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T-19 2.2 The Law Of Gearing A   primary   requirement   of   gears   is   the   constancy   of   angular   velocities   or   proportionality   of position transmission. Precision instruments require positioning fidelity. High-speed and/or high-power gear trains also require transmission at constant angular velocities in order to avoid severe dynamic problems. Constant velocity (i.e., constant ratio) motion transmission is defined as "conjugate action" of the gear tooth profiles. A geometric relationship can be derived (2, 12)* for the form of the tooth profiles to provide conjugate action, which is summarized as the Law of Gearing as follows: "A  common  normal  to  the  tooth  profiles  at  their  point  of  contact  must,  in  all  positions  of  the contacting teeth, pass through a fixed point on the line-of-centers called the pitch point." Any two curves or profiles engaging each other and satisfying the law of gearing are conjugate curves. 2.3  The  Involute  Curve There is almost an infinite number of curves that can be developed to satisfy the law of gearing, and many different curve forms have been tried in the past. Modern gearing (except for clock gears) is  based  on  involute  teeth.    This  is  due  to  three  major  advantages  of  the  involute  curve: Conjugate  action  is  independent  of  changes  in  center  distance. The form of the basic rack tooth is straight-sided, and therefore is relatively simple and can be accurately made; as a generating tool it imparts high accuracy to the cut gear tooth. One cutter can generate all gear teeth numbers of the same pitch. The involute curve is most easily understood as the trace of a point at the end of a taut string that  unwinds  from  a  cylinder.  It  is  imagined  that  a  point  on  a  string,  which  is  pulled  taut  in  a  fixed direction, projects its trace onto a plane that rotates with the base circle.  See Figure 2-2.  The base cylinder, or base circle as referred to in gear literature, fully defines the form of the involute and in a gear it is an inherent parameter, though invisible. The development and action of mating teeth can be visualized by imagining the taut string as being unwound from one base circle and wound on to the other, as shown in  Figure 2-3a. Thus, a single point on the string simultaneously traces an involute on each base circle's rotating plane. This pair of involutes is conjugate, since at all points of contact the common normal is the common tangent which passes through a fixed point on the line-of-centers. If a second winding/unwinding taut string is wound around the base circles in the opposite direction, Figure 2-3b, oppositely curved involutes are generated which can accommodate motion reversal. When the involute pairs are properly spaced, the result is the involute gear tooth, Figure 2-3c. Fig. 2-2     Generation of an Fig. 2-3     Generation and        Involute by a Taut String   Action of Gear Teeth *  Numbers in parenthesis refer to references at end of text. 1. 2. 3. Trace Point Involute Curve Base Cylinder Unwinding Taut String Involute Generating Point on Taut String Base Circle Base Circle Taut String (a)  Left-Hand Involutes (b)  Right-Hand Involutes (c)   Complete Teeth Generated by Two Crossed Generating Taut Strings