bludog
Mechanical
- Aug 9, 2006
- 7
Hi,
I need to designing a high strength non-magnetic gear and pinion for a welding application. Here are the specs:
- The gear and pinion will be located in a very high weld field and need to be non-magnetic.
- Gear and pinion need to drive 420ft.lbs of torque at about 12 RPM.
- The area these gears go is very compact and I am limited to a working center distance of about 6.5 inches and a face width of only 1 inch (for both the gear and pinion)
Using a gear design program from MITcal I have determined that the space restriction is just too much and I can't find a non-magnetic material that is strong enough not fail from contact fatigue (not bending fatigue).
Can anybody make any recommendations of a (non-magnetic) stainless steel or bronze alloy that has tensile and contact fatigue strength?
Also, what diametral pitch and number or teeth do you recommend for the gear and pinion?
Is it best I have a gear/pinion ratio of 1/1 in order to give both gears the same tooth load and minimize the chance of both components from failing?
Thanks,
Justin
I need to designing a high strength non-magnetic gear and pinion for a welding application. Here are the specs:
- The gear and pinion will be located in a very high weld field and need to be non-magnetic.
- Gear and pinion need to drive 420ft.lbs of torque at about 12 RPM.
- The area these gears go is very compact and I am limited to a working center distance of about 6.5 inches and a face width of only 1 inch (for both the gear and pinion)
Using a gear design program from MITcal I have determined that the space restriction is just too much and I can't find a non-magnetic material that is strong enough not fail from contact fatigue (not bending fatigue).
Can anybody make any recommendations of a (non-magnetic) stainless steel or bronze alloy that has tensile and contact fatigue strength?
Also, what diametral pitch and number or teeth do you recommend for the gear and pinion?
Is it best I have a gear/pinion ratio of 1/1 in order to give both gears the same tooth load and minimize the chance of both components from failing?
Thanks,
Justin