| 2.7.4
Other Special Gears
1. Face Gear
This is a
pseudobevel gear that is limited to 900 intersecting axes. The face
gear is a circular disc with a ring of teeth cut in its side face;
hence the name face gear. Tooth elements are tapered towards its
center. The mate is an ordinary spur gear. It offers no advantages
over the standard bevel gear, except that it can be fabricated on an
ordinary shaper gear generating machine. |
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| 2.
Double Enveloping Worm Gear
This worm set uses
a special worm shape in that it partially envelops the worm gear as
viewed in the direction of the worm gear axis. Its big advantage
over the standard worm is much higher load capacity. However, the
worm gear is very complicated to design and produce, and sources for
manufacture are few. |
 |
| 3.
Hypoid Gear
This is a deviation
from a bevel gear that originated as a special development for the
automobile industry. This permitted the drive to the rear axle to be
nonintersecting, and thus allowed the auto body to be lowered, It
looks very much like the spiral bevel gear. However, it is
complicated to design and is the most difficult to produce on a
bevel gear generator. |
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SECTION
3 DETAILS OF INVOLUTE GEARING
3.1 Pressure Angle
The pressure angle is defined as
the angle between the line-of-action (common tangent to the base
circles in Figures 2-3 and 2-4) and a perpendicular to the
line-of-centers. See Figure 3-1. From the geometry of these
figures, it is obvious that the pressure angle varies (slightly) as
the center distance of a gear pair is altered. The base circle is
related to the pressure angle and pitch diameter by the equation:
db = d cos a
(3-1)
where d and a
are the standard values, or alternately:
db = d' cos a'
(3-2)
where d' and a'
are the exact operating values.
The basic formula shows that the larger the pressure
angle the smaller the base circle. Thus, for standard gears, 14.5º
pressure angle gears have base circles much nearer to the roots of
teeth than 20º gears. It is for this reason that 14.5º gears
encounter greater undercutting problems than 20º gears. This is
further elaborated on in SECTION 4.3. |
|

3.2 Proper Meshing And Contact Ratio
Figure
3-2 shows a pair of standard gears meshing together. The contact point
of the two involutes, as Figure 3-2 shows, slides along The common tangent
of the two base circles as rotation occurs. The common tangent is called
the line-of-contact, or line-of-action.
A pair of gears can only mesh correctly if the pitches and
the pressut angles are the same. Pitch comparison can be module m,
circular p, base Pb
That the pressure angles must be identical becomes
obvious trot the following equation for base pitch:
Pb = p
m COS a
(3-3)
Thus, if the pressure angles are different, the base pitches
cannot b identical.
The length of the line-of-action is shown as ab in Figure
3-2.
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