AGMA 14FTM13-2014 A Practical Approach for Modeling a Bevel Gear.pdf
《AGMA 14FTM13-2014 A Practical Approach for Modeling a Bevel Gear.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《AGMA 14FTM13-2014 A Practical Approach for Modeling a Bevel Gear.pdf(17页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、14FTM13 AGMA Technical Paper A Practical Approach for Modeling a Bevel Gear By B. Bijonowski, Arrow Gear Company 2 14FTM13 A Practical Approach for Modeling a Bevel Gear Brendan Bijonowski, Arrow Gear Company The statements and opinions contained herein are those of the author and should not be cons
2、trued as an official action or opinion of the American Gear Manufacturers Association. Abstract The modern bevel gear design engineer is often faced with knowing the basic appearance of the bevel gear tooth that he is designing. The geometry of the bevel gear is quite complicated to describe mathema
3、tically, and much of the overall surface topology of the tooth flank is dependent on machine settings and the cutting method employed. AGMA 929-A06, Calculation of Bevel Gear Top Land and Guidance on Cutter Edge Radius, lays out a practical approach for predicting the approximate top land thicknesse
4、s at certain points of interest regardless of the exact machine settings that will generate the tooth form. The points of interest that AGMA 929-A06 is concerned with consists of toe, mean, heel, and the point of involute lengthwise curvature. The following method expands upon the concepts described
5、 in AGMA 929-A06 to allow the user to calculate not only the top land thickness, but the more general case, the normal tooth thickness anywhere along the face and profile of the bevel gear tooth. This method does not rely on any additional machine settings; only basic geometry of the cutter, blank,
6、and teeth are required to calculate fairly accurate tooth thicknesses. The tooth thicknesses are then transformed into a point cloud describing both the convex and concave flanks in a global Cartesian coordinate system. These points can be utilized in any modern computer aided design software packag
7、e to assist in the generation of a 3D solid model. All pertinent macro tooth geometry can be closely simulated using this technique. Furthermore, a case study will be presented evaluating the accuracy of the point cloud data to a physical part. Copyright 2014 American Gear Manufacturers Association
8、1001 N. Fairfax Street, Suite 500 Alexandria, Virginia 22314 October 2014 ISBN: 978-1-61481-105-3 3 14FTM13 A Practical Approach for Modeling a Bevel Gear Brendan Bijonowski, Arrow Gear Company Introduction The first question that comes to mind from any engineer presented by this paper is why would
9、anyone be interested in a close approximation to the tooth flanks of a straight or spiral bevel gear? That is a very valid question. A bevel gear designer is typically interested in the minute details of the tooth flanks surface topology to gain the optimized contact conditions under the loads that
10、the bevel gears will be operated. The method presented in this paper does not address any of these needs. Purpose One of the main purposes of this method is to create a working three dimensional model for visual interrogation of fits and proportions. The bevel designer is typically concerned with th
11、e proportions of a myriad of geometric values describing the basic layout of the tooth form. Many of the values like top land balance, slot width tapers, spiral angle adjustments, etc., are hard to visualize for the engineer, and their impact to the tooth form can be drastic. The gear engineers tool
12、 kit should include a method for generating a three dimensional model of a bevel gear, as the dependency of using CAD for the general engineer is rapidly increasing. Many application engineers are demanded to provide three dimensional models to their customers. These customers utilize their CAD syst
13、em to validate fits and clearances between components in their systems. Gears should not be left out of this analysis. Advancements in 5 and 6-axis machining of gears are rapidly approaching the precision and capability of dedicated gear generating machines. Most of these machining centers require a
14、 three dimensional model for programming. If the application engineer provides a fully developed gear model to their customer, the 5 or 6-axis machining techniques may become very attractive. For this case alone, many gear companies opt out of providing models of their designs. Background The method
15、 outlined in AGMA 929-A06, Calculation of Bevel Gear Top Land and Guidance on Cutter Edge Radius, describes how to calculate the top land thickness for a bevel tooth at specific points of interest. These points of interest are at the toe, mean, heel, and point of involute lengthwise curvature. Reaso
16、ns regarding the purpose for these calculation points are beyond the scope of this document. The formulas inside AGMA 929 can be generalized so that a set of equations can be devised to calculate the normal circular tooth thickness anywhere along the profile and length of the tooth. Why is this meth
17、od approximate The geometry of a spiral bevel gear is mathematically complicated. The machine settings used to create a spiral bevel gear, whether using face milling or face hobbing, adjust the final flank form of the teeth. A strong understanding of the machine settings and motions are necessary to
18、 achieve an accurate tooth model. AGMA 929-A06 uses the technique of a virtual spur gear to approximate the profile of a bevel tooth in the normal plane without knowing the motions of the machine generating the final form. In doing so, the tooth thicknesses can be calculated quite simply using tradi
19、tional methods for spur gears. The virtual spur gear technique assumes that the tooth form will follow an involute in the profile direction in the normal plane. This is only a close approximation to the true form of a spiral bevel tooth. Most spiral bevels follow the octoid tooth form, which is simi
20、lar but not the same as the involute tooth form found on most cylindrical gears. What is missing in AGMA 929-A06 to complete a model A generalized set of equations can be produced from the content of AGMA 929-A06 to calculate the normal tooth thicknesses of a bevel tooth anywhere in the profile or l
21、engthwise direction. The purpose of this document is to fill in the gaps of AGMA 929-A06 so that a model can be generated. The majority of the content of this document is pertaining to how the normal tooth thicknesses are oriented in three dimensions, and resolving these thicknesses into an array of
22、 Cartesian coordinates. See Figure 1 for a 4 14FTM13 visual depiction of the calculation method described within this document. Additional information regarding the terminology described within the figure is in the subsequent sections. This methods shortcomings Enough discussion has taken place to i
23、lluminate the reader as to why this method creates only an approximate method, but there are additional shortcomings worth mentioning. This method does not currently take into account the root fillet. The coordinates calculated in this method are strictly points following the involute curve that des
24、cribes the approximate flank form. Coordinates for the root fillet is outside the scope of this document. The other major shortcoming is that all subsequent formulas are for spiral bevel gears without a hypoid offset. Additional provisions would need to be made to generalize the formulas to account
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
5000 积分 0人已下载
下载 | 加入VIP,交流精品资源 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- AGMA14FTM132014APRACTICALAPPROACHFORMODELINGABEVELGEARPDF

链接地址:http://www.mydoc123.com/p-422206.html