xduncanx
Mechanical
- Jan 6, 2015
- 1
Hi,
We use a shear key in the output shaft of a motor to prevent catastrophic failure of a mechanism. However, sometimes the key shears but the mechanism still able to drive to catastrophic failure despite the key clearly in two pieces.
The current assembly method to retain the key is to drive a grub screw down through the driven gear boss onto the key surface. I believe this is tightened considerably and could be the reason why we still have substantial drive after key failure.
What are some guidelines when designing shear keys and how to retain them?
thanks,
Michael
We use a shear key in the output shaft of a motor to prevent catastrophic failure of a mechanism. However, sometimes the key shears but the mechanism still able to drive to catastrophic failure despite the key clearly in two pieces.
The current assembly method to retain the key is to drive a grub screw down through the driven gear boss onto the key surface. I believe this is tightened considerably and could be the reason why we still have substantial drive after key failure.
What are some guidelines when designing shear keys and how to retain them?
thanks,
Michael