Manual of Gear Design: Helical and Spiral Gears, Volume III

THE LOAD CARRYING ABILITY OF A PAIR OF GEARS MAY BE LIMITED BY EITHER THE BEAM STRENGTH OF THE GEAR TEETH, OR THE SURFACE ENDURANCE LIMIT OF THE MATERIAL. THE LOWER OF THESE TWO VALUES WILL BE USED TO ESTABLISH THE LOAD CARRYING ABILITY OF ANY PAIR, AND MUST BE GREATER THAN THE MAXIMUM LOAD.
WHENEVER THERE IS AN ERROR IN ACTION BETWEEN A PAIR OF GEARS, ONE OF TWO REACTIONS MUST TAKE PLACE: THE CONNECTED MASSES MUST BE ACCELERATED AND DECELERATED TO COMPENSATE FOR THIS ERROR, OR THE SYSTEM MUST BE ELASTICALLY DEFORMED BY THE AMOUNT OF THE ERROR. IN PRACTICE A COMBINATION OF THE TWO WILL OCCUR. EVEN WITH PERFECT GEARS, THERE WILL BE AN ERROR IN ACTION DUE TO THE DEFORMATIONS UNDER LOAD. THE LOAD CAUSED BY THESE REACTIONS IS CALLED THE DYNAMIC LOAD. THE DERIVATIONS OF THE DYNAMIC LOAD EQUATIONS IS GIVEN IN ANALYTICAL MECHANICS OF GEARS.
TERMS AND SYMBOLS
a = ACCELERATION, FT/SEC 2
A = LOAD DEFORMATION FACTOR
A 1 = PRESSURE ANGLE FACTOR FOR ACCELERATION
B = MASS FACTOR FOR MATERIAL, LB-SEC 2/IN 3- FT
C 1 = LOAD @ R REQ'D TO DEFORM GEAR TEETH AMOUNT OF e, LBS
C x = LOAD @ R REQ'D TO DEFORM SYSTEM TEETH AMOUNT OF e, LBS
d = ELASTIC DEFORMATION OF SYSTEM UNDER APPLIED LOAD, INCHES
d s = DIAMETER OF SHAFT, INCHES
D = DIAMETER OF CYLINDER, INCHES
e =...