This invention relates to gear wheels, and particularly the roll forming of gear wheels from powder metal blanks. It has particular application to wheels for use in gear boxes for motor vehicles, including passenger cars and motor cycles.
Gear Wheels have conventionally been formed from steel castings, with spur or helical gear teeth being cut thereon. Gear wheels formed from powder metal blanks had been proposed, but only in relatively low duty applications. However, and as described in our European Patent No. 0 552 272, to which reference is directed, it has recently been made possible to use gears formed from powder metal blanks for heavier duty.
The present invention is concerned particularly with the manufacture of gear wheels having two axially adjacent gears formed thereon, although it also applicable to wheels having more than two adjacent gears. Specifically, we have found that it is possible to create adjacent gears on the same unitary powder metal hub, using roll-forming techniques. In a method according to the invention, a blank is prepared with the two gears crudely formed thereon by compressing and sintering a shaped mass of substantially metal powder. The blank is then mounted for rotation about a first axis, and the gears are roll-formed on the blank by rotating the blank in meshing engagement with respective dies mounted for rotation about second and third axes substantially parallel to the first axis. This manufacturing method can of course be controlled in accordance with criteria specific to the blank, and to the gears to be formed thereon. Thus, while the engagement of the dies with the blank will normally be simultaneous during at least a portion of the roll-forming process, this is not essential to the method.
In the roll forming stage of methods according to the invention, a preferred technique is that disclosed in our European Patent No. 0 552 272, referred to above. Thus, the tooth, root and flank regions of gears formed on the powder metal blank are typically surfaced hardened to establish densification in the range of 90 to 100 percent to a depth of at least 380 microns. The core density; ie below the densified regions, is usually substantially uniform, typically at around 90 percent. Normally the depth of densification is in the range 380 to 500 microns. We have found that little additional benefit is achieved if the depth of densification exceeds 1000 microns. The density at the surface is substantially 100%, and remains at a density no less than 90% at least to the minimum depth specified. The rate at which the density reduces with respect to depth is normally at least linear; ie, the minimum density in the hardened regions is directly inversely proportional to the depth. Usually, the density at least in regions closer to the surface will be significantly greater than this minimum value. Typically, the rate of density reduction will be very low at the surface and increase uniformly towards the maximum depth of the hardened regions. Thus the density might vary in relation to the square or a higher power of the depth.
The metal powders used in gears according to the invention will be selected according to the eventual application, and can include low alloy steel grades similar to those used in the manufacture of high performance gears from other forms of metal. The powders can be either admixed elemental iron plus alloying additions, or fully pre-alloyed powders. Typical fully pre-alloyed powders would be of a composition such as AISI 4600 and its derivatives. Admixed powders have the advantage of being more compressible, enabling higher densities to be reached at the compaction stage. In addition, the use of admixed powders enables compositions to be tailored to specific applications. For example, elemental powders may be blended together with a lubricant to produce, on sintering, low alloy gears of compositions similar to SAE 4100, SAE 4600, and SAE 8600 grades. Elemental powder additions to the base iron can include Carbon, Chromium, Molybdenum, Manganese, Nickel, Copper, and Vanadium. Again, quantities of the additives will vary with different applications, but will normally be no more than 5 percent by weight in each case. A preferred admixed powder composition in gears according to the invention has the following composition by weight:
the balance being iron and unavoidable impurities.
It will be recognised that the use of Chromium, Molybdenum and Manganese in the formation of a sintered powder metal blank requires a sintering process which can minimise their oxidation. A preferred process used in this invention is to sinter at high temperature up to 1350* C. in a very dry Hydrogen/Nitrogen atmosphere, for example at a dew point of around −40* C. This has the additional benefit of further improving mechanical properties and reducing oxygen levels to approximately 200 ppm. The alloying addition powders used in gears according to the invention will preferably have a particle size in the range 2 to 10 microns. Generally, particle sizes in this range can be achieved by fine grinding of ferroalloys in an appropriate inert atmosphere. Prevention of oxidation of readily oxidisable alloying powders at the grinding stage can be critical to the achievement of the degrees of densification referred to above.
Gear wheels of the kind to which this invention primarily relates will of course normally have different gears formed thereon; i.e. gears having different diameters and/or different numbers of teeth. Commonly, one of the gears will be a helical gear and the other a spur gear, with the diameter of the helical gear normally being greater than that of the spur gear.
Prior to the present invention, wheels with two axially adjacent gears formed thereon were manufactured in two separate components, with one gear being cut on a unitary body including the wheel hub, with the other being cut on a separate annulus subsequently fitted on the hub, typically by a shrink fit. It will be appreciated that it is not possible to cut axially adjacent gears of different sizes on the same unitary body. However, we have found that not only is it possible to roll-form such gears on a unitary body, it is also possible to do so with the axial spacing between the gears being reduced relative to what was previously possible. Specifically, with a roll-formed wheel according to the invention, there is no need for an annular slot between the gears.
The invention will now be described by way of example, and with reference to the accompanying schematic drawings, wherein:
The wheel shown in
A further advantage of roll-forming particularly the spur gear in the embodiment described is the ability to create a reverse axial taper on the teeth. This is shown in
In a method according to the invention, the helical die 10 will normally first be brought into static or backlash mesh with the helical gear which in the embodiment illustrated has the larger diameter of the two gears. The next step is the static or backlash engagement of the other die wheel 12 with the spur gear section of the blank. Once proper meshing engagement has been established, roll-forming can be continued broadly in the manner described in our prior patent specifications referred to above.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0007819.6 | Mar 2000 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB01/01477 | 3/30/2001 | WO | 00 | 7/14/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO01/74514 | 10/11/2001 | WO | A |
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