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Re: pic: Team 948 2-Speed Ball-Shifting Gearbox CAD Drawing
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Originally Posted by Jeremiah H
Very interesting, indeed.
I am not familiar with the concept of ball lockup shifting gearboxes, indeed this is the first I have ever seem of them. I am in charge of developing a godd two-speed gearbox for '07, so here are my questions (more will follow after this) Your expertise and help is greatly appreciated.
I understand how the balls are pushed into slots in the gears, but what is it that causes the thus engaged gears to turn the output shaft? In a dog shifter gearbox, the dog is positively engaged on the shaft (still allowed to slide) and so whatever gear the dog is locked into thus turns the shaft. I cannot find any such mechanism in this drawing. Perhaps I am missing something, but I think this is an important consideration.
And, following that, what happens to the gear (with its ball slots) when it is disengaged and must freewheel on the output shaft? My understanding of the design at present leads me to believe that it would bounce and chatter considerably, possibly even locking the entire gearbox up if it doesn't properly disengage.
Just my thoughts, if someone can answer them, I would greatly appreciate it. Thank you in advance. -JH
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The balls are what cause the engaged gears to turn the output shaft. Comparing this to a "dog shifter" the balls are your dogs. Half or more of the ball remains in the shaft and the other half goes into the slots in the gear. two things can happen when the balls are disengaged. They depend on the design. The original hodaka design had a small groove in the gear and used the balls to act like a ball bearing when not engaged this means the balls stick out from the shaft a couple thousandthsand the gear rides on the balls. For simplcity we have not put this groove in our design. As Brad stated we leave between 4-10 thousandths of air gap between the shaft and the gear. In our design the balls fall flush into the shaft. Then all we do is use a thin oil/grease mixture to lubricate the gears and shafting. The gears have some space to move on the shaft, but not as much space as it seems you are getting at. Also we have never had the transmissions jam up. I don't have time to look for it, but we have produced a white paper on this type of shifting and feel free to PM myself or team222badbrad with any questions.
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