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#1
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Internal vs. External Gear teeth - same profile?
I was just looking at some pictures of internal gears, and now I'm wondering, is it the exact same teeth profile as a spur gear? Like a "negative" in a sense. Like if I took a spur gear and (analogously) put in in a bucket of plaster, and then the plaster hardened and I pulled the spur gear out, would I have an internal gear of correct dimension/shape?
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#2
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Re: Internal vs. External Gear teeth - same profile?
As I said in your other post, the negative of an external gear does not result in the proper profile of an internal gear.
The profile of an internal gear may also need to be undercut: UNDERCUT When the number of teeth in a gear is small, the tip of the mating gear tooth may interfere with the lower portion of the tooth profile. To prevent this, the generating process removes material at this point. This results in loss of a portion of the involute adjacent to the tooth base, reducing tooth contact and tooth strength. On 14-1/2°PA gears undercutting occurs where a number of teeth is less than 32 and for 20°PA less than 18. Since this condition becomes more severe as tooth numbers decrease, it is recommended that the minimum number of teeth be 16 for 14-1/2°PA and 13 for 20°PA. In a similar manner INTERNAL Spur Gear teeth may interfere when the pinion gear is too near the size of its mating internal gear. The following may be used as a guide to assure proper operation of the gear set. For 14-1/2°PA, the difference in tooth numbers between the gear and pinion should not be less than 15. For 20°PA the difference in tooth numbers should not be less than 12. |
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#3
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Re: Internal vs. External Gear teeth - same profile?
I have to disagree with Jack on this one. The proper tooth form for an internal involute gear is indeed the inverse of the external involute. The involute is formed on the common tangent between the base circles of the exterior and interior gear. This is identical to the involute formation for two external gears, except that the tangent does not cross the line of centers between the base circles. This configuation causes the relationship to invert, but in all other respects the formation action parallels the formation of the standard external involute.
So your idea of "if I took a spur gear and (analogously) put in in a bucket of plaster, and then the plaster hardened and I pulled the spur gear out, would I have an internal gear of correct dimension/shape?" is theoretically correct. In actual fabrication, the addendum of the internal tooth is slightly shortened to prevent interference and reduce the need for undercutting on relatively large pinions (thus, the note above regarding having internal teeth - external teeth > 15). -dave Last edited by dlavery : 28-02-2005 at 11:03. Reason: aye learnt to spel |
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#4
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Re: Internal vs. External Gear teeth - same profile?
Quote:
Say I have a large sheet of steel, say 1/4" thick. I put this sheet in a theoretical machine (like a wire EDM, or a watrerjet, or a laser) that can cut with absolutely no radius whatsoever. I cut the profile of a standard (external) involute gear. Remember, this fancy theoretical machine has no dimension whatsoever to the cutting tool (laser, water, etc.) If I took small piece that falls out of the sheet when done, I would most definitely have a nice external gear. Now here's my question, if I discarded this small piece that falls out, would the sheet have a nice internal gear ? If so, would this internal gear be suitable for use in something like a small planetary, not unlike the AndyMark? Would the gears eventually "wear in" or would they not mesh at all to begin with? If this procedure would work on this fancy theoretical machine, would it work on an actual machine? Thanks for your help. |
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#5
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Re: Internal vs. External Gear teeth - same profile?
Quote:
With regard to cutting the internal gear with your theoretical cutting machine, yes this would work. However, as this theoretical cutting machine has the ability to cut the part with a kerf of zero dimension, the resulting gear would be a perfect involute with no backlash. This may not be a desirable situation, as zero backlash setups can lead to rapid wear of the tooth surfaces. -dave |
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#6
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Re: Internal vs. External Gear teeth - same profile?
Quote:
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#7
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Re: Internal vs. External Gear teeth - same profile?
From my experience, the main issue with the idea of making an internal gear by boolean subtraction of an external gear from an internal gear is the clearance issues.
There are 3 clearance issues to think about. The tip of the pinion clearing the valley of the internal gear The tip of the internal gear clearing the valley of the pinion There being enough room along the pitch diameter to fit both teeth and enough backlash to allow things not to bind. #1 and #2 often can cause problems because of naming conventions. What is the "addedendum" for an interal gear? What is the "Dedendum"? There are definitions but folks don't always say what they mean yet alone look up the proper definitions in an AGMA book or a DIN standard. #3 basically means thinning one or both of the teeth from the line to line dim. All three of these problems can cause problems if you use a boolean of an external gear subtracted from block. This is what you must do to the "tool" (external gear) that you subtract from the block to make the internal gear: THICKEN the gear teeth by the amount of backlash you want (0.002-0.005" say) Add to the addendum (1.25 / DP rather than 1/DP) Subtract from the dedendum (1/DP rather than 1.25/DP) From my experience, if you do this, you will be just fine. Joe J. Last edited by Joe Johnson : 28-02-2005 at 12:11. |
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#8
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Re: Internal vs. External Gear teeth - same profile?
It took me a while to find the reference I was trying to remember earlier, but here goes. The following is extracted from my old, dogeared, and (until 20 minutes ago) previously misplaced copy of The Handbook of Gears (Dr. George Michalec, Hoboken NJ, 1995). I am using this reference mostly because it is the one sitting in front of me on my desk right now. Anyway,
Quote:
-dave |
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