English Muffin, thanks for your comments. If I read you correctly, a pair of rigidly connected helical gears of opposite hands will act like a herringbone gear, but they would be easier to produce. The gears may be of different sizes if differential action is required. This compound gear will shift axially on its spindle until it begins to take load. Then it will stop shifting and carry the load.
I suspect that friction devices for setting up the gear timing might be somewhat complicated and expensive, and castable resins might not be able to carry the full load, at least for very long with high reliablity, in the larger gearboxes.
However, I am not seeing how any of these methods would improve load sharing between the planets. It seems that the first planet to take load would remain more heavily loaded than the others, just as it would if spur gears were used. Some method for improving the load sharing would still be needed, such as floating sun and planets as you mentioned.
I have noticed that the floating technique is often used in smaller planetary gearboxes, say under 50 hp. Would you use it in units rated 2000 hp and above, with the high speed shaft turning at 1800 rpm or higher? If not, and the system must be fixed, how would you achieve good load sharing? It can be improved in a fixed system by using higher quality gears, say AGMA 13 when AGMA 10 would be good enough otherwise, but that can be expensive and may not completely solve the problem.
Regarding cost, I understand that the expense of a ring gear increases much more rapidly than the increase in its size, because of the difficulty of heat treating larger ring gears.
Suppose that, just by chance, load sharing is good in a new planetary unit of the fixed design. Would it deteriorate as the gears and bearings wear, if no method was used to adjust for the wear?
The Niigata Co. uses a bending planet spindle to achieve good load sharing in large planetaries (
e.l pg.htm). This appears to be a new idea, and I am wondering if anyone has heard anything about it. Forty years ago an Austrian inventor, Felix Fritsch, patented several mechanisms for balancing the planet loads. These were licensed by Cincinnati Gear, but they apparently proved to be too complicated for commercial use. By the way, Cincinnati Gear has gone out of business, apparently a victim of the Enron collapse.
On a related subject, most of the gearboxes in the largest of the current wind turbines (2000-5000 hp)are planetary for the low speed stages, with a single-mesh parallel-shaft arrangement for the high speed stage. I am only speculating on the reason for this, but unequal load sharing in a high speed planetary stage might cause excessive dynamic loads.
Thanks to all who comment on these questions.