jonnyp
Mechanical
- Mar 14, 2010
- 2
Hi all. First I would just like to say what a great site this is.
I work for a small jobbing shop doing gear cutting.
We have a job on at the moment for which I have the sample pair of helical gears. Usualy we put them on a profile and lead tester to determine the helix angle, but unfortunately they are too big. We know the centre distance because we measured over the shafts in the box, and also used feeler guages to determin the backlash.
When we used the information we know, Our span calculations came to more than the samples measure, which if we cut them to this size there would be excessive backlash. This I suspect is down to us being wrong on the calculated helix angle. I suspect profile modification is also a point I need to know about. Profile modification is something me and the boss have limited knowlege about and I wish to improve my knowlege in this area.
With the information I have from measuring samples etc, Can the helix angle be calculated to what the samples actually are, without using a lead tester etc ?
Many thanks.
I work for a small jobbing shop doing gear cutting.
We have a job on at the moment for which I have the sample pair of helical gears. Usualy we put them on a profile and lead tester to determine the helix angle, but unfortunately they are too big. We know the centre distance because we measured over the shafts in the box, and also used feeler guages to determin the backlash.
When we used the information we know, Our span calculations came to more than the samples measure, which if we cut them to this size there would be excessive backlash. This I suspect is down to us being wrong on the calculated helix angle. I suspect profile modification is also a point I need to know about. Profile modification is something me and the boss have limited knowlege about and I wish to improve my knowlege in this area.
With the information I have from measuring samples etc, Can the helix angle be calculated to what the samples actually are, without using a lead tester etc ?
Many thanks.