AGMA 13FTM10-2013 Calculation of the Tooth Root Load Carrying Capacity of Beveloid Gears.pdf
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1、13FTM10 AGMA Technical Paper Calculation of the Tooth Root Load Carrying Capacity of Beveloid Gears By C. Brecher, M. Brumm and J. Henser, RWTH Aachen University2 13FTM10 Calculation of the Tooth Root Load Carrying Capacity of Beveloid Gears Christian Brecher, Markus Brumm and Jannik Henser, RWTH Aa
2、chen University The statements and opinions contained herein are those of the author and should not be construed as an official action or opinion of the American Gear Manufacturers Association. Abstract In this paper, two developed methods of tooth root load carrying capacity calculations for bevelo
3、id gears with parallel axes are presented. The first method calculates the tooth root load carrying capacity in an FE-based approach. The initial step of the method is the manufacturing simulation in the WZL software GearGenerator. The manufacturing simulation calculates the 3D geometry of the bevel
4、oid gears by simulating the generating grinding process. The next step is an FE-based (finite element) tooth contact analysis with the WZL software ZaKo3D which is able to calculate the tooth root stresses of several gear types during the meshing. From these stresses and further parameters (e.g., lo
5、cal material properties) the tooth root load carrying capacity is calculated in an approach which is based on the weakest link model of Weibull. The second method uses analytic formulas to calculate the tooth root load carrying capacity of beveloid gears. In this method the tooth root load carrying
6、capacity of beveloid gears is compared to the tooth root load carrying capacity of cylindrical gears. The effects which are observed during this comparison are described and formulas are derived to take these effects into account. Finally both methods are applied to a test gear. The methods are comp
7、ared to each other and to tests on beveloids gears with parallel axes in test bench trials. Copyright 2013 American Gear Manufacturers Association 1001 N. Fairfax Street, Suite 500 Alexandria, Virginia 22314 September 2013 ISBN: 978-1-61481-067-4 3 13FTM10 Calculation of the Tooth Root Load Carrying
8、 Capacity of Beveloid Gears Christian Brecher, Markus Brumm and Jannik Henser, RWTH Aachen University Introduction and challenge A particular gear type which becomes more and more important is the beveloid gear, also known as conical involute gear. This is mainly due to their ability to realize smal
9、l crossing angles between shafts and they can be produced economically on conventional gear grinding machines 1, 2. Beveloid gears have been used in marine applications, for example, for many years 3, 4, 5. In recent years the use of beveloid gears in the automotive sector has increased 6, 7. Here t
10、he beveloid gear is used, for example in four wheel drives to transmit torque and rotation from the output of the gearbox to a front axle that may not be parallel. Geometrical characteristics of beveloid gears Beveloid gears are used to transmit torque and rotation between elements of crossing, skew
11、 or parallel axes 6. The geometry of beveloid gears is derived from cylindrical spur or helical gears. The base circle and the pitch circle of beveloids are cylindrical, as presented in the middle section Figure 1. The pitch and the module are constant along the tooth width. The difference between b
12、eveloid gears and cylindrical gears is the varying profile shift along the tooth width to realize crossed or skew axes. For realizing the varying profile shift, the root cone angle fis defined which is generated during gear cutting and gear grinding by a change of the feed during the process. The fo
13、rm of the tip of a beveloid gear is usually conical. The tip cone angle ais determined by the geometry of the work piece. A special use of beveloid gears is the arrangement with parallel axes. This is realized by two meshing beveloids which have a cone angle of the same absolute value but with oppos
14、ite orientation 2. Another gear type which is used for realizing crossing or skew axes is the bevel gear. Bevel gears have a conical pitch and base envelope. This results in a varying module m along the tooth width 2. Beveloids are usually preferred to bevel gears when small crossing angles must be
15、realized due to manufacturing limits of bevel gears. This is related to the long cone distances of gears with small cone angles which require substantial dimensions of the bevel gear cutting machine. 8 Figure 1. Geometrical characteristics of beveloid gears 2 ( WZL) Spur Gear Beveloid Bevel Gearmlmr
16、ml= mrmlmrml mrmlmrml= mrx = const. x const. x = const.dbddbddbd4 13FTM10 Contact behavior of beveloid gears Beveloid gears can be mounted with parallel, crossed or skew axes. The axis orientation has substantial influence on the gear mesh. This influence is presented in Figure 2. In the left part o
17、f Figure 2 a typical contact pattern of beveloid with parallel axes is presented. The contact pattern is spread over the whole flank. On the right part of Figure 2 a typical contact pattern of beveloid gears with crossed axes is illustrated. Two involute beveloid gears with crossed axes have point c
18、ontact. The resulting contact pattern is narrower than the contact pattern of beveloid gears with parallel axes. To achieve a full contact pattern of beveloid gears with crossed or skew axes at least one gear has to be designed with non-involute flanks. In this case, the manufacturing with standard
19、methods like generating grinding is no longer possible. For some applications beveloid gears with conjugated flanks are manufactured by topological grinding to achieve nearly full contact 6 but for most applications this manufacturing method is avoided for economic reasons. Challenge To achieve a hi
20、gh power/weight ratio, a precise calculation of the gear load and load carrying capacity is necessary to design gears in an economical way. At the state of the art, no approved method for the tooth root load carrying capacity calculation for beveloid gears exists. Therefore the beveloid gear is appr
21、oximated by a substitute spur gear with the gear data of the middle transverse section of the beveloid gear. The inaccurateness of this method is shown in Figure 3. In the diagrams the tooth root stresses of a beveloid gear and a substitute spur gear are compared. The beveloid gear has an axis angle
22、 of 7.2. The substitute spur gear is derived from the gear data of the middle transverse section of the beveloid gear. It can be seen that the stresses of the beveloid are significant higher. Reasons for this are the different root fillet geometry and the different contact behavior. Thus the calcula
23、tion of the tooth root load carrying capacity of beveloid gears with a substitute spur gear according to existing standards for cylindrical gears is not possible without further ado. A more precise calculation method can lead to a better design of beveloid gears with a higher power/weight ratio. Fur
24、thermore no simulation method for the running behavior of beveloid gears with and without load exists. Such a method could determine the tooth root load carrying capacity for a large number of variants in a short time. Therefore the project “Development and Verification of a Method to Calculate the
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