Helical Gears With Circular Arc Teeth: Simulation of Conditions of Meshing and Bearing Contact

1985 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 556-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. L. Litvin ◽  
Chung-Biau Tsay

Methods proposed in this paper cover: (a) generation of conjugate gear tooth surfaces with localized bearing contact; (b) derivation of equations of gear tooth surfaces; (c) simulation of conditions of meshing and bearing contact; (d) investigation of the sensitivity of gears to the errors of manufacturing and assembly (to the change of center distance and misalignment); and (e) improvement of bearing contact with the corrections of tool settings. Using this technological method we may compensate for the dislocation of the bearing contact induced by errors of manufacturing and assembly. The application of the proposed methods is illustrated by numerical examples. The derivation of the equations is given in the Appendix.

1989 ◽  
Vol 111 (2) ◽  
pp. 278-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.-B. Tsay ◽  
Z. H. Fong

In this paper, the theory of gearing and the concept of differential geometry have been applied to deal with the relations of two mating gears and of their bearing contact. The gear tooth surfaces of this type of gearing contact with each other at every instant at one point instead of one line. The bearing contact of the gear tooth surface is localized and the center of the bearing contact moves along the tooth surface. Thus, this type of helical gearing is not as sensitive to center distance variation and gear axes misalignment. This paper covered the solutions to the following problems: (1) Computer simulation of the conditions of meshing and bearing contact and (2) Investigation of the sensitivity of gears to the errors of manufacturing and assembly. A method of compensation for the dislocation of the bearing contact induced by errors of manufacturing and assembly has been proposed. Five numerical examples have also been presented to illustrate the influence of the above mentioned errors and the method of compensation for the dislocation of bearing contact.


Author(s):  
Pin-Hao Feng ◽  
Faydor L. Litvin ◽  
Dennis P. Townsend ◽  
Robert F. Handschuh

Abstract Helical gears with localized bearing contact of tooth surfaces achieved by profile crowning of tooth surfaces are considered. Profile crowning is analyzed through the use of two imaginary rack-cutters with mismatched surfaces. The goal is to determine the dimensions and orientation of the instantaneous contact ellipse from the principle curvatures of the pinion and gear tooth surfaces. A simplified solution to this problem is proposed based on the approach developed for correlation of principal curvatures and directions of generating and generated tooth surfaces. The equations obtained are applied to three cases of profile crowning where the normal profiles of the rack-cutters are: (i) parabolic curves: (ii) circular arcs; and (iii) a combination of a straight line for one of the rack-cutters and a parabolic curve or a circular arc for the mating rack-cutter. The gear drives can be the combination of a pinion generated by a parabolic curve or a circular arc and gear generated by one of three cases mentioned above.


1995 ◽  
Vol 117 (2A) ◽  
pp. 254-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. L. Litvin ◽  
N. X. Chen ◽  
J. Lu ◽  
R. F. Handschuh

An approach for the design and generation of low-noise helical gears with localized bearing contact is proposed. The approach is applied to double circular arc helical gears and modified involute helical gears. The reduction of noise and vibration is achieved by application of a predesigned parabolic function of transmission errors that is able to absorb a discontinuous linear function of transmission errors caused by misalignment. The localization of the bearing contact is achieved by the mismatch of pinion-gear tooth surfaces. Computerized simulation of meshing and contact of the designed gears demonstrated that the proposed approach will produce a pair of gears that has a parabolic transmission error function even when misalignment is present. Numerical examples for illustration of the developed approach are given.


Author(s):  
I. H. Seol ◽  
Faydor L. Litvin

Abstract The worm and worm-gear tooth surfaces of existing design of Flender gear drive are in line contact at every instant and the gear drive is very sensitive to misalignment. Errors of alignment cause the shift of the bearing contact and transmission errors. The authors propose : (1) Methods for computerized simulation of meshing and contact of misaligned worm-gear drives of existing design (2) Methods of modification of geometry of worm-gear drives that enable to localize and stabilize the bearing contact and reduce the sensitivity of drives to misalignment (3) Methods for computerized simulation of meshing and contact of worm-gear drives with modified geometry The proposed approach was applied as well for the involute (David Brown) and Klingelnberg type of worm-gear drives. Numerical examples that illustrate the developed theory are provided.


Author(s):  
Ignacio Gonzalez-Perez ◽  
Alfonso Fuentes ◽  
Faydor L. Litvin ◽  
Kenichi Hayasaka ◽  
Kenji Yukishima

Involute helical gears with modified geometry for transformation of rotation between parallel axes are considered. Three types of topology of geometry are considered: (1) crowning of pinion tooth surface is provided only partially by application of a grinding disk; (2) double crowning of pinion tooth surface is obtained applying a grinding disk; (3) concave-convex pinion and gear tooth surfaces are provided (similar to Novikov-Wildhaber gears). Localization of bearing contact is provided for all three types of topology. Computerized TCA (Tooth Contact Analysis) is performed for all three types of topology to obtain: (i) path of contact on pinion and gear tooth surfaces; (ii) negative function of transmission errors for misaligned gear drives (that allows the contact ratio to be increased). Stress analysis is performed for the whole cycle of meshing. Finite element models of pinion and gear with several pairs of teeth are applied. A relative motion is imposed to the pinion model that allows friction between contact surfaces to be considered. Numerical examples have confirmed the advantages and disadvantages of the applied approaches for generation and design.


1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.-H. Feng ◽  
F. L Litvin ◽  
D. P. Townsend ◽  
R. F. Handschuh

Helical gears with localized bearing contact of tooth surfaces achieved by profile crowning of tooth surfaces are considered. Profile crowning is provided by application of two imaginary rack-cutters with mismatched surfaces. The goal is to determine the dimensions and orientation of the instantaneous contact ellipse that requires the determination of principle curvatures of pinion-gear tooth surfaces. A simplified solution to this problem is proposed based on the approach developed in [1, 2] for correlation of principal curvatures and directions of generating and generated tooth surfaces. The obtained equations are applied for profile crowning where the normal profiles of the rack-cutters are either a circular arc or a straight line.


Author(s):  
F. L. Litvin ◽  
N. X. Chen ◽  
J. Lu ◽  
R. F. Handschuh

Abstract An approach for design and generation of low-noise helical gears with localized bearing contact is proposed. The approach is applied to double circular arc helical gears and modified involute helical gears. The reduction of noise and vibration is achieved by application of a predesigned parabolic function of transmission errors that is able to absorb a discontinuous linear function of transmission errors caused by misalignment. The localization of the bearing contact is achieved by the mismatch of pinion-gear tooth surfaces. Computerized simulation of meshing and contact of the designed gears demonstrated that the proposed approach will produce a parabolic transmission errors function when misalignment is present. Numerical examples for illustration of the developed approach are given.


1996 ◽  
Vol 118 (4) ◽  
pp. 544-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. L. Litvin ◽  
I. H. Seol ◽  
D. Kim ◽  
J. Lu ◽  
A. G. Wang ◽  
...  

A methodology is proposed for the modification of gear tooth surfaces that reduces the impact of gear drive misalignment, the shift of the bearing contact (accompanied in some cases with edge contact), and the occurrence of discontinuous functions of transmission errors. The proposed approach is tested by computerized simulation of meshing and contact for unloaded and loaded gear drives. Applications of geometry modifications to the design of spur and helical involute gears, double-circular helical gears, face-gear drives, face-milled spiral bevel gears with constant tooth height and worm-gear drives are represented.


Author(s):  
C-K Chen ◽  
C-Y Wang

A mathematical model of a stepped double circular-arc helical tooth profile with two centre offsets is developed. The conditions of gear meshing that reflect manufacturing and assembly errors are simulated. The locations of bearing contact and the contact path pattern of mating tooth surfaces are determined by tooth contact analysis (TCA). By applying the proposed mathematical model and TCA, single error impact can be determined. To compensate for offset and angular misalignment, the authors propose an adjustable bearing whereby transmission errors can be minimized. The investigation is illustrated with several numerical examples.


1996 ◽  
Vol 118 (4) ◽  
pp. 551-555 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. H. Seol ◽  
F. L. Litvin

The worm and worm-gear tooth surfaces of existing worm-gear drive designs are in line contact at every instant and the gear drive is very sensitive to misalignment. Errors of alignment cause shifting of the bearing contact and transmission errors. Methods for computerized simulation of meshing and contact of misaligned worm-gear drives of existing design are proposed. Also, modification of worm-gear drive geometry that provides a localized and stable bearing contact with reduced sensitivity to misalignment is described. Methods for computerized simulation of meshing and contact of worm-gear drives with the existing and modified geometry are represented. Numerical examples that illustrate the developed theory are provided. The proposed approach has been applied for modification of involute, Klingelnberg and Flender type worm-gear drives.


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