear dimensioning. Metrification in the U.S. is taking place at a time when the SI (International System of Units) has been adopted in most metric countties, but its use has not spread to the practical design engineering profession. For. these countries, transition to the SI system represents a change which is accompanied by a degree of reluctance. The standardization related to transition to metrics in the U.S. is expected to introduce the SI units as well, in a single step. lf we concentrate on the large number of equations which are independent of the system of measuring units, there will be no problem with metrification. Most of the kinematic design equations that appear American gear texts. and are associated with inch-system gears, are suitable for use with metric gear dimensions, provided that a proper substitution of module (in) is made for-pitch. For equations involving diametral pitch: P d is replaced by 25.4 (65) m Recalling that: P d * P c = π m 25.4 we find that for equations involving circular pitch: P c is replaced by π m (66) 25.4 Note: When converting between metric module and the inch diametral pitch, the conversion factor and relationship can be remembered from the simple product of the two pitch measures: m * P d = 25.4 By this means, all geometric and all kinematic equations involving pitch parameters can be used. However, by the above, conversion results are still given in inch measurements. Thus, this is a way to adapt the metric module to kinematic design equations given in inch units. Basic kinematic and geometric design equations for spur gears in both metric module and inch diametral-pitch forms are given in table These equations show the essence of using the modules versus inch diametral pitch. Some equations which are identical in both systems are: 1. Over-pins measurements. 2. Relationship between tooth thicknesses at different radii from gear center. 3. Long and short addendum equations. 4. Profile-shifted gear-design equations: i.e., enlarged gear teeth, non-standard center distance T122

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111 Catalog D MetrIc Tooth Standmrds* The metric module was developed in a number of versions that differ in minor ways. The German module, defined by the DIN standard, is widely used throughout Europe. However, the Japanese have their own version, defined in JIS standards. The deviations among these and other national metric standards are fortunately minor: the various metric standards, differ only with regard to dedendum size and root radii. Even these minor deviations are resolved by a new unified module standard sponsored and promoted by the International Standards Organization (ISO). This unified version, shown in figure 1.52, conforms to the new SI system in all respects. Currently, Germany, Japan, Great Britain and other major industrial countries on the metric system, are shifting to this ISO standard, which has been advocated as the basis for American metric gearing. ISO standard metric gear tooth is defined by a rack of module m = 1. ISO gears share many features with inch-size American gears: 200 pressure angle, plus similar addendum and dedendum ratios. Tooth proportions for the standard, which applies to cylindrical gears of the spur and helical varieties, are given in terms of the basic rack, as shown in the illustration. Dimensions, in millimeters, are normalized for module m = 1. Corresponding values for other modules are obtained by multiplying each dimension by the value of the specific module, m. Major tooth parameters are described by the standard: Tooth form is straight-sided and full-depth, forming the basis of a family of full-depth interchangeable gears. Pressure angle is 200, conforming to world-wide acceptance of 200 as the most versatile pressure angle. Addendum is equal to the module, m, which conforms to the American practice of addendum equaling 1/P. Dedendum is equal to m, which corresponds to American practice for coarse pitch gears (see Table 1.1). Root radius is slightly greater than current American standards specify. Tip radius has a maximum tip-rounding specified. This rounding is a deviation from American standards, which do not specify rounding. However, as a maximum or limit value, American gear makers are not prevented from specifying a tip radius as near zero as possible. Note that the basic racks for metric gears and for American inch gears are essentially identical. For metric gears, specific size dimensions are obtained from multiplying by m (the module). Gears conforming to diametral pitch American standards are sized by dividing the basic rack dimensions by the specific diametral pitch (P). Apart from minor changes in wording. this paragraph, including figure 1.52, is quoted or reproduced wilh the permissior of Machine Design magazine from the following article: "Shifting to Metric", by G.W. Mchalec and F. Buchsbaum Machire Design, Vol. 45, August 9,1973, pp T124

112 Catalog D Metric Gear Standards With recent increasing presence of metric geanng in the USA it is important that designers and gear users have knowledge of and ready reference to various metric gear standards used throughout the world USA Metric Gear Standards Metric gears designed and produced in the USA should conform to the ISO standard. This is the latest metric standard based upon SI units which have been decreed as the most precise metric measurement for standardized international use. The latest (1989) ISO gear standards are listed in Table They can be procured from ANSI Broadway, New York, N.Y ForeIgn Metric Gear Standards Several of the major industrialized countries that have been dedicated for a long time to metric measurement countries have developed their own standards for metric gearing. In general they have similar standards, and since the establishment of ISO and SI units have adopted these standards as theirs. With increasing international trade and worldwide manufacture of common products, availability and familiarity with appropriate foreign standards have become important. To serve that need Table 1.37 offered as a listing of key gear standards in use in several major countries and geographic areas. TABLE 1.36 ISO METRIC GEARING STANDARDS ISO 53:1974 Cylindrical gears for general and heavy engineering Basic rack ISO 54:1977 Cylindrical gears for general and heavy engineering Modules and diametral pitches ISO 677:1976 Straight bevel gears for general and heavy engineering Basic rack ISO 678:1978 Straight bevel gears for general and heavy engineering-. Modules and diarmetral pitches ISO 701:1979 International gear notation Symbols for geometrical data ISO :1983 Glossary of gear terms Part 1: Geometrical definitions ISO 1328:1975 Parallel involute gears -. ISO system of accuracy ISO 1340:1976 Cylindrical gears.- Information to be given to the manufacturer by the purchaser In order to obtain the gear required ISO 1341:1976 Straight bevel gears - Information to be given to the manufacturer by the purchaser in order to obtain the gear required ISO 2490:1976 Single-start solid (monobloc) gear hobs with axial keyway, 1 to 20 module and 1 to 20 diametral pitch - Nominal dimensions ISO/TR 4407:1902 Addendum modification of the teeth of cylindrical gears for speed-reducing and speed-increasing gear pairs ISO 4468:1982 Gear hobs - Single start- Accuracy requirements T-126

113 Catalog D190 ASB AS B AS B ASB2I AS 1637 TABLE 1.37 FOREIGN METRIC GEAR STANDARDS AUSTRALIA Bevel gears Worm gears (inch series) Geometrical dimensions for worm gears Units Glossary for gearing International gear notation symbols for geometric data (similar to ISO 701) NF E NF E NF E NF E NF E NF E NF L FRANCE Glossary of gears (similar to ISO 1122) Glossary of worm gears Gearing Symbols (similar to ISO 701) Tolerances for spur gears with Involute teeth (similar to ISO 1328) Cylindrical gears for general and heavy engineering Basic rack and modules (similar to ISO 467 and ISO 53) Cylindrical gears Information to be given to the manufacturer by the producer Calculating spur gears to NFL DIN DIN 780 Pt DIN 780 P DIN DIN DIN DIN 3962 Pt DIN 3962 Pt DIN 3962 Pt DIN DIN DIN 3965 Pt DIN 3965 Pt DIN 3965 Pt DIN 3965 Pt DIN 3966 Pt DIN 3966 Pt DIN DIN 3970 Pt DIN 3910 Pt GERMANY - DIN (Deutsches Institut für Normung) Conventional and simplified representation of gears and gear pairs [4] Series of modules for gears Modules for spur gears [4] Series of modules for gears Modules for cylindrical worm gear transmissions [4] Basic rack tooth profiles for involute teeth of cylindrical gears for general and heavy engineering [5] General definitions and specification factors for gears, gear pairs and gear trains [11] Tolerances for cylindrical gear teeth Bases [8] Tolerances for cylindrical gear teeth Tolerances for deviations of individual parameters [11] Tolerances for cylindrical gear teeth Tolerances for tooth trace deviations (4] Tolerances for cylindrical gear teeth Tolerances for pitch-span deviations [4] Tolerances for cylindrical gear teeth Tolerances far working deviations [11] Deviations of shaft center distances and shaft position tolerances of casings for cylindrical gears [4] Tolerancing of bevel gears Basic concepts (5] Tolerancing of bevel gears Tolerances for individual parameters [11] Tolerancing of bevel gears Tolerances for tangential composite errors [11] Tolerancing of bevel gears Tolerances for shaft angle errors and axes intersection point deviations [5] Information on gear teeth in drawings Information on involute teeth for cylindrical gears [7] Information on gear teeth in drawings Information on straight bevel gear teeth [6] System of gear fits - Backlash, tooth thickness allowances, tooth thickness tolerances - Principles [12] Master gears for checking spur gears - Gear blank and tooth system [8] Master gears for ducking spur gears - Receiving arbors [4] T127

114 Catalog D190 TABLE 1.37 CONT. FOREIGN METRIC GEAR STANDARDS DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN 3993 Pt D1N3993 P D1N3993 Pt DIN 3993 P DIN Suppl 1 DIN 3998 Ptl DIN 3998 Pt DIN 3998 P DIN 3998 P DIN Pt DIN P GERMANY CONT. - DIN (Deutsches Institut für Normung) Definitions and parameters for bevel gears and bevel gear pair [12] Reference profiles of gear-cutting tools for involute tooth systems according to DIN 887[4] Terms and definitions for cylindrical worm gears with shaft angle 90 o [9] Cylindrical worms Dimensions, correlation of shaft center distances and gear ratios of worm gear drives [6] Measuring element diameters for the radial or diametral dimension for testing tooth thickness of cylindrical gears [8] Helix angles for cylindrical gear teeth [5] Tooth damage on gear trains Designation, characteristics, causes [11] Geometrical design of cylindrical Internal involute gear pairs Basic r ules [17] Geometrical design of cylindrical internal involute gear pairs Diagrams for geometrical limits of internal gear-pinion matings [15] Geometrical design of cylindrical internal involute gear pairs Diagrams for the determination of addendum modification coefficients [15] Geometrical design of cylindrical internal involute gear pairs -. Diagrams for limits of internal gear-pinion type cutter matings [10] Denominations on gear and gear pairs Alphabetical index of equivalent terms [10] Denominations on gears and gear pairs General definitions [11] Denominations on gears and gear pairs Cylindrical gears and gear pairs [11] Denominations on gears and gear pairs Bevel and hypoid gears and gear pairs [9] Denominations on gears and gear pairs Worm gear pairs [8] Spur gear drives for fine mechanics Scope, definitions, principal design data, classification [7] Spur gear drives for fine mechanics Gear fit selection, tolerances, allowances [9] Spur gear drives for fine mechanics Indication in drawings, examples for calculation [12] spur gear drives for fine mechanics Tables [15] Technical drawings Conventional representation of gears DIN P DIN Pt DIN ISO NOTE: Standards available in English from: ANSI, 1430 Broadway, New York, NY 10018: or Beuth Verlag GmbH, Burggrafenstrasse 6. D-1000 Berlin 30, West Germany: or Global Engineering Documents, 2806 McGaw Avenue, P.O. Box 19539, Irvine, CA 92714, Telex Easylink ; or I.S.L.I., 160 Old Derby Street, Hingham, MA 02018, Telex UNI UNI UNI UNI UNI UNI UNI ITALY Gearing - Module series Gearing - Basic rack Spur gears Order Information for straight and bevel gears Gearing - Glossary and geometrical definitions Modules and diametral pitches of cylindrical and straight bevel gears for general and heavy engineering (corresponds to ISO54 and 678) Basic rack of cylindrical gears for general engineering (corresponding to ISO 53) Basic rack of straight bevel gears for general and heavy engineering (corresponds to ISO677) International gear notation -. Symbols for geometrical data (Corresponding to ISO 701) UNI T128

115 Catalog D190 B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B TABLE 1.37 CONT. - FOREIGN METRIC GEAR STANDARDS JAPAN - JIS (Japanese Industrial Standards) Drawing office practice for gears. Glossary of gear terms Involute gear tooth profile and dimensions Accuracy for spur and helical gears Backlash for spur and helical gears Accuracy for bevel gears Backlash for bevel gears Shapes arid dimensions of spur gears for general engineering Shapes and dimensions of helical gears for general use Dimensions of cylindrical worm gears Tooth contact marking of gears Master cylindrical gears Methods of measurement of spur and helical gears Measuring method of noise of gears Gear cutter tooth profile and dimensions Straight bevel gear generating cutters Single thread hobs Single thread fine pitch hobs Pinion type cutters Rotary gear shaving cutters Rack type cutters NOTE: Standards available in English from: ANSI, 1430 Broadway, New York, NY 10018; or International Standardization Cooperation Centre, Japanese Standards Association, Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo 107. UNITED KINGDOM - BSI (BrItish Standards Institute) BS BS 438 Pt BS 436 Pt BS436 Pt BS721 Pt BS721 Pt BS978 Pt BS978 Pt BS978 Pt BS978 Pt BS BS BS2062 Pt BS2082 Pt BS2518 Pt BS2518 Pt Specification of gears for electric traction Spur and helical gears Basic rack form, pitches and accuracy (diametral pitch series) Spur and helical gears Basic rack form, modules and accuracy (1 to 50 metric module) (Parts I & 2 related but not equivalent with ISO 53.54, 1328,1340 & 1341) Spur gear and helical gears-method for calculation of contact and root bending stresses, limitations for metallic involute gears (Related but not equivalent with ISO/ DIS , 2 & 3) Specification for worm gearing Imperial units Specification for worm gearing Metric units Specification for fine pitch gears Involute spur and helical gears Specification for fine pitch gears Cydoidal type gears Specification for fine pitch gears - Bevel gears Specification for fine pitch gears - Hobs and cutters SpecifIcation for marine propulsion gears and similar drives: metric module Specification for circular gear shaving cutters, 1 to 8 metric module,accuracy requirements Specification for gear hobs Hobs for general purpose: 1 to 2O dp., inclusive Specification for gear hobs Hobs for gears for turbone reduction and similar drives Specification for rotary form relieved gear cutters - Diametral pitch Specification for rotary relieved gear cutters - Metric modules T129

116 Catalog D190 BS 2519 Pt BS 2519 Pt BS BS BS 3696 Pt BS BS 4582 Pt BS 4582 Pt BS BS BS TABLE 1.37 CONTD. FOREIGN METRIC GEAR STANDARDS UNITED KINGDOM CONT. BSI (British Standards Institute) Glossary for gears Geometrical definitions Glossary for gears Notation (symbols for geometrical data for use in gear notation) Specification for rack type gear cutters Specification for dimensions of worm gear units Specification for master gears Spur and helical gears (metric module) Dimensions of spur and helical geared motor units (metric series) Fine pitch gears (metric module) Involute spur and helical gears Fine pitch gears (metric module) Hobs and cutters Specification for general purpose, metric module gear hobs Specification for pinion type cutters for spur gears 1 to 8 metric module Specification for non-metallic spur gears NOTE: Standards available from: ANSI Broadway, New York, NY 10018; or BSI, Linford Wood, Milton Keynes MK146LE, United Kingdom. ADDITIONAL GEAR DESIGN LITERATURE AND SOFTWARE From noted authorities In the field of GEAR DESIGN. such as: Earl Buckingham J W. Dudley JE Shigley Clifford E. Adams and others is made available... See complete listing with detailed description and ordering information on pages T159 and T160 T130

117 Catalog D190 GEAR DESIGN - PLASTIC 20.0 DESIGN OF PLASTIC MOLDED GEARS Plastic gears are continuing to displace metal gears in a widening arena of applications. Their unique characteristics are also being enhanced with new developments, both in materials and processing. In this regard plastics contrast somewhat dramatically from metals, in that the latter materials and processes are essentially fully developed and, therefore, are in a relatively static state of development. Among the various methods of producing plastic gears, molding is unique in many respects. For that reason, it is singled out for in-depth treatment in this separate section General Characteristics of Plastic Gears Among the characteristics responsible for the large increase in plastic gear usage the following are probably the most significant: 1. Cost effectiveness of the injection-molding process. 2. Elimination of machining operations; capability of fabrication with inserts and integral designs. 3. Low density: light weight, low inertia. 4. Uniformity of parts. 5. Capability to absorb shock and vibration as a result of elastic compliance. 6. Ability to operate with minimum or no lubrication, due to inherent lubricity. 7. Relatively low coefficient of friction. 8. Corrosion resistance; elimination of plating, or protective coatings. 9. Quietness of operation. 10. Tolerances often less critical than for metal gears, due in part to their greater resilience. 11. Consistency with trend to greater use of plastic housings and other components. 12. One step production; no preliminary or secondary operations. At the same time the design engineer should be familiar with the limitations of plastic gears relative to metal gears. The most significant of these are as follows: 1. Less load-carrying capacity due to lower maximum allowable stress; the greater compliance of plastic gears may also produce stress concentrations. 2. Plastic gears cannot generally be molded to the same accuracy as high-precision machined metal gears. 3. Plastic gears are subject to greater dimensional instabilities due to their greater coefficient of thermal expansion and moisture absorption. 4. Reduced ability to operate at elevated temperatures; as an approximate figure, operation is limited to less than 250 degrees o F. Also limited cold temperature operations. 5. Initial high mold cost in developing correct tooth form and dimensions. 6. Can be negatively affected by certain chemicals and even some lubricants. 7. Improper molding tools and process can produce residual internal stresses at the tooth roots resulting in over stressing and/or distortion with aging. 8. Cost of plastics track petrochemical pricing and thus are more volatile and increasing in comparison to metals T131

118 Catalog D Properties of Plastic Gear Materials Popular materials for Plastic Gears are acetal resins such as DELRIN*, nylon resins such as ZYTEL* and NYLATRON** and acetal copolymers such as CELCON***. The physical and mechanical properties of a these materials vary with regard to strength, rigidly, dimensional resistance, fabrication requirements, moisture absorption etc. Standardized tabular data is available from various manufacturers catalogs. In general, the information and data is less simplified and fixed than for the metals. This is because plastics are subject to wider formulation variations and are often regarded as proprietary compounds and mixtures. Tables 1.38 through 1.43A are representative listings of physical and mechanical properties of gear plastics taken from a variety of sources. It is common practice to use plastics in combination with different metals and materials other than plastics. Such is the case when gears have metal hubs, inserts, rims, spokes, etc. In these cases one must be cognizant of the fact that plastics have an order of magnitude different Coefficients of Thermal Expansion as well as Density and Modulus of Elasticity. For this reason TABLE 1.43A is presented. Other properties and features that enter into considerations for gearing are given in Table 1.44 (Wear) and Table 1.45 (Poisson s Ratio). Moisture has a significant impact on plastic properties as can be seen in Tables 1.38 thru Ranking of plastics is given in Table In this table, rate refers to expansion from dry to full moist condition. Thus, a 0.20% rating means a dimensional increase of inch per inch. Note that this is only a rough guide as exact values depend upon factors of composition and processing, both the raw material and gear molding. For example, it can be seen that the various types and grades of nylon can range from 0.07% to 2.0%. Material Acetal ABS Nylon 6/6 Nylon6/1O Polycarbonate High Impact Polystyrene Polyurethane Polyvinyl Chloride Polysulflon MoS2 Filled Nylon Table 1.47 lists safe stress values for a few basic plastics and the effect of glass fiber reinforcement TABLE 1.38 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF PLASTICS USED IN GEARS Tensile Strength (psi x 10 3 ) Flexural Strength (psi x 103) Compressive Modulus (psi x 103) Heat Distortion Temperature ( o 264 psi) Reprinted with the permission of Plastic Design and Processing Magazine; see Raf. 11. Water Absorption (% 24 hr) Rockwell Hardness M94 R120 R R R111 M70 R112 M25-69 M29 R90 R M69-R120 D785 Mold Shrinkage (in./in.) 0.022/ / / / / *Registered trademark. E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., Wilmington, Delaware **Registered trademark, The Polymer Corporation, P.O. Box 422, Reading Pennsylvania, ***Registered trademark, Celanese Corporation, 26 Msin St., Chaitham, N.J T132

119 Catalog D190 TABLE 1.39 PROPERTY CHART FOR BASIC POLYMERS FOR GEARING Mold Flexural Shrinkage Modulus Water Absorption 24 hr Tensile Strength *Yield #Break Izod Impact Strength Notched deflect. psi Coeff. Linear Thermal Expan. Specific Gravity Units % In./In. psi psi ft-lb/in. o F 10-5 o F ASTM D570 D955 D638 D790 D256 D648 D696 D /.030 *11, , /.025 *11, , varies /.030 *10, , / *17,500 1,200, Nylon 6/6 2.Nylon6 3.Acetal 4.Polycarbonate 30% G.F 15% PTFE 5.Polyester (thermoplastic) 6.Polyphenylene Sulfide 30% Sulfide 15% PTFE 7.Polyester elastomer 8.Phenolic (molded) *8,000 #12,000 *19, ,000 1,300, / *3,780 #5,500 #7, , These are average values for comparison purposes only. Source: Clifford E. Adams, "Plastic Gearng", Marcel Dekker Inc. N.Y Ref.13 TABLE 1.40 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF OELRIN ACETAL RESIN AND ZYTEL NYLON RESIN Properties - Units Yield Strength, psi Shear Strength, psi Impact Strength, (Izod) Elongation at Yield,% Modulus of Elasticity, psi Hardness, Rockwell Coefficient of Linear Thermal Expansion, in/in. o F Water Absorption 24hrs.% Saturation, % ASTM D638 D732 D256 D638 D790 D785 D696 "DELRIN" ,000 9, ,000 M94 R x 10-5 "ZYTEL" 100.2% Moisture 2.5% Moisture 11,800 9, ,000 M79 R x , ,000 M59 R108 Specific Gravity D D Test conducted at 73 o F Reprinted with the permission of E.l. DuPont de nemours and Co.; see Ref. 8 T133

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127 Catalog D190 TABLE 1.46 MATERIAL RANKING BY WATER ABSORPTION RATE Material Rate of change % Polytetrafluoroethylene Poly ethylene: medium density high density high molecular weight low density Polyphenylene sulfldes (40% glass filled) Polyester: thermosetting and alkyds low shrink glass-preformed chopping roving Polyester: linear aromatic Polyphenylene sulfide: unfilled Polyester: thermoplastic(18% glass) Polyurethane: cast liquid methane Polyester synthetic: fiber filled - alkyd glass filled - alkyd mineral filled - alkyd glass-woven cloth glass premixed, chopped Nylon 12 (30% glass) Polycarbonate (10-40% glass) Styrene acrylonitrite copolymer(20-33% glass filled) Polyester thermoplastic: thermoplastic PTMT (20% asbestos) glass sheet molding Polycarbonate < 10% glass Phenolic cast - mineral filled Polyester alkyd - asbestos filled Polycarbonate - unfilled Polyester cast - rigid Acetal: TFE Nylon 6/12 (30-35% glass) 6/10 (30-35% glass) Polyester alkyd vinyl ester thermoset Styrene acrylonitrite copolymer: unfilled Polycarbonate ABS alloy Phenolic cast : unfilled Acetal copolymer homopolymer Nylon 12 (unmodified) Acetal (20% glass) Poly(ancide-imide) Acetal (25% glass) Nylon 11 (unmodified) 0.0 <0.01 <0.01 <0.01 < Source: Clifford E. Adams, "Plastic Gearing", Marcel Oekker, Inc. New York, Ref 13 T138

128 Catalog D190 TABLE 1.46 (CONTINUED) Material Rate of change % Polyester elastomer Poly imide Nylon 6/12 (unmodified) 6/10 (unmodified) Polyester-thermosetting and alkyds (cast flexible) Nylon 6 (cast) Poly urethane elastomer thermoplastic Nylon 6/6: MOS % glass unmodified nucleated Nylon 6 (30-35% glass) unmodified nucleated Nylon 6/6-6(copolymer) Source: Clifford E. Adams, "Plastic Gearing", Marcel Dekker, Inc. New York, Ref Pressure Angles Pressure angles of 14½ o, 20 o and 25 o are used in plastic gears. The 20 o pressure angle is usually preferred due to its stronger tooth shape and reduced undercutting compared to the 14½ o pressure-angle system. The 25 o pressure angle has the highest load-carring ability, but is more sensitive to center-distance variation and hence runs less quietly. The choice is dependent on the application Diametral Pitch The determination of the appropriate diametral pitch is a compromise between a number of different design requirements. A smaller pitch number is associated with larger and stronger teeth. For a given pitch diameter, however, this also means a smaller number of teeth with a correspondingly greater likelihood of undercut at very low tooth numbers. Larger teeth are generally associated with more sliding than smaller teeth. On the other side of the coin, larger pitch numbers, which are associated with smaller teeth, tend to provide greater load sharing due to the compliance of plastic gears. However, a limiting condition would eventually be reached when mechanical interference occurs as a result of too much compliance. Smaller teeth are also more sensitive to tooth errors and may be more highly stressed. A good procedure is probably to size the pinion first, since it is the more highly loaded member. It should be proportioned to support the required loads, but should not be overdesigned Design Equations For Plastic Spur, Bevel, Helical and Worm Gears General Considerations The load-carrying capacity of a plastic spur gear is reached under a limiting load, which is determined either by bending fatigue strength or wear(surface durability). The latter is measured by contact stress. The character of the limiting load depends on the presence or absence of lubrication and its nature, as shown in Table 1.48 T139

129 Catalog D190 TABLE 1.4 LOAD-CARRYING UNIT VS. LUBRICATION OF SPUR GEARS FOR ACETAL COPOLYMER (CELCON), ACEIAL RESIN (DELRIN) AND NYLON RESIN (NYLON ETC.). Natureof Lubricant Limiting Load Determined by: Continuous lubrication Bending fatigue strength Initial lubrication only No lubrication Celcon and Zytel: Bending fatigue strength Delrin: Wear (contact strength) Wear (contact stress) Like metal gearing, plastic spur gears are the most prevalent type and also the easiest to design in regard to stress level. The design procedure for helical and bevel gears is analagous to those for spur, differing mainly in the values of the various equation modification parameters. We first consider the design for bending fatigue strength and follow this with a discussion of design for surface durability (contact stress), For a given spur gear Table 1.48 determines which of these should be used. In regard to standards it should be noted that the AGMA standards have been generated around metal gears. An exception is AGMA which is devoted to plastic gearing Bending Stress -Spur Gears The basic Lewis Formula, the use of which for metal gears has been described in Section 13, is used also for plastic gears with suitable modifying factors. It can be expressed in the form: where W t = SFY K L K v K t (70) P d K L = lubrication factor K v = velocity-dependent dynamic factor K t = temperature factor As already explained in Section 13.1, the remaining notation is as follows: W t = tangentially transmitted Load lbs S = maximum tooth bending stress, lbs/in 2 F = face width of gears, in. Y = Lewis form factor f (Table 1.49) ln the event torque or horsepower (H.P.) are specified, these are related to the tangent.ially transmitted load as follows: Torque (in.-lbs.) = (1/2)W t D (71) and H.P. = W t Dn (72) where D = pitch diameter of gear, inches n = gear speed in revolutions per minute T-140

130 Catalog D190 TABLE 1.49 LEWIS FORM FACTOR, Y TOOTH FORM FACTOR LOAD NEAR THE PITCH POINT Number of Teeth 14½ o 20 o Full Depth 20 o Stub Rack Reprinted with the permission of E. I. DuPont de Nemours and Co.; see Ref Surface Durability for Spur and Helical Gears Excessive contact stresses can cause wear of the tooth surface and can be a limiting factor in the performance of a plastic gear. For spur gears which are not lubricated or (in some cases) only initially lubricated, both contact stress and bending stress should be checked, the smaller load being the limiting load. For spur gears the Hertzian contact stress, 5,, in the elastic range is given by:

131 Catalog D190 For helical gears, the contact stress is given by the equation: The other symbols have the same meaning as in the case of spur gears. The allowable contact stress is a function of lubrication, gear and pinion material, speed of operation, ambient temperature and cycles of operation during the life of the gear. The most reliable information on -this point is likely to be that obtainable from the plastics manufacturer. In applying eqs. (73) and (74) it is not always easy to predict the values of the elastic moduli. The values given in the literature such as figures 1.53 and 1.54 are functions of temperature. If the temperature does not vary too much, the ambient temperature can be used for a first estimate. For bevel gears the determination of contact stresses is beyond the scope of this treatment and the cited references at the end of this section can be consulted for further information. T142

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140 Catalog D ln determining the Lewis form factor from Table 1.49 the number of teeth should be the formative Numberr of teeth, N t where N t = N (77) cosý and ý = pitch angle 3. Both bending stress and contact stress should be checked for all bevel gears regardless of lubrication, as either type of stress may be limiting. The subject of contact stresses in bevel gears is an Involved subject for which the reader is referred to the references Design Procedure- Worm Gears The design of worm-gear drives involves consideration of a rumber of factors, which do not arise in the design of spur and helical gears. These include the stresses associated with the theoretical line contact between the teeth of the worm and gear - and the wear associated with the relatively high sliding velocities at the tooth interface. Plastic worm gears meshing with either with a plastic worm or a metal worm have been used. In either case the load-carrying capacity of the combination is substantially less than that of metal gears and worms. For design calculations, which are the scope of this discussion, the reader is referred to the references. 3.6 Operating Temperature As a general guideline plastic gears should be used only for temperatures below 250 o F, as their load carrying capacity decreases with temperature. The actual recommended maximum temperature can be considerably below 2500 o F, depending upon the application. Limiting factors include the nature of the lubrication, loads, speeds, thermal expansion, nature of operation (continuous or intermittent) and the material properties of the plastics involved. The combination of a plastic and a metal gear improves heat dissipation. If space permits, the plastic can be proportioned so as to maximize the rate of heat transferred to its surroundings. In order to estimate the operating temperature limit it is recommended that the bending stress and contact stress can be calculated, taking into account the reduction in tensile strength and elastic moduli with temperature (Figures 1.53, 1.54) Effect of Part Shrinkage on Gear Design The nature of the part and the molding operation have a significant effect on the molded gear. From the design point of view the most important effect is the shrinkage of the gear relative to the size of the mold cavity. Gear shrinkage depends upon mold proportions, gear geometry, material, ambient temperature and is usually expressed in inches per inch. For example, if a plastic gear with a shrinkage rate of in./in. has a pitch diameter of 2 inches while in the mold, the pitch diameter after molding will be reduced by (2)(0.22)" or 0.44" and becomes 1.956" after it leaves the mold. Depending upon the material and the molding process shrinkage rates ranging from about 0.OO1in./in. to in/in, occur in (see Tablet 1.38 and Fig.1.61). Sometimes shrinkage rates are expressed as a percentage. For example a shrinkage rate of in/in, can be stated as a 0.25% shrinkage rate. T147

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145 Catalog D Design Specifications Basic gear formals have been discussed in Section 11.1, which also included a typical data block for spur gears (Figure 1.47). The information required for plastic injection-molded gears is very similar. Additional information, which would be useful, would include fillet radius and whole depth. Other data, which is pertinent to the function of the gear and which the design engineer may wish to add to the data block, includes the following: material and pitch diameter of mating gear, operating temperature, lubrication, moisture/humidity data, and annealing, if required Backlash Due to the thermal expansion of plastic gears, which is significantly greater than that of metal gears (see Tables 1.40 thru 1.43A) and the effects of tolerances, one should make sure that meshing gears do not bind in the course of service. Several means are available for introducing backlash into the system. Perhaps the simplest is to enlarge center distance. This procedure is described in Section Care must be taken, however, to ensure that the contact ratio remains adequate. It is possible also to thin out the tooth profile during manufacturing, but this adds to the manufacturing cost and requires careful consideration of the tooth geometry. To some extent the flexibility of the bearings and clearances can compensate for thermal expansion. It a small change in center distance is necessary and feasible, it probably represents the best and least expensive compromise Environment and Tolerances In any discussion of tolerances for plastic gears it is necessary to distinguish between manufacturing tolerances and dimensional changes due to environmental conditions. As far an manufacturing is concerned, plastic gears can be made to high accuracy, if desired. For injection-molded gears TCE can readily be held within a range of roughly 0.003" ", with a corresponding TTCE of about 0.OO ". Higher accuracies can be obtained if the more expensive filled materials, mold design, tooling and quality control are warranted. In addition to thermal expansion changes there are permanent dimensional changes as the result of moisture absorption. In addition, there are dimensional changes due to compliance under load. The coefficient of thermal expansion of plastics is on the order of four to ten times those of metals (see Tables 1.40, 1.43A). In addition, most plastics are hygroscopic (i.e., absorb moisture) and dimensional changes on the order of 0.1% or more can develop in the course of time, if the humidity is sufficient As a result, one should attempt to make sure that a tolerance which is specified is not smaller than the inevitable dimensional changes which arise as a result of environmental conditions. At the same time, the greater compliance of plastic gears as compared to metal gears suggests that the necessity for close tolerances need not always be as high as those required for metal gears Avoiding Stress Concentration In order to minimize stress concentration and maximize the life of a plastic gear the root fillet radius should be as large as possible, consistent with conjugate gear actiotn. Sudden changes in section and sharp corners should be avoided, especially in view of the possibility of additional residual stresses, which may have occurred in the course of the molding operation. T150

146 Catalog D Metal Inserts Injection-molded metal inserts are used in plastic gears for a variety of reasons: (a) To avoid an extra finishing operation (b) To achieve greater dimensional stability, because the metal will shrink less and is not sensitive to moisture, is also, a better heat sink. (c) To provide greater load-carting capacity (d) To provide increased rigidity (e) To permit repeated assembly and disassembly (f) To provide a more precise bore to shaft fit Inserts can be molded into the part or subsequently assembled. By subsequent insertion of inserts stress concentrations may be present which can result in cracking of the parts. The interference limits for press fits must be obeyed depending on the material used, also proper minimum wall thicknesses around the inserts must be left. The insertion of inserts can be accomplished by ultrasonically driving in the insert. In this case the material actually melts into the knurling at the insert periphery. Inserts are usually produced by screw-machines and made of aluminum or brass, It is advantageous to attempt to match the coefficient of thermal expansion of the plastic to the materials used for inserts. This will reduce the residual stresses in the plastic part of the gear during contraction while cooling after molding. When metal inserts are used generous radii and fillets in the plastic gear are recommended to avoid stress concentration, It is also possible to use other types of metal inserts, such as self-threading, self-tapping screws, press fits and knurled inserts. One advantage of the first two of these is that they permit repeated assembly and disassembly without part failure of fatigue Attachment of Plastic Gears To Shafts Several methods of attaching gears to shafts are in common use. These include splines, keys, integral shafts, set screws, and plain and knurled press fits. Table 1.53 lists some of the basic characteristics of each of these fastening methods: TABLE 1.53 CHARACTERISTICS OF VARIOUS SHAFT-ATTACHMENT METHODS Nature of Gear Shaft Connection Set Screw Press fit Knurled Shaft Connection Spindle Key Integral Shaft Torque Capacity Limited Limited Fair Good Good Good Cost Disassembly Comments Low Low Low High Reasonably Low Low T151 Not good unless threaded metal insert is used Not Possible Not Possible Good Good Not Possible Questionable reliability, particularly under vibration or reversing drive Residual stresses need to be considered A permanent assembly Suited for close tolerances Requires good fits Bending load on shaft needs to be watched

147 Catalog D Lubrication Depending on the application, plaslic gears can operate with continuous lubrication, initial lubrication or no lubrication. According to LD. Martin lnjection Molded Plastic Gears, Plastics Design and Processing, 1968; Pert 1, August,pp 38-45; Part 2. September,pp.33-35); (a) all gears function more effectively with lubrication and will have a longer service life; (b) a light spindle oil (SAE 10) is generally recommended as are the usual lubricants; these include silicone and hydrocarbon oils, and in some cases cold water is acceptable as well ; and (c) under certain conditions dry lubricants, such as molybdenum disulfide, can be used to reduce tooth friction. Ample experience and evidence exists that substantiates plastic gears can operate with a metal mate without the need of a lubricant so long as the stress levels are not exceeded. It is also true that in the case of a moderate stress level, relative to the materials rating plastic gears can be meshed together without a lubricant However, as the stress level is increased there is a tendency for localized plastic to plastic welding which increases friction and wear. The level of this problem varies with the particular plastic type. A key advantage of plastic gearing is that for many applications running dry is adequate. When a situation of stress and shock level is uncertain, using the proper lubricant will provide a safety margin and certainly will cause no harm. The chief consideration in choosing a lubricants chemical compatability with the particular plastic. Least likely to encounter problems with typical gear oils and greases are: nylons, delrins, phenolics, polyethylene and polypropylene. Materials requiring caution are: polystyrene, polycarbonates, polyvinyl chloride and ABS resins. An alternate to external lubrication is to use plastics fortified with a solid state lubricant. Molybdenum disulfide in nylon and Delrin are commonly used. Also, graphite, coloidal carbon and silicone are used as fillers. In no event should there be need of an elaborate sophisticated lubrication system such as for metal gearing. If such a system is contemplated then the choice of plastic gearing is in question. Simplicity is the plastic gears inherent feature Inspection In view of the compliance of injection-molded gears, the dimensional accuracy of such gears is determined by a variable-center-distance fixture (see Section 18.1). This type of gear testing is both functional and utilizes a much more consistent measuring contact force than an over-wires measurement. In view of the hygroscopic nature of plastic gears, care should be taken to minimize dimensional changes between inspection and use of the gear Molded vs. Cut Plastic Gears Although not nearly as common as the injection-molding process, both thermosetting and thermoplastic plastic gears can be readily machined. The machining of plastic gears can be considered for high-precision parts with close tolerances and for the development of prototypes for which the investment in a mold may not be justified. Standard stock gears of reasonable precision are produced by molding blanks with brass inserts, which are subsequently hobbed to close tolerances. When to use molded gears vs. cut plastic gears is usually determined on the basis at production quantity, body features that may favor molding, quality level and unit cost Often the initial prototype quantity will be machine cut, and investment in molding tools is deferred until the product and market is assured. However, with some plastics this approach can encounter problems. The performance of molded vs. cut plastic gears is not always identical. Differences occur due to subtle causes. Bar stock and molding stock may not be precisely the same. Molding temperature can have an effect. Also, surface finishes will be different for cut vs. molded gears. And finally there is the impact of shrinkage with molding which may not have been adequately compensated. An example is Dupont's. Vespel SP3, a good high temperature polyamide plastic available in rod form. However Vespel for molding is not available in SP3 formulation another similar Vespel resin must be substituted. T152

148 Catalog D Elimination of Gear Noise In complete conjugate action and/or excessive backlash are the source of noise. Plastic-molded gears are generally less accurate than their metal counterparts. Furthermore, due to the presence of a larger TCE there is more backlash built into the gear train. To avoid noise, more resilient material, such as Urethane can be used. Figure 1.63 shows several gears made of Urethane which in mesh with Delrin gears produce a practically noiseless gear train. The face width of the Urethane gears must be increased correspondingly to compensate for lower load carrying ability of this material Mold Construction Depending on the quantity of gears to be produced a decision has to be made to make one single cavity or a multiplicity of identical cavities. If more than one cavity is involved these are used as "family molds" inserted in mold bases which can accommodate a number of cavities for identical or different parts. Since special terminology will be used we shall first describe the elements shown in Figure LOCATING RING is the element which assures the proper location of the mold on the platen with respect to the nozzle which injects the molten plastic. 2 SPRUE BUSHING is the element which mates with the nozzle. It has a spherical or flat receptacle which accurately mates with the surface of the nozzle. 3 SPRUE is the channel in the sprue bushing through which the molten plastic is injected. 4 RUNNER is the channel which distributes material to different cavities within the same mold base. 5-CORE PIN is the element which by its presence restricts the flow of plastic; hence, a hole or void will be created in the molded part. 6-EJECTOR PINS are pins-operated by the molding machine. These have a relative motion with respect to the cavity in the direction which will cause ejection of the part from the mold. 7-FRONT SIDE is considered the side on which the sprue bushing and the Nozzle are located. 8- GATE is the orifice through which the molten plastic enters the cavity. * - VENT is a miniscule opening through which the air can be evacuated from the cavity as the molten plastic fills it. The Vent is configured to let air escape, but does not fill up with plastic. *Not visible due to its small size. T153

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