Design of Involute Spur Gears With Asymmetric Teeth & Direct Gear Design
Design of Involute Spur Gears With Asymmetric Teeth & Direct Gear Design
Design of Involute Spur Gears With Asymmetric Teeth & Direct Gear Design
ISSN: 2278-0181
Vol. 1 Issue 6, August - 2012
Abstract-- Design of gears with asymmetric teeth that production. Gear grinding is adaptable to custom tooth shapes.
enables to increase load capacity, reduce weight, size and Metal and plastic gear molding cost largely does not depend
vibration level. . standard tool parameters and uses nonstandard on tooth shape. This article presents the direct gear design
tooth shapes to provide required performance for a particular method, which separates gear geometry definition from tool
custom application. This makes finite element analysis (FEA) selection, to achieve the best possible performance for a
more preferable than the Lewis equation for bending stress particular product and application.
definition. This paper does not describe the FEA application
for comprehensive stress analysis of the gear teeth. It sents the
engineering method for bending stress balance and
minimization. Involute gear
Introduction
Conventional involute spur gears are designed with symmetric
tooth side surfaces . It is well known that the conditions of load
and meshing are different for drive and coast tooth's side.
Application of asymmetric tooth side surfaces enables to
increase the load capacity and durability for the drive tooth side.
Therefore, the geometry and design of asymmetric spur gears
represents an important problem. There are several articles
about involute gears with asymmetric, or so-called, buttress
teeth . They consider the low pressure angle profile (as a rule
20) for the drive side and high pressure angle profile for the
coast side teeth. Such an approach enables to decrease the
bending stresses and keeps contact stresses on the same level as
for symmetric teeth with equal pressure angle. However, this
design is accompanied by raising mesh stiffness, increasing
noise and vibration with frequency of the cycle of meshing. It
does not affect the load capacity limited by contact stresses.
Two involute gears, the left driving the right: Blue arrows show
Modern gear design is generally based on standard the contact forces between them. The force line runs along a
tools. This makes gear design quite simple (almost like selecting tangent common to both base circles. (In this situation, there is
fasteners), economical, and available for everyone, reducing no force, and no contact needed, along the opposite common
tooling expenses and inventory. At the same time, it is well tangent not shown.) The involutes here are traced out in
known that universal standard tools provide gears with less than converse fashion: points (of contact) move along the stationary
optimum performance andin some casesdo not allow for force-vector "string" as if it was being unwound from the left
finding acceptable gear solutions. Application specifics, rotating base circle, and wound onto the right rotating base
including low noise and vibration, high density of power circle.
transmission (lighter weight, smaller size) and others, require
gears with nonstandard parameters. Thats why, for example,
aviation gear transmissions use tool profiles with custom The involute gear profile is the most commonly used system
proportions, such as pressure angle, addendum, and whole for gearing today. In an involute gear, the profiles of the teeth
depth. The following considerations make application of are involutes of a circle. (The involute of a circle is the spiraling
nonstandard gears suitable and cost-efficient: CNC cutting curve traced by the end of an imaginary taut string unwinding
machines and CMM gear inspection equipment make itself from that stationary circle called the base circle.)
production of nonstandard gears as easy as production of
standard ones. Cost of the custom cutting tool is not much In involute gear design contact between a pair of gear teeth
higher than that of the cutting tool for standard gears and can be occurs at a single instantaneous point (see figure at right).
amortized if roduction quantity is large enough. The custom Rotation of the gears causes the location of this contact point to
gear performance advantage makes a product more competitive move across the respective tooth surfaces. The path traced by
and justifies larger tooling inventory, especially in mass this contact point is known as the Line of Action (also called
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International Journal of Engineering Research & Technology (IJERT)
ISSN: 2278-0181
Vol. 1 Issue 6, August - 2012
The Pressure Angle is the acute angle between the line of action
and a normal to the line connecting the gear centers. The
pressure angle of the gear is a function of the involute tooth
shape and pairs of gears must have the same pressure angle in
order for the teeth to mesh properly.
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International Journal of Engineering Research & Technology (IJERT)
ISSN: 2278-0181
Vol. 1 Issue 6, August - 2012
The spur gear is is simplest type of gear manufactured and is mode, so power distribution under loss of front-wheel traction
generally used for transmission of rotary motion between may be marginally improved.
parallel shafts. The spur gear is the first choice option for gears
except when high speeds, loads, and ratios direct towards other
S is highlighted in the instrument display, and like D mode, the
options. Other gear types may also be preferred to provide
currently used gear ratio is also displayed as a number.
more silent low-vibration operation. A single spur gear is
generally selected to have a ratio range of between 1:1 and 1:6
with a pitch line velocity up to 25 m/s. The spur gear has an R position of the floor-m"R"
operating efficiency of 98-99%. The pinion is made from a
harder material than the wheel. A gear pair should be selected
to have the highest number of teeth consistent with a suitable ounted shift lever means that the transmission is in "reverse".
safety margin in strength and wear. This functions in a similar way to D, but there is just one
'reverse gear'. When selected, R is highlighted in the instrument
display.
"S" mode Current variants of the DSG will still downshift to the lowest
possible gear ratio when the kick-down button is activated
during full throttle whilst in manual mode. In Manual mode this
The floor selector lever also has an S position.When S is kick-down is only activated by an additional button at the
selected, "sport" mode is activated in the DSG. Sport mode still bottom of the accelerator pedal travel; unless this is pressed the
functions as a fully automatic mode, identical in operation to DSG will not downshift, and will simply perform a full-throttle
"D" mode, but upshifts and downshifts are made much higher acceleration in whatever gear was previously being utilised.
up the engine rev-range. This aids a more sporty driving
manner, by utilising considerably more of the available engine
power, and also maximising engine braking. However, this Advantages and disadvantages
mode does have a detrimental effect on the vehicle fuel Advantages
consumption, when compared to D mode. This mode may not
be ideal to use when wanting to drive in a 'sedate' manner; nor
Better fuel economy (up to 15% improvement) than
when road conditions are very slippery, due to ice, snow or
torrential rain because loss of tyre traction may be conventional planetary geared automatic
experienced (wheel spin during acceleration, and may also transmission (due to lower parasitic losses from oil
churning)and for some models with manual
result in roadwheel locking during downshifts at high engine
rpms under closed throttle). On 4motion or quattro-equipped transmissions;
vehicles this may be partially offset by the drivetrain No loss of torque transmission from the engine to the
maintaining full-time engagement of the rear differential in 'S' driving wheels during gear shifts;
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International Journal of Engineering Research & Technology (IJERT)
ISSN: 2278-0181
Vol. 1 Issue 6, August - 2012
Short up-shift time of 8 milliseconds when shifting 6. Vulgakov, E.B. and A.L. Kapelevicich. Expanding the
to a gear the alternate gear shaft has preselected; range of involute helical gearing, Vestnik
Mashinostroeniya, 1982, Issue 3, pp. 1214 (in Russian).
Smooth gear-shift operations; Translated to English, Soviet Engineering Research, Vol. 2,
Consistent shift time of 600 milliseconds, regardless Issue 3, 1982, pp. 89.
of throttle or operational mode; 7. Kapelevich, A.L. Geometry and design of involute
spur gears with asymmetric teeth, Mechanism and
Disadvantages Machine Theory, 2000, Issue 35, pp. 117130.
8. Litvin, F.L., Q. Lian, and A.L. Kapelevich.
Asymmetric modified gear drives: reduction of noise,
Achieving maximum acceleration or hill climbing, localization of contact, simulation of meshing and stress
while avoiding engine speeds higher than a certain analysis, Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and
limit (e.g. 3000 or 4000 RPM), is difficult since it Engineering, 2000, Issue 188, pp. 363390.
requires avoiding triggering the kick-down-switch.
Avoiding triggering the kick-down-switch requires a
good feel of the throttle pedal, but use of full throttle
can still be achieved with a little sensitivity as the
kick-down button is only activated beyond the
normal full opening of the accelerator pedal.
Marginally worse overall mechanical efficiency
compared to a conventional manual transmission,
especially on wet-clutch variants (due to electronics
and hydraulic systems);
Expensive specialist transmission fluids/lubricants
with dedicated additives are required, which need
regular changes;
Relatively expensive to manufacture, and therefore
increases new vehicle purchase price;
Relatively lengthy shift time when shifting to a gear
ratio which the transmission ECU did not anticipate
(around 1100 ms, depending on the situation);
Torque handling capability constraints perceive a
limit on after-market engine tuning modifications
(though many tuners and users have now greatly
exceeded the official torque limits.; Later variants
have been fitted to more powerful cars, such as the
300 bhp/350Nm VW R36 and the 272 bp/350 Nm
Audi TTS.
Mechatronic units in earlier models are prone to
problems and requires replacement units
Conclusions
The basic geometric theory of the gears with asymmetric teeth
has been developed. This theory allows to research and design
gears independently from generating rack parameters. It also
provides wide variety of solutions for a particular couple of
gears that are included in the area of existence. The asymmetric
tooth geometry allows for an increase in load capacity while
reducing weight and dimensions for some types of gears. It
becomes possible by increasing of the pressure angle and
contact ratio for drive sides.
References
1. Groman, M.B. The Zones of Involute Mesh, Vestnik
Mashinostroeniya, 1962, Issue 12, pp. 1217 (in Russian).
2. Vulgakov, E.B. Theory of Involute Gears,
Mashinostroenie, Moscow, 1995 (in Russian).
3. Colbourne, J.R. The Geometry of Involute Gears,
Springer-Verlag, New York, 1987.
4. ANSI/AGMA 1006-A97, Tooth Proportions for Plastic
Gears, Appendix F Generating Gear Geometry Without
Racks, AGMA, Alexandria, VA, 1997.
5. Kleiss, R.E., A.L. Kapelevich, and N.J. Kleiss. New
Opportunities with Molded Gears, AGMA Fall Technical
Meeting, Detroit, October 35, 2001, (01FTM9)
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