Influence of Tooth Spacing Error on Gears With and Without Profile Modifications
Author(s) -
Giri Padmasolala,
Hsiang Hsi Lin,
Fred B. Oswald
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
nasa technical reports server (nasa)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1115/detc2000/ptg-14436
Subject(s) - amplitude , span (engineering) , error analysis , gear tooth , structural engineering , computer science , control theory (sociology) , mathematics , optics , engineering , physics , control (management) , artificial intelligence
A computer simulation was conducted to investigate the effectiveness of profile modification for reducing dynamic loads in gears with different tooth spacing errors. The simulation examined varying amplitudes of spacing error and differences in the span of teeth over which the error occurs. The modification considered included both linear and parabolic tip relief. The analysis considered spacing error that varies around most of the gear circumference (similar to a typical sinusoidal error pattern) as well as a shorter span of spacing errors that occurs on only a few teeth. The dynamic analysis was performed using a revised version of a NASA gear dynamics code, modified to add tooth spacing errors to the analysis. Results obtained from the investigation show that linear tip relief is more effective in reducing dynamic loads on gears with small spacing errors but parabolic tip relief becomes more effective as the amplitude of spacing error increases. In addition, the parabolic modification is more effective for the more severe error case where the error is spread over a longer span of teeth. The findings of this study can be used to design robust tooth profile modification for improving dynamic performance of gear sets with different tooth spacing errors.
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