KM
Mechanical
- Mar 27, 2000
- 64
We've got a machine that is almost 100 years old, to be scrapped at most 5 years hence, but to be operational until then. Intermittent service two or three times a month, for a couple of hours at a time, but lots of starts & stops.
The power transmission system is an open spur gear train where many gears have little bits out of them, pieces broken off, and so forth. Mostly on the mitre and bevel gears, the spur gears look mostly OK.
See pic attached. Will post a 2nd one too.
Looks like the original gears were cast, not sure what material, though. In the 1910s could they even do cast steel? I'm guessing it's cast iron.
Some previous repairs were done by welding 5 to 10 years ago, in some type of metal and grinding a new tooth profile. From what I've been reading and from conversations with custom gear fabricators, this is generally a bad idea. Introduces all sorts of weird stress concentrations, possibly micro-cracks leading to sudden failure, etc. etc. They all say this is a repair technique to stay away from.
Yet...the machine has been working. And I only need it to keep working for another 5 years, tops.
So, what kind of risks am I running if I do another weld repair now?
Could we braze-in material rather than weld, and would that be less likely to cause problems?
Constraints are that the machine can only be out of service for about a week to 10 days at a time.
All sorts of thoughts welcome.
The power transmission system is an open spur gear train where many gears have little bits out of them, pieces broken off, and so forth. Mostly on the mitre and bevel gears, the spur gears look mostly OK.
See pic attached. Will post a 2nd one too.
Looks like the original gears were cast, not sure what material, though. In the 1910s could they even do cast steel? I'm guessing it's cast iron.
Some previous repairs were done by welding 5 to 10 years ago, in some type of metal and grinding a new tooth profile. From what I've been reading and from conversations with custom gear fabricators, this is generally a bad idea. Introduces all sorts of weird stress concentrations, possibly micro-cracks leading to sudden failure, etc. etc. They all say this is a repair technique to stay away from.
Yet...the machine has been working. And I only need it to keep working for another 5 years, tops.
So, what kind of risks am I running if I do another weld repair now?
Could we braze-in material rather than weld, and would that be less likely to cause problems?
Constraints are that the machine can only be out of service for about a week to 10 days at a time.
All sorts of thoughts welcome.