poetix99
Mechanical
- Feb 11, 2002
- 211
(This will be posted identically on Mech. Engr'g (#404) and also on Gears and Pulleys forum.)
I am trying to get any design references about the use of shaft keys with a round cross-section.
We are now trying to analyze this configuration because the original design work is 30+ years old; anything that was written down (if anything WAS written down) is gone. We are pushing the envelope of our known applications, and would like to better know where we're going.
It seems clear that the original rationale was the idea of a lower stress concentration that one would obtain with a semi-circular key slot in the disk. I have questions (suspicions?) about torque capacity and any tendency for the disk to want to "cam" over the keyway as it transmits torque to the shaft.
We use a fairly heavy shrink fit in addition to the key, so the shrink is really intended primarily for torque transmission. The key is, in a meaningful sense, a back-up.
There are also some thermally induced (hoop) stresses in the disk during normal operation.
Any written design calculations have long since disappeared, and we are re-inventing the wheel, so to speak.
Thanks in advance.