jeffcannon
Mechanical
- Jan 28, 2010
- 6
This question is probably mostly theoretical in nature but I couldn't find anyone that could give me a satisfactory answer. I work for a company that makes gearboxes and we routinely use gears with modified addendums. My question is how does this effect the gear ratio. I know the off the shelf answer is that the gear ratio is based purely on the number of teeth. But in reality isn't the ratio based on the test radius of the gears? I have always thought of gears as simply a system of rotating levers. By changing the distance between the levers I would alter the amount of torque I can transmit with a given force. By modifying the addendum I am changing the test radius and the center distance. Shouldn't this change the amount of torque I can transmit with a given input? I have calculated our geartrains both ways and the difference is generally only about 1%, but the question continues to bug me. Thanks in advance.