driller1
Mechanical
- Jul 11, 2012
- 5
I just joined after reading a recent thread - Splined Shaft Wear (thread 330-318697). I'll apologize in advance as I"ll likely miss nuances of posting etiquette.
I have been dealing with a significant wear problem on the splines driving some hydraulic pumps on a large piece of equipment. We've figured out a lot of the causes - mostly related to the equipment manufacturer not following the specific recommendations the pump manufacturers make for the mating female splined shaft in the pump drive. The wear pattern on the splines is sort of a compound curve rather than straight like you might expect when two straight splines are rubbing. I think it is probably related to misalignment, but haven't been able to get a good explanation of the mechanism (movements?)that would create the pattern.
Background: The biggest problem was that in a new model of pump drive for the machine's hydraulic pumps, the equipment manufacturer decided a 35 Rc 4340 shaft was good enough. The pumps (Sauer-Danfoss, Eaton, Parker) all have SAE D 1.75" or SAE C 1.25" splined input shafts with hardness near 60 Rc & all of these pump makers call out for a hardness in the range of Rc 55-62 for the mating female shaft in the pump drive.
This was compounded by 1. A lack of lubrication other than the initial assembly with a high temperature anti-seize. 2. A shorter length of spline engagement less than recommended and 3. A concentricity specification that allowed a runout of .010 TRIR between OD diameter of hollow shaft where it is supported in taper roller bearings and the female spline pitch diameter on the inside of the shaft. The prior model of their pump drive had a carburized 8620 shaft matching the hardness of the pumps' input shaft & the other factors didn't impact nearly as much- average life > 10,000 hours vs <3,000 hours now.
Here is a link to a few pictures showing the wear pattern.
I'm looking forward to the input & hopefully will be able to provide some to others from time to time.
I have been dealing with a significant wear problem on the splines driving some hydraulic pumps on a large piece of equipment. We've figured out a lot of the causes - mostly related to the equipment manufacturer not following the specific recommendations the pump manufacturers make for the mating female splined shaft in the pump drive. The wear pattern on the splines is sort of a compound curve rather than straight like you might expect when two straight splines are rubbing. I think it is probably related to misalignment, but haven't been able to get a good explanation of the mechanism (movements?)that would create the pattern.
Background: The biggest problem was that in a new model of pump drive for the machine's hydraulic pumps, the equipment manufacturer decided a 35 Rc 4340 shaft was good enough. The pumps (Sauer-Danfoss, Eaton, Parker) all have SAE D 1.75" or SAE C 1.25" splined input shafts with hardness near 60 Rc & all of these pump makers call out for a hardness in the range of Rc 55-62 for the mating female shaft in the pump drive.
This was compounded by 1. A lack of lubrication other than the initial assembly with a high temperature anti-seize. 2. A shorter length of spline engagement less than recommended and 3. A concentricity specification that allowed a runout of .010 TRIR between OD diameter of hollow shaft where it is supported in taper roller bearings and the female spline pitch diameter on the inside of the shaft. The prior model of their pump drive had a carburized 8620 shaft matching the hardness of the pumps' input shaft & the other factors didn't impact nearly as much- average life > 10,000 hours vs <3,000 hours now.
Here is a link to a few pictures showing the wear pattern.
I'm looking forward to the input & hopefully will be able to provide some to others from time to time.