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Epicyclic gearing

An epicyclic gear train (also known as a planetary gearset) is a gear reduction assembly consisting of two gears mounted so that the center of one gear (the "planet") revolves around the center of the other (the "sun"). A carrier connects the centers of the two gears and rotates, to carry the planet gear(s) around the sun gear. The planet and sun gears mesh so that their pitch circles roll without slip. If the sun gear is held fixed, then a point on the pitch circle of the planet gear traces an epicycloid curve.

This planetary gear train consists of a sun gear (yellow), planet gears (blue) supported by the carrier (green) and a ring gear (pink). The red marks show the relative displacement of the sun gear and carrier, when the sun gear is rotated 180° clockwise and the ring gear is held fixed.

An epicyclic gear train can be assembled so the planet gear rolls on the inside of the pitch circle of an outer gear ring, or ring gear, sometimes called an annulus gear. Such an assembly of a planet engaging both a sun gear and a ring gear is called a planetary gear train.[1][2] By choosing to hold one component or another—the planetary carrier, the ring gear, or the sun gear—stationary, three different gear ratios can be realized.[3]

Overview edit

Epicyclic gearing or planetary gearing is a gear system consisting of one or more outer, or planet, gears or pinions, revolving about a central sun gear or sun wheel.[4][5] Typically, the planet gears are mounted on a movable arm or carrier, which itself may rotate relative to the sun gear. Epicyclic gearing systems also incorporate the use of an outer ring gear or annulus, which meshes with the planet gears. Planetary gears (or epicyclic gears) are typically classified as simple or compound planetary gears. Simple planetary gears have one sun, one ring, one carrier, and one planet set. Compound planetary gears involve one or more of the following three types of structures: meshed-planet (there are at least two more planets in mesh with each other in each planet train), stepped-planet (there exists a shaft connection between two planets in each planet train), and multi-stage structures (the system contains two or more planet sets). Compared to simple planetary gears, compound planetary gears have the advantages of larger reduction ratio, higher torque-to-weight ratio, and more flexible configurations.

The axes of all gears are usually parallel, but for special cases like pencil sharpeners and differentials, they can be placed at an angle, introducing elements of bevel gear (see below). Further, the sun, planet carrier and ring axes are usually coaxial.

 
Bookwheel, from Agostino Ramelli's Le diverse et artifiose machine, 1588

Epicyclic gearing is also available which consists of a sun, a carrier, and two planets which mesh with each other. One planet meshes with the sun gear, while the second planet meshes with the ring gear. For this case, when the carrier is fixed, the ring gear rotates in the same direction as the sun gear, thus providing a reversal in direction compared to standard epicyclic gearing.

History edit

Around 500 BCE, the Greeks invented the idea of epicycles, of circles travelling on the circular orbits. With this theory Claudius Ptolemy in the Almagest in 148 CE was able to approximate planetary paths observed crossing the sky. The Antikythera Mechanism, circa 80 BCE, had gearing which was able to closely match the moon's elliptical path through the heavens, and even to correct for the nine-year precession of that path.[6] (The Greeks interpreted the motion they saw, not as elliptical, but rather as epicyclic motion.)

In the 2nd century AD treatise The Mathematical Syntaxis (a.k.a. Almagest), Claudius Ptolemy used rotating deferent and epicycles that form epicyclic gear trains to predict the motions of the planets. Accurate predictions of the movement of the Sun, Moon, and the five planets, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, across the sky assumed that each followed a trajectory traced by a point on the planet gear of an epicyclic gear train. This curve is called an epitrochoid.[citation needed]

Epicyclic gearing was used in the Antikythera Mechanism, circa 80 BCE, to adjust the displayed position of the moon for the ellipticity of its orbit, and even for its orbital apsidal precession. Two facing gears were rotated around slightly different centers; one drove the other, not with meshed teeth but with a pin inserted into a slot on the second. As the slot drove the second gear, the radius of driving would change, thus invoking a speeding up and slowing down of the driven gear in each revolution.[citation needed]

Richard of Wallingford, an English abbot of St. Albans monastery, later described epicyclic gearing for an astronomical clock in the 14th century.[7] In 1588, Italian military engineer Agostino Ramelli invented the bookwheel, a vertically revolving bookstand containing epicyclic gearing with two levels of planetary gears to maintain proper orientation of the books.[7][8]

French mathematician and engineer Desargues designed and constructed the first mill with epicycloidal teeth c. 1650.[9]

Requirements for non-interference edit

In order that the planet gear teeth mesh properly with both the sun and ring gears, assuming   equally spaced planet gears, the following equation must be satisfied:

 

where

  are the number of teeth of the sun gear and the ring gear, respectively and

  is the number of planet gears in the assembly and

  is a whole number

If one is to create an asymmetric carrier frame with non-equiangular planet gears, say to create some kind of mechanical vibration in the system, one must make the teething such that the above equation complies with the "imaginary gears". For example, in the case where a carrier frame is intended to contain planet gears spaced 0°, 50°, 120°, and 230°, one is to calculate as if there are actually 36 planetary gears (10° equiangular), rather than the four real ones.

Gear speed ratios of conventional epicyclic gearing edit

The gear ratio of an epicyclic gearing system is somewhat non-intuitive, particularly because there are several ways in which an input rotation can be converted into an output rotation. The four basic components of the epicyclic gear are:

  • Sun gear: The central gear
  • Carrier frame: Holds one or more planetary gear(s) symmetrically and separated, all meshed with the sun gear
  • Planet gear(s): Usually two to four peripheral gears, all of the same size, that mesh between the sun gear and the ring gear
  • Ring gear, Moon gear, Annulus gear, or Annular gear: An outer ring with inward-facing teeth that mesh with the planetary gear(s)
 
In this example, the carrier (green) is held stationary while the sun gear (yellow) is used as input. Analysis assumes a common gear design modulus. The planetary gears (blue) turn in a ratio determined by the number of teeth in each gear. Here, the ratio is +24/ 16 , or +3/ 2 ; meaning that each planet gear turns at 3/ 2  the rate of the sun gear, in the opposite direction. An outer ring gear is not shown.

The overall gear ratio of a simple planetary gearset can be calculated using the following two equations,[1] representing the sun-planet and planet-ring interactions respectively:

 

where

  are the angular velocities of the ring gear, sun gear, planetary gears, and carrier frame respectively, and   are the number of teeth of the ring gear, the sun gear, and each planet gear respectively.

from which we can derive the following:

 
 
 
 

and

 

only if  [10] In many epicyclic gearing systems, one of these three basic components is held stationary (hence set   for whichever gear is stationary); one of the two remaining components is an input, providing power to the system, while the last component is an output, receiving power from the system. The ratio of input rotation to output rotation is dependent upon the number of teeth in each of the gears, and upon which component is held stationary.

Alternatively, in the special case where the number of teeth on each gear meets the relationship   the equation can be re-written as the following:

 

where

  is the sun-to-planet gear ratio.

These relationships can be used to analyze any epicyclic system, including those, such as hybrid vehicle transmissions, where two of the components are used as inputs with the third providing output relative to the two inputs.[11]

In one arrangement, the planetary carrier (green in the diagram above) is held stationary, and the sun gear (yellow) is used as input. In that case, the planetary gears simply rotate about their own axes (i.e., spin) at a rate determined by the number of teeth in each gear. If the sun gear has   teeth, and each planet gear has   teeth, then the ratio is equal to   For instance, if the sun gear has 24 teeth, and each planet has 16 teeth, then the ratio is +24/ 16 , or +3/ 2 ; this means that one clockwise turn of the sun gear produces 1.5 counterclockwise turns of each of the planet gear(s) about its axis.

Rotation of the planet gears can in turn drive the ring gear (not depicted in diagram), at a speed corresponding to the gear ratios: If the ring gear has   teeth, then the ring will rotate by   turns for each turn of the planetary gears. For instance, if the ring gear has 64 teeth, and the planets 16 teeth, one clockwise turn of a planet gear results in 16/ 64 , or 1/ 4  clockwise turns of the ring gear. Extending this case from the one above:

  • One turn of the sun gear results in   turns of the planets
  • One turn of a planet gear results in   turns of the ring gear

So, with the planetary carrier locked, one turn of the sun gear results in   turns of the ring gear.

The ring gear may also be held fixed, with input provided to the planetary gear carrier; output rotation is then produced from the sun gear. This configuration will produce an increase in gear ratio, equal to  

If the ring gear is held stationary and the sun gear is used as the input, the planet carrier will be the output. The gear ratio in this case will be   which may also be written as   This is the lowest gear ratio attainable with an epicyclic gear train. This type of gearing is sometimes used in tractors and construction equipment to provide high torque to the drive wheels.

In bicycle hub gears, the sun is usually stationary, being keyed to the axle or even machined directly onto it. The planetary gear carrier is used as input. In this case the gear ratio is simply given by   The number of teeth in the planet gear is irrelevant.

 
Compound planets of a Sturmey-Archer AM bicycle hub (ring gear removed)

Accelerations of standard epicyclic gearing edit

From the above formulae, we can also derive the accelerations of the sun, ring and carrier, which are:

 
 
 

Torque ratios of standard epicyclic gearing edit

In epicyclic gears, two speeds must be known, in order to determine the third speed. However, in a steady state condition, only one torque must be known, in order to determine the other two torques. The equations which determine torque are:

 
 
 
 
 
 


where:   — Torque of ring (annulus),   — Torque of sun,  — Torque of carrier. For all three, these are the torques applied to the mechanism (input torques). Output torques have the reverse sign of input torques. These torque ratios can be derived using the law of conservation of energy. Applied to a single stage this equation is expressed as:

 

In the cases where gears are accelerating, or to account for friction, these equations must be modified.

Fixed carrier train ratio edit

A convenient approach to determine the various speed ratios available in a planetary gear train begins by considering the speed ratio of the gear train when the carrier is held fixed. This is known as the fixed carrier train ratio.[2]

In the case of a simple planetary gear train formed by a carrier supporting a planet gear engaged with a sun and ring gear, the fixed carrier train ratio is computed as the speed ratio of the gear train formed by the sun, planet and ring gears on the fixed carrier. This is given by

 

In this calculation the planet gear is an idler gear.

The fundamental formula of the planetary gear train with a rotating carrier is obtained by recognizing that this formula remains true if the angular velocities of the sun, planet and ring gears are computed relative to the carrier angular velocity. This becomes,

 

This formula provides a simple way to determine the speed ratios for the simple planetary gear train under different conditions:

1. The carrier is held fixed, ωc=0,

 

2. The ring gear is held fixed, ωr=0,

 

3. The sun gear is held fixed, ωs=0,

 

Each of the speed ratios available to a simple planetary gear train can be obtained by using band brakes to hold and release the carrier, sun or ring gears as needed. This provides the basic structure for an automatic transmission.

Spur gear differential edit

 
A spur gear differential constructed by engaging the planet gears of two co-axial epicyclic gear trains. The casing is the carrier for this planetary gear train.

A spur gear differential is constructed from two identical coaxial epicyclic gear trains assembled with a single carrier such that their planet gears are engaged. This forms a planetary gear train with a fixed carrier train ratio R = −1.

In this case, the fundamental formula for the planetary gear train yields,

 

or

 

Thus, the angular velocity of the carrier of a spur gear differential is the average of the angular velocities of the sun and ring gears.

In discussing the spur gear differential, the use of the term ring gear is a convenient way to distinguish the sun gears of the two epicyclic gear trains. Ring gears are normally fixed in most applications as this arrangement will have a good reduction capacity. The second sun gear serves the same purpose as the ring gear of a simple planetary gear train but clearly does not have the internal gear mate that is typical of a ring gear.[1]

Gear ratio of reversed epicyclic gearing edit

 
CSS animations of epicyclic gearing with 56-tooth ring gear locked (1), 24-tooth sun gear locked (2), carrier with 16-tooth planetary gears locked (3) and direct drive (4) – numbers denote relative angular speed

Some epicyclic gear trains employ two planetary gears which mesh with each other. One of these planets meshes with the sun gear, the other planet meshes with the ring gear. This results in different ratios being generated by the planetary and also causes the sun gear to rotate in the same direction as the ring gear when the planet carrier is the stationary. The fundamental equation becomes:

 

where  

which results in:

  when the carrier is locked,
  when the sun is locked,
  when the ring gear is locked.

Compound planetary gears edit

 
Stepped planet series of the Rohloff Speedhub internally geared bicycle hub with the smaller planet series meshing with the sun wheel and the larger planet series meshing with the ring gear

"Compound planetary gear" is a general concept and it refers to any planetary gears involving one or more of the following three types of structures: meshed-planet (there are at least two or more planets in mesh with each other in each planet train), stepped-planet (there exists a shaft connection between two planets in each planet train), and multi-stage structures (the system contains two or more planet sets).

Some designs use "stepped-planet" which have two differently-sized gears on either end of a common shaft. The small end engages the sun, while the large end engages the ring gear. This may be necessary to achieve smaller step changes in gear ratio when the overall package size is limited. Compound planets have "timing marks" (or "relative gear mesh phase" in technical term). The assembly conditions of compound planetary gears are more restrictive than simple planetary gears,[12] and they must be assembled in the correct initial orientation relative to each other, or their teeth will not simultaneously engage the sun and ring gear at opposite ends of the planet, leading to very rough running and short life. In 2015, a traction based variant of the "stepped-planet" design was developed at the Delft University of Technology,[13] which relies on compression of the stepped planet elements to achieve torque transmission. The use of traction elements eliminates the need to "timing marks" as well as the restrictive assembly conditions as typically found. Compound planetary gears can easily achieve larger transmission ratio with equal or smaller volume. For example, compound planets with teeth in a 2:1 ratio with a 50T ring gear would give the same effect as a 100T ring gear, but with half the actual diameter.

More planet and sun gear units can be placed in series in the same housing (where the output shaft of the first stage becomes the input shaft of the next stage) providing a larger (or smaller) gear ratio. This is the way most automatic transmissions work. In some cases multiple stages may even share the same ring gear which can be extended down the length of the transmission, or even be a structural part of the casing of smaller gearboxes.

During World War II, a special variation of epicyclic gearing was developed for portable radar gear, where a very high reduction ratio in a small package was needed. This had two outer ring gears, each half the thickness of the other gears. One of these two ring gears was held fixed and had one tooth fewer than did the other. Therefore, several turns of the "sun" gear made the "planet" gears complete a single revolution, which in turn made the rotating ring gear rotate by a single tooth like a cycloidal drive.[citation needed]

Power splitting edit

More than one member of a system can serve as output. As an example, the input is connected to the ring gear, the sun gear is connected to the output and the planet carrier is connected to the output through a torque converter. Idler gears are used between sun gear and the planets to cause the sun gear to rotate in the same direction as the ring gear when the planet carrier is stationary. At low input speed, because of the load on the output, the sun will be stationary and the planet carrier will rotate in the direction of the ring gear. Given a high enough load, the turbine of the torque converter will remain stationary, the energy will be dissipated and the torque converter pump will slip. If the input speed is increased to overcome the load the converter turbine will turn the output shaft. Because the torque converter itself is a load on the planet carrier, a force will be exerted on the sun gear. Both the planet carrier and the sun gear extract energy from the system and apply it to the output shaft.[14]

Advantages edit

 
The mechanism of a pencil sharpener with stationary ring gear and rotating planet carrier as input. Planet gears are extended into cylindrical cutters, rotating around the pencil that is placed on the sun axis. The axes of planetary gears join at the pencil sharpening angle.

Planetary gear trains provide high power density in comparison to standard parallel axis gear trains. They provide a reduction in volume, multiple kinematic combinations, purely torsional reactions, and coaxial shafting. Disadvantages include high bearing loads, constant lubrication requirements, inaccessibility, and design complexity.[15][16]

The efficiency loss in a planetary gear train is typically about 3% per stage. This type of efficiency ensures that a high proportion (about 97%) of the energy being input is transmitted through the gearbox, rather than being wasted on mechanical losses inside the gearbox.

The load in a planetary gear train is shared among multiple planets; therefore, torque capability is greatly increased. The more planets in the system, the greater the load ability and the higher the torque density.

The planetary gear train also provides stability due to an even distribution of mass and increased rotational stiffness. Torque applied radially onto the gears of a planetary gear train is transferred radially by the gear, without lateral pressure on the gear teeth.

In a typical application, the drive power connects to the sun gear. The sun gear then drives the planetary gears assembled with the external gear ring to operate. The whole set of planetary gear system revolves on its own axis and along the external gear ring where the output shaft connected to the planetary carrier achieves the goal of speed reduction. A higher reduction ratio can be achieved by doubling the multiple staged gears and planetary gears which can operate within the same ring gear.

The method of motion of a planetary gear structure is different from traditional parallel gears. Traditional gears rely on a small number of contact points between two gears to transfer the driving force. In this case, all the loading is concentrated on a few contacting surfaces, making the gears wear quickly and sometimes crack. But the planetary speed reducer has multiple gear contacting surfaces with a larger area that can distribute the loading evenly around the central axis. Multiple gear surfaces share the load, including any instantaneous impact loading, evenly, which make them more resistant to damage from higher torque. The housing and bearing parts are also less likely to be damaged from high loading as only the planet carrier bearings experience significant lateral force from the transmission of torque, radial forces oppose each other and are balanced, and axial forces only arise when using helical gears.

3D printing edit

 
Animation of a printable gear set. Legend: driving shaft and sun gear (green), ring gear (dark gray), planet gears (blue), driven shaft and carrier (red).

Planetary gears have become popular in 3D printing for a few different reasons. Planetary gear boxes can provide a large gear ratio in a small, light-weight package. Some people install such gearboxes to get more accurate 3D prints by gearing-down the movement of their stepper motors.

A geared-down motor must turn farther and faster in order to produce the same output movement in the 3D printer which is advantageous if it is not outweighed by the slower movement speed. If the stepper motor has to turn farther then it also has to take more steps to move the printer a given distance; therefore, the geared-down stepper motor has a smaller minimum step-size than the same stepper motor without a gearbox. While there are many involved factors, planetary gearboxes may help produce very high quality 3D prints.

One popular use of 3D printed planetary gear systems is as toys for children.[citation needed] Since herringbone gears are easy to 3D print, it has become very popular to 3D print a moving herringbone planetary gear system for teaching children how gears work. An advantage of herringbone gears is that they don't fall out of the ring and don't need a mounting plate, allowing the moving parts to be clearly seen.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c J. J. Uicker, G. R. Pennock and J. E. Shigley, 2003, Theory of Machines and Mechanisms, Oxford University Press, New York.
  2. ^ a b B. Paul, 1979, Kinematics and Dynamics of Planar Machinery, Prentice Hall.
  3. ^ Machinery, Volume 19. University of California. 1913. p. 979.
  4. ^ Hillier, V.A.W. (2001). "Planetary gearing and unidirectional clutches". Fundamentals of Motor Vehicle Technology (4th ed.). Cheltenham, UK: Nelson Thornes. p. 244. ISBN 0-74-870531-7.
  5. ^ Harrison, H.; Nettleton, T. (1994). Principles of Engineering Mechanics (2nd ed.). Oxford, UK: Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 58. ISBN 0-34-056831-3.
  6. ^ Wright, M.T. (2007). "The Antikythera Mechanism reconsidered" (PDF). Interdisciplinary Science Reviews. 32 (1): 27–43. Bibcode:2007ISRv...32...27W. doi:10.1179/030801807X163670. S2CID 54663891. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
  7. ^ a b Coy, J.J.; Townsend, D.P.; Zaretsky, E.V. (1985). Gearing (PDF) (Report). NASA Reference Publication. Vol. 1152. AVSCOM Technical Report 84-C-15.
  8. ^ Randl, Chad (15 May 2008). Revolving Architecture: A history of buildings that rotate, swivel, and pivot. New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-156898681-4. OCLC 1036836698. ISBN 1568986815
  9. ^ Musson, A.E.; Robinson, Eric H. (1969). Science and Technology in the Industrial Revolution. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press. p. 69. ISBN 9780802016379. OCLC 1036858215.
  10. ^ "How to derive and calculate epicyclic gear ratio equations in planetary gear systems". buseco.net.
  11. ^ Miller, John M. (May 2006). "Hybrid electric vehicle propulsion system architectures of the e-CVT type". IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics. 21 (3): 756–767. Bibcode:2006ITPE...21..756M. doi:10.1109/TPEL.2006.872372. S2CID 4986932.
  12. ^ P. A. Simionescu (1998-09-01). "A Unified Approach to the Assembly Condition of Epicyclic Gears". Journal of Mechanical Design. 120 (3): 448–453. doi:10.1115/1.2829172.
  13. ^ "Archimedes Drive".
  14. ^ "52514 Caterpillar Tractor D8 Bulldozer Powershift Transmission Promotional Film". 10 August 2022.
  15. ^ Lynwander, P., 1983, Gear Drive Systems: Design and Application. Marcel Dekker, New York
  16. ^ Smith, J. D., 1983, Gears and Their Vibration: A Basic Approach to Understanding Gear Noise. Marcel Dekker, New York and MacMillan, London

External links edit

  • Kinematic Models for Design Digital Library (KMODDL), movies and photos of hundreds of working mechanical-systems models at Cornell.
  • "Epicyclic gearing animation in SVG"
  • "Animation of Epicyclic gearing"
  • The "Power Split Device"
  • The "Interactive Planetary Gearset tutorial"
  • Prius Gearbox
  • Short Cuts for Analyzing Planetary Gearing

epicyclic, gearing, ring, gear, used, starter, motors, starter, ring, gear, epicyclic, gear, train, also, known, planetary, gearset, gear, reduction, assembly, consisting, gears, mounted, that, center, gear, planet, revolves, around, center, other, carrier, co. For the ring gear used in starter motors see Starter ring gear An epicyclic gear train also known as a planetary gearset is a gear reduction assembly consisting of two gears mounted so that the center of one gear the planet revolves around the center of the other the sun A carrier connects the centers of the two gears and rotates to carry the planet gear s around the sun gear The planet and sun gears mesh so that their pitch circles roll without slip If the sun gear is held fixed then a point on the pitch circle of the planet gear traces an epicycloid curve This planetary gear train consists of a sun gear yellow planet gears blue supported by the carrier green and a ring gear pink The red marks show the relative displacement of the sun gear and carrier when the sun gear is rotated 180 clockwise and the ring gear is held fixed An epicyclic gear train can be assembled so the planet gear rolls on the inside of the pitch circle of an outer gear ring or ring gear sometimes called an annulus gear Such an assembly of a planet engaging both a sun gear and a ring gear is called a planetary gear train 1 2 By choosing to hold one component or another the planetary carrier the ring gear or the sun gear stationary three different gear ratios can be realized 3 Contents 1 Overview 2 History 3 Requirements for non interference 4 Gear speed ratios of conventional epicyclic gearing 5 Accelerations of standard epicyclic gearing 6 Torque ratios of standard epicyclic gearing 7 Fixed carrier train ratio 7 1 Spur gear differential 8 Gear ratio of reversed epicyclic gearing 9 Compound planetary gears 10 Power splitting 11 Advantages 12 3D printing 13 Gallery 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksOverview editEpicyclic gearing or planetary gearing is a gear system consisting of one or more outer or planet gears or pinions revolving about a central sun gear or sun wheel 4 5 Typically the planet gears are mounted on a movable arm or carrier which itself may rotate relative to the sun gear Epicyclic gearing systems also incorporate the use of an outer ring gear or annulus which meshes with the planet gears Planetary gears or epicyclic gears are typically classified as simple or compound planetary gears Simple planetary gears have one sun one ring one carrier and one planet set Compound planetary gears involve one or more of the following three types of structures meshed planet there are at least two more planets in mesh with each other in each planet train stepped planet there exists a shaft connection between two planets in each planet train and multi stage structures the system contains two or more planet sets Compared to simple planetary gears compound planetary gears have the advantages of larger reduction ratio higher torque to weight ratio and more flexible configurations The axes of all gears are usually parallel but for special cases like pencil sharpeners and differentials they can be placed at an angle introducing elements of bevel gear see below Further the sun planet carrier and ring axes are usually coaxial nbsp Bookwheel from Agostino Ramelli s Le diverse et artifiose machine 1588Epicyclic gearing is also available which consists of a sun a carrier and two planets which mesh with each other One planet meshes with the sun gear while the second planet meshes with the ring gear For this case when the carrier is fixed the ring gear rotates in the same direction as the sun gear thus providing a reversal in direction compared to standard epicyclic gearing History editAround 500 BCE the Greeks invented the idea of epicycles of circles travelling on the circular orbits With this theory Claudius Ptolemy in the Almagest in 148 CE was able to approximate planetary paths observed crossing the sky The Antikythera Mechanism circa 80 BCE had gearing which was able to closely match the moon s elliptical path through the heavens and even to correct for the nine year precession of that path 6 The Greeks interpreted the motion they saw not as elliptical but rather as epicyclic motion In the 2nd century AD treatise The Mathematical Syntaxis a k a Almagest Claudius Ptolemy used rotating deferent and epicycles that form epicyclic gear trains to predict the motions of the planets Accurate predictions of the movement of the Sun Moon and the five planets Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter and Saturn across the sky assumed that each followed a trajectory traced by a point on the planet gear of an epicyclic gear train This curve is called an epitrochoid citation needed Epicyclic gearing was used in the Antikythera Mechanism circa 80 BCE to adjust the displayed position of the moon for the ellipticity of its orbit and even for its orbital apsidal precession Two facing gears were rotated around slightly different centers one drove the other not with meshed teeth but with a pin inserted into a slot on the second As the slot drove the second gear the radius of driving would change thus invoking a speeding up and slowing down of the driven gear in each revolution citation needed Richard of Wallingford an English abbot of St Albans monastery later described epicyclic gearing for an astronomical clock in the 14th century 7 In 1588 Italian military engineer Agostino Ramelli invented the bookwheel a vertically revolving bookstand containing epicyclic gearing with two levels of planetary gears to maintain proper orientation of the books 7 8 French mathematician and engineer Desargues designed and constructed the first mill with epicycloidal teeth c 1650 9 Requirements for non interference editIn order that the planet gear teeth mesh properly with both the sun and ring gears assuming n p displaystyle n text p nbsp equally spaced planet gears the following equation must be satisfied N s N r n p A displaystyle frac N text s N text r n text p A nbsp whereN s N r displaystyle N text s N text r nbsp are the number of teeth of the sun gear and the ring gear respectively andn p displaystyle n text p nbsp is the number of planet gears in the assembly andA displaystyle A nbsp is a whole numberIf one is to create an asymmetric carrier frame with non equiangular planet gears say to create some kind of mechanical vibration in the system one must make the teething such that the above equation complies with the imaginary gears For example in the case where a carrier frame is intended to contain planet gears spaced 0 50 120 and 230 one is to calculate as if there are actually 36 planetary gears 10 equiangular rather than the four real ones Gear speed ratios of conventional epicyclic gearing editThe gear ratio of an epicyclic gearing system is somewhat non intuitive particularly because there are several ways in which an input rotation can be converted into an output rotation The four basic components of the epicyclic gear are Sun gear The central gear Carrier frame Holds one or more planetary gear s symmetrically and separated all meshed with the sun gear Planet gear s Usually two to four peripheral gears all of the same size that mesh between the sun gear and the ring gear Ring gear Moon gear Annulus gear or Annular gear An outer ring with inward facing teeth that mesh with the planetary gear s nbsp In this example the carrier green is held stationary while the sun gear yellow is used as input Analysis assumes a common gear design modulus The planetary gears blue turn in a ratio determined by the number of teeth in each gear Here the ratio is 24 16 or 3 2 meaning that each planet gear turns at 3 2 the rate of the sun gear in the opposite direction An outer ring gear is not shown The overall gear ratio of a simple planetary gearset can be calculated using the following two equations 1 representing the sun planet and planet ring interactions respectively N s w s N p w p N s N p w c 0 N r w r N p w p N r N p w c 0 displaystyle begin aligned N text s omega text s N text p omega text p left N text s N text p right omega text c amp 0 N text r omega text r N text p omega text p left N text r N text p right omega text c amp 0 end aligned nbsp where w r w s w p w c displaystyle omega text r omega text s omega text p omega text c nbsp are the angular velocities of the ring gear sun gear planetary gears and carrier frame respectively and N r N s N p displaystyle N text r N text s N text p nbsp are the number of teeth of the ring gear the sun gear and each planet gear respectively from which we can derive the following N s w s N r w r N s N r w c displaystyle N text s omega text s N text r omega text r N text s N text r omega text c nbsp w s N s N r N s w c N r N s w r displaystyle omega text s frac N text s N text r N text s omega text c frac N text r N text s omega text r nbsp w r N s N r N r w c N s N r w s displaystyle omega text r frac N text s N text r N text r omega text c frac N text s N text r omega text s nbsp w c N s N s N r w s N r N s N r w r displaystyle omega text c frac N text s N text s N text r omega text s frac N text r N text s N text r omega text r nbsp and N r N s w s w c w r w c displaystyle frac N text r N text s frac omega text s omega text c omega text r omega text c nbsp only if w r w c displaystyle omega text r neq omega text c nbsp 10 In many epicyclic gearing systems one of these three basic components is held stationary hence set w 0 displaystyle omega text 0 nbsp for whichever gear is stationary one of the two remaining components is an input providing power to the system while the last component is an output receiving power from the system The ratio of input rotation to output rotation is dependent upon the number of teeth in each of the gears and upon which component is held stationary Alternatively in the special case where the number of teeth on each gear meets the relationship N r N s 2 N p displaystyle N text r N text s 2 N text p nbsp the equation can be re written as the following n w s 2 n w r 2 1 n w c 0 displaystyle n omega text s 2 n omega text r 2 1 n omega text c 0 nbsp where n N s N p displaystyle n tfrac N text s N text p nbsp is the sun to planet gear ratio These relationships can be used to analyze any epicyclic system including those such as hybrid vehicle transmissions where two of the components are used as inputs with the third providing output relative to the two inputs 11 In one arrangement the planetary carrier green in the diagram above is held stationary and the sun gear yellow is used as input In that case the planetary gears simply rotate about their own axes i e spin at a rate determined by the number of teeth in each gear If the sun gear has N s displaystyle N text s nbsp teeth and each planet gear has N p displaystyle N text p nbsp teeth then the ratio is equal to N s N p displaystyle tfrac N text s N text p nbsp For instance if the sun gear has 24 teeth and each planet has 16 teeth then the ratio is 24 16 or 3 2 this means that one clockwise turn of the sun gear produces 1 5 counterclockwise turns of each of the planet gear s about its axis Rotation of the planet gears can in turn drive the ring gear not depicted in diagram at a speed corresponding to the gear ratios If the ring gear has N r displaystyle N text r nbsp teeth then the ring will rotate by N p N r displaystyle tfrac N text p N text r nbsp turns for each turn of the planetary gears For instance if the ring gear has 64 teeth and the planets 16 teeth one clockwise turn of a planet gear results in 16 64 or 1 4 clockwise turns of the ring gear Extending this case from the one above One turn of the sun gear results in N s N p displaystyle tfrac N text s N text p nbsp turns of the planets One turn of a planet gear results in N p N r displaystyle tfrac N text p N text r nbsp turns of the ring gearSo with the planetary carrier locked one turn of the sun gear results in N s N r displaystyle tfrac N text s N text r nbsp turns of the ring gear The ring gear may also be held fixed with input provided to the planetary gear carrier output rotation is then produced from the sun gear This configuration will produce an increase in gear ratio equal to 1 N r N s N s N r N s displaystyle 1 tfrac N text r N text s tfrac N text s N text r N text s nbsp If the ring gear is held stationary and the sun gear is used as the input the planet carrier will be the output The gear ratio in this case will be 1 1 N r N s N s N s N r displaystyle 1 left 1 tfrac N text r N text s right tfrac N text s N text s N text r nbsp which may also be written as N s N s N r displaystyle N text s N text s N text r nbsp This is the lowest gear ratio attainable with an epicyclic gear train This type of gearing is sometimes used in tractors and construction equipment to provide high torque to the drive wheels In bicycle hub gears the sun is usually stationary being keyed to the axle or even machined directly onto it The planetary gear carrier is used as input In this case the gear ratio is simply given by N s N r N r displaystyle tfrac N text s N text r N text r nbsp The number of teeth in the planet gear is irrelevant nbsp Compound planets of a Sturmey Archer AM bicycle hub ring gear removed Accelerations of standard epicyclic gearing editFrom the above formulae we can also derive the accelerations of the sun ring and carrier which are a s N s N r N s a c N r N s a r displaystyle alpha text s frac text N text s text N text r text N text s alpha text c frac text N text r text N text s alpha text r nbsp a r N s N r N r a c N s N r a s displaystyle alpha text r frac text N text s text N text r text N text r alpha text c frac text N text s text N text r alpha text s nbsp a c N s N s N r a s N r N s N r a r displaystyle alpha text c frac text N text s text N text s text N text r alpha text s frac text N text r text N text s text N text r alpha text r nbsp Torque ratios of standard epicyclic gearing editIn epicyclic gears two speeds must be known in order to determine the third speed However in a steady state condition only one torque must be known in order to determine the other two torques The equations which determine torque are t r t s N r N s displaystyle tau r tau s frac N r N s nbsp t r t c N r N r N s displaystyle tau r tau c frac N r N r N s nbsp t c t r N r N s N r displaystyle tau c tau r frac N r N s N r nbsp t c t s N r N s N s displaystyle tau c tau s frac N r N s N s nbsp t s t r N s N r displaystyle tau s tau r frac N s N r nbsp t s t c N s N r N s displaystyle tau s tau c frac N s N r N s nbsp where t r displaystyle tau r nbsp Torque of ring annulus t s displaystyle tau s nbsp Torque of sun t c displaystyle tau c nbsp Torque of carrier For all three these are the torques applied to the mechanism input torques Output torques have the reverse sign of input torques These torque ratios can be derived using the law of conservation of energy Applied to a single stage this equation is expressed as t r w r t c w c t s w s 0 displaystyle tau r omega r tau c omega c tau s omega s 0 nbsp In the cases where gears are accelerating or to account for friction these equations must be modified Fixed carrier train ratio editA convenient approach to determine the various speed ratios available in a planetary gear train begins by considering the speed ratio of the gear train when the carrier is held fixed This is known as the fixed carrier train ratio 2 In the case of a simple planetary gear train formed by a carrier supporting a planet gear engaged with a sun and ring gear the fixed carrier train ratio is computed as the speed ratio of the gear train formed by the sun planet and ring gears on the fixed carrier This is given by R w s w r N r N s displaystyle R frac omega s omega r frac N r N s nbsp In this calculation the planet gear is an idler gear The fundamental formula of the planetary gear train with a rotating carrier is obtained by recognizing that this formula remains true if the angular velocities of the sun planet and ring gears are computed relative to the carrier angular velocity This becomes R w s w c w r w c displaystyle R frac omega s omega c omega r omega c nbsp This formula provides a simple way to determine the speed ratios for the simple planetary gear train under different conditions 1 The carrier is held fixed wc 0 w s w r R so w s w r N r N s displaystyle frac omega s omega r R quad mbox so quad frac omega s omega r frac N r N s nbsp dd 2 The ring gear is held fixed wr 0 w s w c w c R or w s w c 1 R so w s w c 1 N r N s displaystyle frac omega s omega c omega c R quad mbox or quad frac omega s omega c 1 R quad mbox so quad frac omega s omega c 1 frac N r N s nbsp dd 3 The sun gear is held fixed ws 0 w c w r w c R or w r w c 1 1 R so w r w c 1 N s N r displaystyle frac omega c omega r omega c R quad mbox or quad frac omega r omega c 1 frac 1 R quad mbox so quad frac omega r omega c 1 frac N s N r nbsp dd Each of the speed ratios available to a simple planetary gear train can be obtained by using band brakes to hold and release the carrier sun or ring gears as needed This provides the basic structure for an automatic transmission Spur gear differential edit nbsp A spur gear differential constructed by engaging the planet gears of two co axial epicyclic gear trains The casing is the carrier for this planetary gear train A spur gear differential is constructed from two identical coaxial epicyclic gear trains assembled with a single carrier such that their planet gears are engaged This forms a planetary gear train with a fixed carrier train ratio R 1 In this case the fundamental formula for the planetary gear train yields w s w c w r w c 1 displaystyle frac omega s omega c omega r omega c 1 nbsp or w c 1 2 w s w r displaystyle omega c frac 1 2 omega s omega r nbsp Thus the angular velocity of the carrier of a spur gear differential is the average of the angular velocities of the sun and ring gears In discussing the spur gear differential the use of the term ring gear is a convenient way to distinguish the sun gears of the two epicyclic gear trains Ring gears are normally fixed in most applications as this arrangement will have a good reduction capacity The second sun gear serves the same purpose as the ring gear of a simple planetary gear train but clearly does not have the internal gear mate that is typical of a ring gear 1 Gear ratio of reversed epicyclic gearing edit nbsp CSS animations of epicyclic gearing with 56 tooth ring gear locked 1 24 tooth sun gear locked 2 carrier with 16 tooth planetary gears locked 3 and direct drive 4 numbers denote relative angular speedSome epicyclic gear trains employ two planetary gears which mesh with each other One of these planets meshes with the sun gear the other planet meshes with the ring gear This results in different ratios being generated by the planetary and also causes the sun gear to rotate in the same direction as the ring gear when the planet carrier is the stationary The fundamental equation becomes R 1 w c R w r w s displaystyle R 1 omega text c R omega text r omega text s nbsp where R N r N s displaystyle R N text r N text s nbsp which results in w r w s 1 R displaystyle omega text r omega text s 1 R nbsp when the carrier is locked w r w c R 1 R displaystyle omega text r omega text c R 1 R nbsp when the sun is locked w s w c R 1 displaystyle omega text s omega text c R 1 nbsp when the ring gear is locked Compound planetary gears edit nbsp Stepped planet series of the Rohloff Speedhub internally geared bicycle hub with the smaller planet series meshing with the sun wheel and the larger planet series meshing with the ring gear Compound planetary gear is a general concept and it refers to any planetary gears involving one or more of the following three types of structures meshed planet there are at least two or more planets in mesh with each other in each planet train stepped planet there exists a shaft connection between two planets in each planet train and multi stage structures the system contains two or more planet sets Some designs use stepped planet which have two differently sized gears on either end of a common shaft The small end engages the sun while the large end engages the ring gear This may be necessary to achieve smaller step changes in gear ratio when the overall package size is limited Compound planets have timing marks or relative gear mesh phase in technical term The assembly conditions of compound planetary gears are more restrictive than simple planetary gears 12 and they must be assembled in the correct initial orientation relative to each other or their teeth will not simultaneously engage the sun and ring gear at opposite ends of the planet leading to very rough running and short life In 2015 a traction based variant of the stepped planet design was developed at the Delft University of Technology 13 which relies on compression of the stepped planet elements to achieve torque transmission The use of traction elements eliminates the need to timing marks as well as the restrictive assembly conditions as typically found Compound planetary gears can easily achieve larger transmission ratio with equal or smaller volume For example compound planets with teeth in a 2 1 ratio with a 50T ring gear would give the same effect as a 100T ring gear but with half the actual diameter More planet and sun gear units can be placed in series in the same housing where the output shaft of the first stage becomes the input shaft of the next stage providing a larger or smaller gear ratio This is the way most automatic transmissions work In some cases multiple stages may even share the same ring gear which can be extended down the length of the transmission or even be a structural part of the casing of smaller gearboxes During World War II a special variation of epicyclic gearing was developed for portable radar gear where a very high reduction ratio in a small package was needed This had two outer ring gears each half the thickness of the other gears One of these two ring gears was held fixed and had one tooth fewer than did the other Therefore several turns of the sun gear made the planet gears complete a single revolution which in turn made the rotating ring gear rotate by a single tooth like a cycloidal drive citation needed Power splitting editMore than one member of a system can serve as output As an example the input is connected to the ring gear the sun gear is connected to the output and the planet carrier is connected to the output through a torque converter Idler gears are used between sun gear and the planets to cause the sun gear to rotate in the same direction as the ring gear when the planet carrier is stationary At low input speed because of the load on the output the sun will be stationary and the planet carrier will rotate in the direction of the ring gear Given a high enough load the turbine of the torque converter will remain stationary the energy will be dissipated and the torque converter pump will slip If the input speed is increased to overcome the load the converter turbine will turn the output shaft Because the torque converter itself is a load on the planet carrier a force will be exerted on the sun gear Both the planet carrier and the sun gear extract energy from the system and apply it to the output shaft 14 Advantages edit nbsp The mechanism of a pencil sharpener with stationary ring gear and rotating planet carrier as input Planet gears are extended into cylindrical cutters rotating around the pencil that is placed on the sun axis The axes of planetary gears join at the pencil sharpening angle Planetary gear trains provide high power density in comparison to standard parallel axis gear trains They provide a reduction in volume multiple kinematic combinations purely torsional reactions and coaxial shafting Disadvantages include high bearing loads constant lubrication requirements inaccessibility and design complexity 15 16 The efficiency loss in a planetary gear train is typically about 3 per stage This type of efficiency ensures that a high proportion about 97 of the energy being input is transmitted through the gearbox rather than being wasted on mechanical losses inside the gearbox The load in a planetary gear train is shared among multiple planets therefore torque capability is greatly increased The more planets in the system the greater the load ability and the higher the torque density The planetary gear train also provides stability due to an even distribution of mass and increased rotational stiffness Torque applied radially onto the gears of a planetary gear train is transferred radially by the gear without lateral pressure on the gear teeth In a typical application the drive power connects to the sun gear The sun gear then drives the planetary gears assembled with the external gear ring to operate The whole set of planetary gear system revolves on its own axis and along the external gear ring where the output shaft connected to the planetary carrier achieves the goal of speed reduction A higher reduction ratio can be achieved by doubling the multiple staged gears and planetary gears which can operate within the same ring gear The method of motion of a planetary gear structure is different from traditional parallel gears Traditional gears rely on a small number of contact points between two gears to transfer the driving force In this case all the loading is concentrated on a few contacting surfaces making the gears wear quickly and sometimes crack But the planetary speed reducer has multiple gear contacting surfaces with a larger area that can distribute the loading evenly around the central axis Multiple gear surfaces share the load including any instantaneous impact loading evenly which make them more resistant to damage from higher torque The housing and bearing parts are also less likely to be damaged from high loading as only the planet carrier bearings experience significant lateral force from the transmission of torque radial forces oppose each other and are balanced and axial forces only arise when using helical gears 3D printing editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Animation of a printable gear set Legend driving shaft and sun gear green ring gear dark gray planet gears blue driven shaft and carrier red Planetary gears have become popular in 3D printing for a few different reasons Planetary gear boxes can provide a large gear ratio in a small light weight package Some people install such gearboxes to get more accurate 3D prints by gearing down the movement of their stepper motors A geared down motor must turn farther and faster in order to produce the same output movement in the 3D printer which is advantageous if it is not outweighed by the slower movement speed If the stepper motor has to turn farther then it also has to take more steps to move the printer a given distance therefore the geared down stepper motor has a smaller minimum step size than the same stepper motor without a gearbox While there are many involved factors planetary gearboxes may help produce very high quality 3D prints One popular use of 3D printed planetary gear systems is as toys for children citation needed Since herringbone gears are easy to 3D print it has become very popular to 3D print a moving herringbone planetary gear system for teaching children how gears work An advantage of herringbone gears is that they don t fall out of the ring and don t need a mounting plate allowing the moving parts to be clearly seen Gallery edit nbsp Split ring compound planet epicyclic gears of a car rear view mirror positioner This has a ratio from input sun gear to output black ring gear of 5 352 nbsp nbsp Reduction gears on Pratt amp Whitney Canada PT6 gas turbine engine nbsp One of three sets of three gears inside the planet carrier of a Ford FMX Ravigneaux transmissionSee also editHypocycloidal gearing Antikythera mechanism ancient mechanical astronomical computer Continuously variable transmission CVT Cycloidal drive Epicycloid Ford Model T had a 2 speed planetary transmission Gearbox Harmonic drive Hub gear for bicycles etc NuVinci continuously variable transmission Ravigneaux planetary gearset Lepelletier gear mechanism Rohloff Speedhub 14 ratio bicycle hub gearbox Simpson planetary gearset Sturmey Archer First major manufacturer of bicycle hubs using planetary gears Uni Wheel a wheel that incorporates a planetary gear systemReferences edit a b c J J Uicker G R Pennock and J E Shigley 2003 Theory of Machines and Mechanisms Oxford University Press New York a b B Paul 1979 Kinematics and Dynamics of Planar Machinery Prentice Hall Machinery Volume 19 University of California 1913 p 979 Hillier V A W 2001 Planetary gearing and unidirectional clutches Fundamentals of Motor Vehicle Technology 4th ed Cheltenham UK Nelson Thornes p 244 ISBN 0 74 870531 7 Harrison H Nettleton T 1994 Principles of Engineering Mechanics 2nd ed Oxford UK Butterworth Heinemann p 58 ISBN 0 34 056831 3 Wright M T 2007 The Antikythera Mechanism reconsidered PDF Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 32 1 27 43 Bibcode 2007ISRv 32 27W doi 10 1179 030801807X163670 S2CID 54663891 Retrieved 20 May 2014 a b Coy J J Townsend D P Zaretsky E V 1985 Gearing PDF Report NASA Reference Publication Vol 1152 AVSCOM Technical Report 84 C 15 Randl Chad 15 May 2008 Revolving Architecture A history of buildings that rotate swivel and pivot New York NY Princeton Architectural Press p 19 ISBN 978 156898681 4 OCLC 1036836698 ISBN 1568986815 Musson A E Robinson Eric H 1969 Science and Technology in the Industrial Revolution Toronto ON University of Toronto Press p 69 ISBN 9780802016379 OCLC 1036858215 How to derive and calculate epicyclic gear ratio equations in planetary gear systems buseco net Miller John M May 2006 Hybrid electric vehicle propulsion system architectures of the e CVT type IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics 21 3 756 767 Bibcode 2006ITPE 21 756M doi 10 1109 TPEL 2006 872372 S2CID 4986932 P A Simionescu 1998 09 01 A Unified Approach to the Assembly Condition of Epicyclic Gears Journal of Mechanical Design 120 3 448 453 doi 10 1115 1 2829172 Archimedes Drive 52514 Caterpillar Tractor D8 Bulldozer Powershift Transmission Promotional Film 10 August 2022 Lynwander P 1983 Gear Drive Systems Design and Application Marcel Dekker New York Smith J D 1983 Gears and Their Vibration A Basic Approach to Understanding Gear Noise Marcel Dekker New York and MacMillan LondonExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Epicyclic gears Kinematic Models for Design Digital Library KMODDL movies and photos of hundreds of working mechanical systems models at Cornell Epicyclic gearing animation in SVG Animation of Epicyclic gearing The Power Split Device The Interactive Planetary Gearset tutorial Prius Gearbox Planetary Gearbox Short Cuts for Analyzing Planetary Gearing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Epicyclic gearing amp oldid 1189848954, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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