Bevel Grinding Rolling Right Along
Bevel Grinding ‘Rolling’ Right Along
When Dr. Hermann J. Stadtfeld speaks, people tend to listen.
Considered one of the world’s foremost experts on bevel gears, Stadtfeld, the vice president of bevel gear technology at Gleason, recently revealed several cutting-edge advancements that the company has been working on.
The first of which should have the industry’s collective ears firmly planted to the ground.
“We came up with what we call the FormRolling process,” Stadtfeld says. “It allows you to make a correction in the gear — a flank-form correction on top of the originally calculated flank-form. This particular correction allows the gear set to be as quiet as the best lapped gear set in face hobbing and the deflection forgivingness is the same or even higher than in face hobbing.
“This is brand new … and the result is awesome.”
According to Stadtfeld and Gleason Gear Process Theoretician Robert T. Donnan, the term FormRolling relates to a method which creates an end relief and which is integrated into the plunging cycle of non-generated bevel gears. This method bases on the idea that the tool after feeding to the correct final tooth forming position (in case of nongenerated gears) could be swung sideways out of cutting or grinding contact with the slot instead of a withdraw path which is identical to the plunge path but moves in the opposite direction. Such a swing motion can be conducted around an axis which is determined in three dimensional space exactly to achieve an end relief with a certain width (in face width direction), a certain magnitude of maximal relief and with a certain function (like relief build up linear, second or higher order relative to the distance from the relief begin).