MikeHalloran:
I agree that on their own, chamfers and weird teeth have proven to be of little or no value, but in combination with a mechanism that allows the pinion to move away from the correct pitch distance, we found that they will substantially reduce the load on the rack's leading and second tooth.
marvincooper:
I was thinking overnight about the relevance of the device I worked on had to your problem, so I will explain what it was and you can form your own opinion.
Quite a few years ago, we were approached to help sort out a piece of Lab equipment that had become unusable and the originsal manufacturer had eventually refused to help. It consisted of several small interchangeable steel blocks that slid in dovetails on a microscope stage. A short length of rack was fixed to the stage between the dovetails and was engaged by a thumbscrew driven pinion in each block, this enabled the blocks to be precisely positioned under the microscope. The parts were quite well made, but the gears were small at 96DP; with the pinions mounted rigidly and on the tight side of the correct centre distance, they needed care and a little "engineers feel" to engage smoothly. This all went OK until an eminent Professor took over the lab and wanted to do some experiments himself. He was a brilliant man, but totally lacked the aforementioned "engineers feel", in fact, his lab technician said that his Prof would break a hammer if he was daft enough to give him one! In under a month, all the gears were in a terrible state, with bent rack teeth and broken pinnions, the manufacturer replaced the gears under warranty and returned them. However, they still jammed, so the lab tech chamfered the rack ends. I actually think that this didn't help the engagement and more likely made it worse! Within a week, all the gears were mashed again and this time the manufacturer told the lab to go away (because they had been tampered with) and that's where we came into the picture.
Unfortunately, other reasons prevented a full length rack, so we were stuck with the short rack drive because a friction drive that would fit in, couldn't cope with the static friction of the dovetails. Therefore, we renewed the gears and mounted the pinion bearings on flexure strips, these permitted enough movement to allow the pinion to climb out of a jam situation and their compliance allowed a tight but smooth mesh. We made a dummy block out of perspex so that we could watch the engagement action with another microscope and came to the conclusion that although it seemed to work well enough with plain ends to the rack, the stubby shape (shown in my last post) protected the first normal tooth from the worst case jam and gave a better lifting action to the pinion. They've been back in service now for over ten years and I hear that they still work very smoothly and that anyone can use them without difficulty.
So, now you can see that although the rack drive part is similar, I expect that there is a vast difference in scale and other details, which when added to the mechanical drive leads to my element of caution.
I do have to ask the question, why do you need the rack drive? We were stuck with it by the required precision, limited traction and lack of space for a pinch wheel. The method we used may well work in your case, but unless the rack is essential or can't be extended to full travel for some reason, then I would think that a friction drive probably has a more predictable outcome and easier development.
Good luck again