JD P.E.
Mechanical
- Oct 17, 2021
- 79
I am looking at drawings for a paper machine gear train gear set and am trying to understand where some of these dimensions came from. The gears would have been designed by Swedish engineers in the 70's.
Gear Data:
Teeth = 64
Module 12.0000
Pressure Angle = 20 deg
Tooth Form = "Normal Deep Depth"
Helix Angle = 7.5 deg
Addendum = .472 inch
Whole Depth = 1.091 inch (1.063 STD)
Root Dia. = 29.260 inch
Normal Circ. Tooth Thickness = .722/.717 inch
Normal Chord Tooth Thickness = .722/.717 inch
Normal Chord Addendum = .476 inch
Pitch Diameter = 30.497 inch
OD = 31.441 inch
My questions are:
Does "Normal Deep Depth" give clue to the extended dedendum? I can't find that verbiage anywhere that ties to equations.
I found equations that give me matching numbers for addendum and whole tooth depth. But when I input gear data into a gear generator, the dedendum doesn't match which makes the tooth thickness not match the above. Is this a profile shifted gear? If so, where do the equations come from to match these numbers?
Gear Data:
Teeth = 64
Module 12.0000
Pressure Angle = 20 deg
Tooth Form = "Normal Deep Depth"
Helix Angle = 7.5 deg
Addendum = .472 inch
Whole Depth = 1.091 inch (1.063 STD)
Root Dia. = 29.260 inch
Normal Circ. Tooth Thickness = .722/.717 inch
Normal Chord Tooth Thickness = .722/.717 inch
Normal Chord Addendum = .476 inch
Pitch Diameter = 30.497 inch
OD = 31.441 inch
My questions are:
Does "Normal Deep Depth" give clue to the extended dedendum? I can't find that verbiage anywhere that ties to equations.
I found equations that give me matching numbers for addendum and whole tooth depth. But when I input gear data into a gear generator, the dedendum doesn't match which makes the tooth thickness not match the above. Is this a profile shifted gear? If so, where do the equations come from to match these numbers?