SteveGarrison
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2008
- 6
Gentlemen,
I have developed a totally new way to cut either spur or helical gears. I am an inventor with some engineering background and know what I am doing. Using the same basic gear formulas that you use, I input values for the following parameters to calculate data to make any gear I want to make: diametral pitch, pressure angle, number of teeth, and helix angle. Then I make a very simple reusable part needed for my technique to work and also a gear blank. The teeth are then cut using a (are you sitting down?) - tablesaw - my gears are made in plywood. The gears tooth profile is a very nice involute curve specifically designed for the exact parameters I used. The blade has no special profile, it is a simple straight-sided blade.
I have attached a picture of a pair of my helical gears, these are 5 pitch, 25° pressure angle, 16 tooth, 30° helix angle. I have more sample pictures on my site Have a look and let me know what you think. And thank you for your time.
Steve
I have developed a totally new way to cut either spur or helical gears. I am an inventor with some engineering background and know what I am doing. Using the same basic gear formulas that you use, I input values for the following parameters to calculate data to make any gear I want to make: diametral pitch, pressure angle, number of teeth, and helix angle. Then I make a very simple reusable part needed for my technique to work and also a gear blank. The teeth are then cut using a (are you sitting down?) - tablesaw - my gears are made in plywood. The gears tooth profile is a very nice involute curve specifically designed for the exact parameters I used. The blade has no special profile, it is a simple straight-sided blade.
I have attached a picture of a pair of my helical gears, these are 5 pitch, 25° pressure angle, 16 tooth, 30° helix angle. I have more sample pictures on my site Have a look and let me know what you think. And thank you for your time.
Steve
