How did you set it up ?
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That might work but unless you use a method like the Chuck Fellows fixture or another method that rotates the gear against the cutter, you will not get a constant depth gear toothIt's simple, Just set a 45 (30, 60 ) degree angle between the workpiece and the cutter on the lathe or milling machine
For general milling of the helical gears, the cutter isn't that big of a problem, according to Colvin and Stanley's Gear Cutting Practice book, there is a chart, Fig 77, p120 for how to select the appropriate B&S system cutter number.Above post with Chuck's explanation is correct. That's why I bought the gears I wanted. You must rotate the workpiece through the cut, so needs a geared drive to do that. And special milling cutters for the "COS" factor to get the correct tooth gap. It's why these are so expensive to buy! (And hard to find!)
K2
With all due respect, if you are commercially hobbing helical gears, that math is required, if you are milling the gears for low power, low usage gears, the chart I posted will get you where you need to be.Nothing too difficult here?
With all due respect, if you are commercially hobbing helical gears, that math is required, if you are milling the gears for low power, low usage gears, the chart I posted will get you where you need to be.
Without knowing more about what they do, probably not.Thanks for the comments
As Chuck Fellows said : "but I the gears that I have made mate and work flawlessly"
And ....
I am aiming for smooth operation . "not commercial"
If you have seen those 2 gears they have angles of 30 and 60 degrees and I am having trouble with angle settings for the tool
I would like to ask if it is possible to change all of them to 45 degrees ? -- Of course when changing I need to recalculate the parameters ... of the gears
That would be correct for a right angle drive because a 60° helical/worm has more axial load than a 30 or 45° and will work if the 60° is the drive gear/worm.30/60 gear give less load on gear than 45/45 gear due "worm gear" properties who give smooth running between gears.
Yes exactly what I mentioned..That would be correct for a right angle drive because a 60° helical/worm has more axial load than a 30 or 45° and will work if the 60° is the drive gear/worm.
Nice! Do you have a picture of the setup you used?Hi All !
I just cut the gear - helical gear 45, it looks pretty good.
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