Abstract

Knowledge of the expected tooth root bending strength plays a decisive role in the design of gear sets. Due to dimensional and shape changes resulting from distortion due to the heat treatment, unintentional, partial grinding in the tooth root area may occur, particularly in the application range of large gears. The influences of an unintentional grinding zone on the tooth root bending strength have not yet been clarified with sufficient accuracy. As a result, grinding zones lead to uncertainties when evaluating the tooth root bending strength and thus to a loss of time and cost in the field of industrial practice.This paper presents experimental investigations on the influence of grinding zones on the tooth root bending strength of case carburized gears. For the experimental investigations, there are three unground reference variants with different blasting treatments: non-blasted, mechanical cleaned by shot blasting and shot peened. The unground reference variants are examined regarding their tooth root bending strength. For the other test gear variants, different grindings zones are applied resulting in light and strong material removal by grinding. The variants with the different grinding zones are examined analogously regarding their tooth root bending strength and are subsequently compared to the reference variants.The results of the experimental investigations show that grinding zones can have diverse influences on the tooth root bending strength of case carburized gears– Non-blasted gears do not show changes regarding the tooth root bending strength with regard to light or strong grinding zones applied within this investigation.– Shot blasted (mechanical cleaned) gears show no change in the tooth root bending strength for light grinding zones (grinding application does not significantly alter the original residual stress state in the tooth root area).– Shot blasted (mechanical cleaned) gears show a reduction of the tooth bending strength of up to 20 % with regard to strong grinding zones (grinding application does significantly alter the original residual stress state in the tooth root area).– Shot peened gears show a behavior similar to that of shot blasted gears with reductions of the tooth root bending strength of up to 30 %.– Shot peening the strong grinding zones as a repair measure can increase the reduced tooth root bending strength again. However, for the investigated test gears, the resulting tooth root bending strength was below the shot blasted reference variant.The results of this paper help to evaluate the influence of grinding zones on the tooth root bending strength of case carburized gears more precisely compared to the generalized reductions of current standards and classifications. The results can be incorporated in standards such as DIN 3390 as well as ISO 6336 and can be applied in the field of industrial practice. Eventually, the findings help to reduce the current loss of time and cost caused by uncertainties regarding grinding zones.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call