mrpi
Mechanical
- Jun 22, 2008
- 80
Hello,
I'm working on a design that uses a worm-type gear reduction unit. The output "shaft" of the gear reducer is in fact a 25mm hollow shaft provided with am 8mm keyway.
I use a 25mm keyed shaft placed through the worm reducer hollow shaft to transmit the output torque.
A little about the mechanism:
One end of the 25mm keyed shaft is coupled to a ball-screw actuator with a keyed clamp shaft coupler.
The other end of the 25mm keyed shaft is provided with an overhung shaft brake.
The shaft brake is a spring applied tooted-type brake. The stationary "stator" part of the brake is bolted to the output flange of the worm reducer and the 25mm keyed shaft passes through the center of it. Internal springs push a ring of brass teeth axially against the rotating half of the brake.
The rotating "rotor" half of the tooth brake is a steel ring of teeth that is axially fixed to the end of the 25mm keyed shaft with an aluminum plate.
When power is applied, an electromagnet pulls the brass stator teeth back away from the rotor teeth, and the brake is disengaged. When power is removed, the internal springs push the stator teeth against the rotor teeth and the brake is engaged. Rated torque of the brake is on the order of 100 Nm.
Currently, I couple the rotor to the 25mm shaft with 6 axial pins arranged in a "bolt-circle" like bullets in a revolver. A central M8 bolt holds the rotor plate axially against the shaft. These pins are 3/16" diameter. The shaft is 303 stainless and the rotor plate is 6061-T6 aluminum. We have had problems with the holes in the shaft being drilled too deep, and there are instances of an assembly have very little pin engagement into the aluminum plate. This reduction in bearing area caused the pins to deform the holes in the aluminum plate, and loosen the central bolt. There's also the difficulty of ensuring all 6 pins fit into all 6 holes without excessive clearance.
I would like to increase the robustness and manufacturability of this interface. Axial space is quite limited "overhead" of the brake.
The 25mm keyed shaft is held to f6 tolerance to provide a slip fit into the worm reducer hollow shaft. Concentricity between worm reducer output axis and brake axis is critical to achieve full holding power of the brake.
The brake stator is supplied with a 28mm bore of H7 tolerance, so there is not much room to increase the shaft diameter (25mm currently, <28mm max).
I would like to move to a keyed or splined design instead of the 6 pins. At best I would have around 17mm of axial engagement length to couple the rotor plate and the output shaft.
I would also like to move to a shaft and rotor plate with higher strength, like 17-4 H1150 instead of the current 303ss.
A splined coupling I'm worried will have high manufacturing/development costs and will not provide as good concentricty as a keyed coupling.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
(I've attached a crude diagram showing general layout of components)
Beat to fit, paint to match.
I'm working on a design that uses a worm-type gear reduction unit. The output "shaft" of the gear reducer is in fact a 25mm hollow shaft provided with am 8mm keyway.
I use a 25mm keyed shaft placed through the worm reducer hollow shaft to transmit the output torque.
A little about the mechanism:
One end of the 25mm keyed shaft is coupled to a ball-screw actuator with a keyed clamp shaft coupler.
The other end of the 25mm keyed shaft is provided with an overhung shaft brake.
The shaft brake is a spring applied tooted-type brake. The stationary "stator" part of the brake is bolted to the output flange of the worm reducer and the 25mm keyed shaft passes through the center of it. Internal springs push a ring of brass teeth axially against the rotating half of the brake.
The rotating "rotor" half of the tooth brake is a steel ring of teeth that is axially fixed to the end of the 25mm keyed shaft with an aluminum plate.
When power is applied, an electromagnet pulls the brass stator teeth back away from the rotor teeth, and the brake is disengaged. When power is removed, the internal springs push the stator teeth against the rotor teeth and the brake is engaged. Rated torque of the brake is on the order of 100 Nm.
Currently, I couple the rotor to the 25mm shaft with 6 axial pins arranged in a "bolt-circle" like bullets in a revolver. A central M8 bolt holds the rotor plate axially against the shaft. These pins are 3/16" diameter. The shaft is 303 stainless and the rotor plate is 6061-T6 aluminum. We have had problems with the holes in the shaft being drilled too deep, and there are instances of an assembly have very little pin engagement into the aluminum plate. This reduction in bearing area caused the pins to deform the holes in the aluminum plate, and loosen the central bolt. There's also the difficulty of ensuring all 6 pins fit into all 6 holes without excessive clearance.
I would like to increase the robustness and manufacturability of this interface. Axial space is quite limited "overhead" of the brake.
The 25mm keyed shaft is held to f6 tolerance to provide a slip fit into the worm reducer hollow shaft. Concentricity between worm reducer output axis and brake axis is critical to achieve full holding power of the brake.
The brake stator is supplied with a 28mm bore of H7 tolerance, so there is not much room to increase the shaft diameter (25mm currently, <28mm max).
I would like to move to a keyed or splined design instead of the 6 pins. At best I would have around 17mm of axial engagement length to couple the rotor plate and the output shaft.
I would also like to move to a shaft and rotor plate with higher strength, like 17-4 H1150 instead of the current 303ss.
A splined coupling I'm worried will have high manufacturing/development costs and will not provide as good concentricty as a keyed coupling.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
(I've attached a crude diagram showing general layout of components)
Beat to fit, paint to match.