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spherical on end of shaft 1

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subsearobot

Mechanical
Jan 19, 2007
217
Hello all,
I am designing a shaft detail that requires a spherical on the end of a shaft. the ball fits into a socket, which allows minimal torsional coupling, while allowing a strong axial connection, and is self centering between elements.

It's a spring biased push shaft that does not couple rotations. no pull, or separation is possible.

The spherical end is perhaps 1/3 of a ball, perched on top of the cylindrical shaft.

I have it in my head that machining a spherical end on a shaft is difficult, and thus expensive. this will be a production part (100k/year). the shaft is ~.080" diam, the radius of the endis .06.

If i were to use a blunted cone instead of a ball, i think it would give me the self centering. The friction would be slightly higher, but i think it woudl be fine. Blunted because there are small impact loads.

In terms of machinability on a screw machine, do either of these solutions stand out as easier and thusly less expensive to manufacture in mass?

cheers,
thank you!



 
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Can you have a flat on the end of the spherical section? If so I would expect the machinability of either feature to be the same.
 
I was trying to avoid the flat, but the flat on flat seemed fine in an informal examination.





 
Machining a full ball is tricky (most ball bearings are forged and cold rolled to shape IIRC), but machining a partial sphere on the end of a shaft is not that difficult, especially in this age of CNC lathes. Even old school manual machinists can manage it with a bit of extra kit (ball turning tools). Simpler yet perhaps would be to buy the ball end from a specialist company, with a suitable female thread and spin it onto the corresponding thread on a shaft.

Blunted cone, yeah simple but you lose the off-axis rotation capability.

Not quite clear from your descriptions what you are trying to accomplish, and would expect some sketches from you if you wanted more ideas...
 
It is strange, because on several different production examples that i have, the ball was made in two steps. when I say production, only ~100k per year.

I examined ball surfaces with a micrograph. It appears that the ball was machined with a stub on the very apex, which was subsequently removed by a grinding operation. in one case, it left the linear wear pattern, the other a different circular wear pattern from the tool marks.

The joys of working for a medium size corporation. this means I have no idea who will make the parts, so i can't just call the shop up and chat with a machinist.
 
There are a bunch of machinists that hang out at:


The "General" forum would be your best bet. It's tough to get the nub off the middle since turning the part produces a velocity of zero on the centerline. I'm guessing if you want a nice clean spherical radius with no nub or flat spot on the centerline you would need to do a subsequent grinding operation on a machine that spins the grinding wheel and rotates the part at the same time.
 
Nice, thx Brian. I hadn;t thought about the zero velocity issue. of course.
 
Cutting a radius like described is neither expensive nor difficult so long as the setup is decently rigid. On a screw machine or lathe it would likely be a simple form tool plunged in.

An engineer not being in direct contact with suppliers to quickly resolve any small or large question or concern would be a major problem IMHO, and is unacceptable regardless of the business' size. I would recommend discussing the matter with your supervisor and purchasing dept asap bc I'm not sure how they expect you to do your job to any reasonable standard blindly.
 
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