Inventor Gear Fastener Tutorial
Inventor Gear Fastener Tutorial
Worm Gear
Helix Gear
Rack and Pinion
Internal Gears
Transmission
Gearbox
Two or more gears working in tandem are called a gear train and can produce a
mechanical advantage through a designed gear ratio. For gears to function properly, they
must fulfill the following basic requirements: (1) Transmit motion smoothly and
efficiently; (2) Maintain fixed angular relationships between members; (3) Must be
interchangeable with other gears having the same tooth size.
Spur Gear Nomenclatures
Root diameter
Diameter of the gear, measured across the bottom of the teeth.
Pitch diameter
Diameter of the pitch circle; the standard pitch diameter is a basic dimension at which the
thread tooth and the thread space are equal. The circular tooth thickness, pressure angle
and helix angles are all defined at the pitch circle.
Addendum
The top portion of the gear tooth; it is measured from the pitch circle to the outermost
point of the tooth.
Dedendum
The bottom portion of the gear tooth; it is measured from the root circle to the pitch
circle.
Clearance
Distance between the root circle of a gear and the addendum circle of its mate.
Working depth
Depth of engagement of two gears, that is, the sum of their operating addendums.
Whole depth
The distance from the top of the tooth to the root; it is equal to addendum plus dedendum
or to working depth plus clearance.
Circular Pitch
Circular pitch is the distance measured along the pitch circle, from a point on one tooth to
the corresponding point on the adjacent tooth.
Circular Pitch = Pitch diameter / No. of teeth
Pitch, Diametral Pitch
Diametral pitch of a gear is an expression of tooth size. It is the number of teeth per inch
of pitch diameter. Thus, a gear with a 2-in. pitch diameter and 40 teeth is a 20-pitch gear.
Any two gears having the same pitch will operate together, provided they are based on
the same gear system.
Diametral Pitch = No. of teeth / Pitch diameter = 40/2 = 20-Pitch
Module
A scaling factor used in metric gears with units in millimeters whose effect is to enlarge
the gear tooth size as the module increases and reduce the size as the module decreases.
2. Select the New File icon with a single click of the left-
mouse-button in the Launch toolbar as shown.
3. Select the Metric tab and in the Template list, then select Standard(mm).iam
(Standard Inventor Assembly Model template file).
4. Click on the Create button in the New File dialog box to accept the selected settings and
start a new assembly model.
1. In the Design tab of the Ribbon toolbar area, select the Spur
Gear command by left-clicking the icon.
11. Set the Input Type to Number of Teeth and Size Type to Module and Reaching
Center Distance to Teeth Correction. Also set the Unit Tooth Sizes to the values as
shown.
12. Set the Design Guide to Module, Center Distance to 13.5 mm and Pressure Angle
to 22.5 degrees. Set the gear option to Component and enter 12 for the Number of
Teeth of Gear 1 and 42 for the Number of Teeth of Gear 2. Also set the Facewidth to 5
mm and Unit Correction to 0.1.
14. The results of the calculations are listed in the dialog box
below, click on the small down arrow to display the dialog box.
15. In this case, Inventor indicated that the gears will need to
be adjusted for proper operation.
16. Click OK to proceed with placing the gears in the assembly model.
17. Click OK to accept the default naming of the files for the new gears.
18. Place the gears in the assembly model by clicking in an empty location inside the
graphics window.
· The Autodesk Inventor Design Accelerator provides a convenient way to create a gear
set. Note the creation of true gear tooth profiles can be very time consuming by
traditional methods. The created gears can also be edited and modified just like a regular
Inventor part.
Using the Content Center
11. In the Save As dialog box, enter Shaft-3x80.ipt as the model filename as shown.
Note that by saving the part as a custom file, this will allow the adjustment of the length of
the shaft.
13. Inside the graphics window, right-click once to bring up the option menu and select OK
to end the Place Component command.
20. In the Ribbon toolbar area, click Return to end the editing of the
Shaft Model and return to the assembly model.