[advertisement]

July 1, 2009



Extending the Benefits of Elemental Gear Inspection

It may not be widely recognized that most of the inspection data supplied by inspection equipment, following the practices of AGMA Standard 2015 and similar standards, are not of elemental accuracy deviations but of some form of composite deviations. This paper demonstrates the validity of this “composite” label by first defining the nature of a true elemental deviation and then, by referring to earlier literature, demonstrating how the common inspection practices for involute, lead (on helical gears), pitch, and, in some cases, total accumulated pitch, constitute composite measurements.
Share and save:




Read PDF

[advertisement]

×

Like What You see?

Power Transmission Engineering magazinePower Transmission Engineering is THE magazine of mechanical components. PTE is written for engineers and maintenance pros who specify, purchase and use gears, gear drives, bearings, motors, couplings, clutches, lubrication, seals and all other types of mechanical power transmission and motion control components.

E-mail

Choose at least one from the options below:

 Power Transmission Engineering magazine, published 8 times per year (print or digital).

 Power Transmission Engineering e-mail newsletter, published weekly.

 Special Offers and promotions via e-mail from Power Transmission Engineering's advertisers and partners.

*Unsubscribe any time.
Full details in our privacy policy
Already a subscriber? Log in