bdeuell
Mechanical
- Jan 24, 2012
- 15
I am designing shaft that will transmit torque from a pulley at one end to a plate near the middle. The shaft is roughly 4” long and I am hoping for a .5” diameter shaft. I might be able to go up to a .625” shaft without causing catastrophic problems elsewhere in the assembly but any bigger and I am not sure I will have the room. I was planning to use 4140 for the shaft and heat treat but this material election is flexible. The plate is .5” thick will likely be made from the same material. The pulley is aluminum and approximately .750” wide. The shaft assembly will need to transmit a torque of 1300 in-lb through a rotation of 120 degrees at low rpms. There needs to be very little or ideally no backlash.
I am looking for suggestions on how to make the connections to this shaft for both the pulley and the plate. Currently I have shaft keys in my design but I am concerned about the backlash so I am looking for alternatives.
I have looked at using a tapered locking hub (see Link) but it would require at least a .75” shaft to even get close to the required torque rating.
I have considered a tapered connection directly between the shaft and the pulley/plate but this would require using a larger shaft as the pulley comes with a .5” bore already drilled. If this is the way to go I could bolt a new hub to the pulley or if necessary I may be able to go to a larger shaft size.
I am concerned about designing my own friction based (tapered) shaft connection without prototype testing. As this is a one off production I can’t really afford to test multiple ideas in search of a solution. Of course I expect to do some prototype development during the build but I want to be sure I am on a design path that will deliver a solution. Surely someone has done testing on the torque transmission of tapered shaft connections. Does anyone know of a source for data that could be use to design a tapered shaft connection?
Another thought was to use a flange plate to transmit the torque. This could be welded on or machined out of a large piece of stock (neither sounds very appealing to me but they are options). However, this would only work for the plate in the center of the shaft as the pulley must be removable for assembly/disassembly.
I would appreciate any help on this problem.
I am looking for suggestions on how to make the connections to this shaft for both the pulley and the plate. Currently I have shaft keys in my design but I am concerned about the backlash so I am looking for alternatives.
I have looked at using a tapered locking hub (see Link) but it would require at least a .75” shaft to even get close to the required torque rating.
I have considered a tapered connection directly between the shaft and the pulley/plate but this would require using a larger shaft as the pulley comes with a .5” bore already drilled. If this is the way to go I could bolt a new hub to the pulley or if necessary I may be able to go to a larger shaft size.
I am concerned about designing my own friction based (tapered) shaft connection without prototype testing. As this is a one off production I can’t really afford to test multiple ideas in search of a solution. Of course I expect to do some prototype development during the build but I want to be sure I am on a design path that will deliver a solution. Surely someone has done testing on the torque transmission of tapered shaft connections. Does anyone know of a source for data that could be use to design a tapered shaft connection?
Another thought was to use a flange plate to transmit the torque. This could be welded on or machined out of a large piece of stock (neither sounds very appealing to me but they are options). However, this would only work for the plate in the center of the shaft as the pulley must be removable for assembly/disassembly.
I would appreciate any help on this problem.