What kind if splined shaft is this ?

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Anatol
I do not see any reason you could not take and use a wider tool and grinding the round profile into it and when pushing it through the hole cut the sides of two teeth at a time rotating 6 or 8 times to produce the coupler you need. Keep us up on the progress.
Nelson

Interesting idea, thanks
 
Looking closely at the splined shaft it appears the spline was first cut to depth with an end mill, then a wheel type cutter was run down the slots to form the profile.
I'm wondering why you would put set screws on a splined coupling? Seems to me that would defeat the purpose of the splines.
I'm no engineer, just a tinkerer, but my understanding is the reason for a splined connection is to provide a positive drive, while allowing a limited axial movement or some leeway in axial placement.
 
Hi Anatol,

Thank you for the complement.

Just for the record:
I'll start with a piece of 1.5" dia bar, say 3" long (sorry for imperial measurements).

square up ends and mark centers on lathe
clamp piece in rotary table on mill
drill my 6 holes on pcd 1.5" deep
bore or drill 5/8 hole straight through
bore or drill 1" hole 1.5" deep, cutting away half of pcd holes.

Is exactly how I would do it.
 
It's called an involute spline. Made to reduce stress points and give greater strength than a square form spline.
This half round form is probably a Wildhaber Novikov gear

Thankyou! A name for it. Makes sense, this is a high torque low rpm application. But I think, strictly speaking, a splined shaft is a not a gear, for obvious reasons - one part - the coupling - doe not rotate around the other.
 
I read that article from WILDHABER-NOVIKOV GEARS APPLICABLE. It make a lot of sense in his theory but I wonder why his was not kept because of load and stress. Somethings we just do not understand.
Nelson
 
Anatol
I think the document was written in Europe and the lingo is differ than ours. I remember reading the word pinion and that is something in clocks.
Quote:
Root bending stresses of pinion and gear with different loading positions have been analyzed. Effects on root stresses due to variations of fillet radius and normal pressure angle of pinion have also been investigated.

I believe it was a good coupler for its application. It is different for sure.
Nelson
 
It is pretty common in mechanical drives to refer to the small gear as the pinion. Thus the term rack and pinion where the rack has an infinite diameter.
 
Anatol,
I think your method of drilling holes on the pcd and boring out he center is workable. Ig you make he female spline long enough you can eliminate the need for hardening. Most tractor PTO shafts and couplings I worked with were unhardened.
 
[
Thankyou fro the pics, that's a nice piece of toolmaking!

Forgot to mention that I was in Edinburgh a fortnight ago. Nice example of the fluting in Rosslyn Chapel next to the Apprentice's Pillar. That has the mystical helix carved in it.

N
 
I have seen something very similar on a 1920's Miller 8 race car engine. nuts were circular with 4 semicircular cuts on the periphery. The socket was a cylindrical hole with 4 hard pins set into the body projecting halfway into the hole. Why it was don this way I do not know! Bill in Boulder CO USA
 
I have seen something very similar on a 1920's Miller 8 race car engine. nuts were circular with 4 semicircular cuts on the periphery. The socket was a cylindrical hole with 4 hard pins set into the body projecting halfway into the hole. Why it was don this way I do not know! Bill in Boulder CO USA

The earliest gears were wooden wheels -with round wooden pegs to intermesh with others.


Once the average tutor struggles to get students to understand Archimedes, everyone has lost interest .

Once of the best bits of machinery was the Gutenberg printing press and made with wooden pegs as gears- some like what the topic started out as



Ah well?

Norm
 

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