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Without knowing the pressure angle and the pitch circle diameter, I'm afraid one is still guessing. The pressure angle is what determines to tooth tangent to pitch resulting in tooth curvature; OD and number of teeth is simply not enough to know the true mesh. As the pressure angle decreases the contact face of the tooth becomes more pitched.Also one cannot measure the diameter of an ODD number of teeth. Liken it this way, if you measure a three legged stool, you will measure from the tangent of one leg to a line between two tangents of the other two legs, I.e, a flat spot, which will skew the measurement.Not saying you can't come close, but you really are just guessing, and there really is no way to determine if the mesh is English or Metric without an optical comparator, or measuring across pins of a very specific diameter.Yes, I used to design Ford Tractor (now New Holland) transmissions many moons ago.See the image below to truly understand all the the dimensions that are necessary to 3D model a properly meshed (teeth actually touching at the pitch circle) spur gear.
You're not wrong, but it doesn't require that much precision. A fairly close measurement of the OD is enough, plus the number of teeth plus 2 is all you need. We're talking about models here, not precision transmissions, gearheads or the like, with high loads and long lifespans.The only time you run into trouble if the gear is some mongrel pitch (DP or Mod), or a non-standard tooth profile or just plain manufactured poorly. Which is entirely possible.Some might also argue that helical gears (RH and LH, sometimes called "worm and reverse worm" gears) require a complex calculation... Maybe it does, but I've built many gearboxes using both and the simple calculation for gear spacing, plus a little clearance has always worked without issue. Jeff
To answer a few questions—Pete- I think we were talking about how to figure the gear ratio of a planatary gear set up. Lots of info but I do not recall tooth design.I have sleep since then and did not go back and read that post again-I learned about making gears 60 years ago at an industrial art school, and I do not think the math has changed.I can get the OD by making a go-no-go gauge so getting the correct OD does no present a problem.The gear I need made has been removed from the gear case. There are two of the same gear used in the drive and only one is destroyed.I can measure six ways from Sunday of said gear. Except the root diameter. I guess that I could use the wire method and a micrometer but handling such a small gear with wires takes more hands than I have.SkipGear you stated you had made some gears, would you care to take a stab at doing one of these for me?I can furnish all the data you said you needed.Thanks for all the feed back.
Great commentary @narrowminded .Alas hobs to make gears aren't always used, particularly on very small gears. Extrusion dies are very inexpensive, accurate and the process is simple. You can bet your bottom dollar that all of the small metal gears made for models are cutoff extrusions. This makes the parts very inexpensive to manufacture and why places like NWSL can (could?) offer specialty gears so cheaply.
All of NWSL's gears are machined/hobbed. The worms/worm stock is pressure rolled from 12L12 or 12L14 steel stock. I know this for a fact because I've purchased several thousand dollars worth of their gear stock and had spoken at length about gears/gearing with the first owner of NWSL (Raoul "Fred" Martin).Good info narrowminded. Undercut is definitely a problem with gears smaller than 12-15tooth. Some manufacturers (like NWSL) will alter the OD/PD a bit (make it larger) to compensate, as well as using a special hob (or at least that's what Fred Martin of NWSL had told me). Tooth strength is a consideration in larger applications, where there's higher loads involved. But for our model trains, it's not really an issue so long as you select the appropriate gear pitch for the scale you're building in. Wear is more of a problem than anything, more specifically, wear of the worm/worm gear, where friction is highest (in gearboxes we use at least). If you look at the majority of the NWSL gearboxes, the worm is polished steel and the worm gears are Delrin/Nylon. This is to minimize friction/wear. It's not the only option, lubricated Delrin/Nylon worm/worm gears are fine too. "Precision" is a relative term... I don't know how precise most commercial gears (for model train applications) really are. I would assume that the steel gears in Faulhaber or Maxon gearheads have a very high degree of precision due to what they're used for (in industry). Gears in our locomotives... Probably not as "precise" as you might think, but I don't know that for sure. I've seen some decent running locomotives that have lower quality gearing. They may not last long, but so long as they gear train and rest of the mechanism is smooth running, and the motor is of decent quality, they'll run OK. Jeff