" So you might consider asking your pump vendor how much extra they would charge to assemble a set of pump drives for you using gears selected from their production inventory that meet AGMA 10 quality. Since 100% of their production gears meet AGMA 9 standards, it should be no problem for them to find a few that meet the slightly tighter AGMA 10 requirements."
You're assuming they have 100% inspection data on hand for each piece. I would not expect that, at least from the industries where I have experience.
I'm not sure I agree with everything the gear mfr is saying.
- "bearing life is better indicator of drive life" L10 bearing life calculations are wrong. Well, you should aware that they can be wildly inaccurate depending on lubrication and speed factors that the old/simple L10 calculation ignores. (L10a gives you a more complete understanding of the life of the bearings, but that's not necessarily a trustworthy statistic from the manufacturer). I guess my overall point is that published bearing life that goes beyond the warranty period is not worth much.
- On the same point, if the gear design calculations are not conservative, the gear teeth can wear out (pitting) long before the bearings spall. Bearing life would be no indication of life in this case.
- Higher service factors can help, but a manufacturer who is steering you away from <2.0 SF in a shock-free application gives me the impression their gear ratings are junky and need padding. Not that you should buy a 1.0 SF, but if a 1.5 or 2.0 is not enough then their ratings could be, well, aggressive.
- AGMA rating is certainly not the only factor in drive quality. It is strictly a control over the accuracy of the tooth forms. It does not control bearing quality, gearing design, housing accuracy, housing rigidity, shaft rigidity, or any of the other critical factors in gearbox construction. It's actually quite easy to design or build AGMA Q15 gears to run like Q7s.
- Bevel gear quality is a tough situation for manufacturers. They are describing a cut/carburized/lapped manufacturing process, which tops out around AGMA 9 for Gleason cut or AGMA 10 for Klingelnberg cut teeth. After lapping, the gear and pinion take on a shape that matches each other, and make much better contact and run more smoothly, but technically do not increase in measurable quality. But lapping works and this Q9 manufacturing process is very effective for the low speed gear reduction.
To go up in bevel gear quality the next option is Klingelnberg hard-cut or Gleason ground bevel sets. These are very expensive, usually long-lead time in small runs, and come in at AGMA 12-13 quality. I suspect that would be a waste of your resources.
So my point is that you can't buy bevels in Q10 or Q11 for a bit more than Q9. Your options are basically Q9 at a reasonable price or Q12 for a small mint.
If another manufacturer also has bevel gearing but claims Q10 for them, it's probably a lie or their sales team isn't actually aware of the realities of bevel set quality.
For many years customers have requested Q10 gearing as a standard practice, and for many years they have been receiving right-angle gearboxes with Q10 helical high-speed and intermediate reductions and Q9 bevel low speed set with no ill effect or damaged expectations. Some manufacturers are open and honest about this technicality, and others pass over this white lie. My company makes this kind of right-angle design for a non-pump application and I will attest that it's a sound design. Just don't put that Q9 bevel set on the highest speed reduction.
- I don't think I would push the mfr to create a special manufacturing process for you to get nominally "better" component quality. There are so many aspects to gear reducer quality that if a manufacturing process is working well, it's best to leave it alone. Specials are in reality a perturbation to the manufacturing process and can lead to other quality or lead time problems.
It sounds like you have a couple of manufacturers making basically the same thing. They may or may not be an equal comparison. I would not punish the one who is being open about their bevel gear quality. Or if the other mfr is claiming a quality advantage, ask them to provide their inspection reports of their Q10 bevel gear sets.
I think if you want to control quality, you should focus on 1) mfr reputation 2) mfr quality control (not the stated gear quality, but their control of the process) 3) stated noise and vibration limits 4) warranty 5) tooth contact patterns under load
David