by Nate » Mon May 11, 2015 6:53 pm
ArtF wrote:
That's the plan. Its not easy to cut bevels, but for bevels less than 45 degrees, the workbench should be
able to profile them, for more than 45 degrees, he 4th axis should be able to profile them..
A bevel gear with lots of helicity, a small pressure angle, and large teeth can have both radial and axial overhangs. (That is to say, require a 'tilt' or 5th axis set up.) I'm not sure whether gears like that have any practical application.
This is a section of a decorative bevel gear I modeled. If the pitch cone angle were larger, you can see that there would be a 'double undercut'.

[quote="ArtF"]
That's the plan. Its not easy to cut bevels, but for bevels less than 45 degrees, the workbench should be
able to profile them, for more than 45 degrees, he 4th axis should be able to profile them..
[/quote]
A bevel gear with lots of helicity, a small pressure angle, and large teeth can have both radial and axial overhangs. (That is to say, require a 'tilt' or 5th axis set up.) I'm not sure whether gears like that have any practical application.
This is a section of a decorative bevel gear I modeled. If the pitch cone angle were larger, you can see that there would be a 'double undercut'.
[img]http://www.pedantic.org/~nate/imgs/section.png[/img]