Rinsuke
Industrial
- Feb 13, 2003
- 16
Looks like I found the right place...
We are designing a small winch to be used in forestry operations. I consult with end users and report incorporate their wishes into the new product design guidelines. The winch is meant to be portable , therefore light nevertheless we want a max 2.7 metric ton pull on the wire.
The gear box on the prototype is a 2 stage spur gear design for a 1:114 reduction. Input rpm is 6500 to 9000 with max 5kw power at max rpm. What would be the advantages of going planetary?
I find that weight in this case could be drastically reduced with a planetary design. Could it be a relatively simple one stage system? What kind of weight savings could we expect (percentage wise)? And what kind of cost comparison (general rules) is there between spur and planetary type gearboxes?
The additional compactness of the planetary design, in my opinion, would allow for weight savings elsewhere (gearbox would be shorter , the current spur gear design is double stage in-line and the planetary gearbox would certainly be more compact thereby allowing a shorter tranmission roller chain ...etc... )
I know these are many questions for a first post, but Idon`t have the technical background to go to bat for the end-users against the engineer here and I keep getting a flat answer to my suggestions of a planetary design : "Too expensive!"
TIA
Stephan
We are designing a small winch to be used in forestry operations. I consult with end users and report incorporate their wishes into the new product design guidelines. The winch is meant to be portable , therefore light nevertheless we want a max 2.7 metric ton pull on the wire.
The gear box on the prototype is a 2 stage spur gear design for a 1:114 reduction. Input rpm is 6500 to 9000 with max 5kw power at max rpm. What would be the advantages of going planetary?
I find that weight in this case could be drastically reduced with a planetary design. Could it be a relatively simple one stage system? What kind of weight savings could we expect (percentage wise)? And what kind of cost comparison (general rules) is there between spur and planetary type gearboxes?
The additional compactness of the planetary design, in my opinion, would allow for weight savings elsewhere (gearbox would be shorter , the current spur gear design is double stage in-line and the planetary gearbox would certainly be more compact thereby allowing a shorter tranmission roller chain ...etc... )
I know these are many questions for a first post, but Idon`t have the technical background to go to bat for the end-users against the engineer here and I keep getting a flat answer to my suggestions of a planetary design : "Too expensive!"
TIA
Stephan