Phamjt
Automotive
- Feb 28, 2017
- 9
I was assigned a task of researching the capability of heat shrinking two metal parts (Rod and Sleeve/Hub) together instead of the current process of welding them. Unfortunately I am an intern and I have very limited knowledge on tolerancing and none on heat shrinking.
From what I was able to find through the machinery handbook and Shingey's Mechanical engineering design textbook I am able to calculate the tolerances using the FN5 table for force/shrink fits.
With a diameter of 1.125 for the hub if it was heated up we should get 0.033" interference in the tightest fit. Would it be reasonable to heat the hub up to around 0.005" or are there more factors I should consider? The hub is Ansi 1045 steel so with the coefficient of thermal expansion I should be able to use this formula: Total deformation = αL(delta T)
My calculations so far have primarily been based off of this example as the problem seems similar:
From what I was able to find through the machinery handbook and Shingey's Mechanical engineering design textbook I am able to calculate the tolerances using the FN5 table for force/shrink fits.
With a diameter of 1.125 for the hub if it was heated up we should get 0.033" interference in the tightest fit. Would it be reasonable to heat the hub up to around 0.005" or are there more factors I should consider? The hub is Ansi 1045 steel so with the coefficient of thermal expansion I should be able to use this formula: Total deformation = αL(delta T)
My calculations so far have primarily been based off of this example as the problem seems similar: