What is the Proper Involute Profile for Worm Gear Drive Teeth Design?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the challenges of designing proper involute profiles for worm gear drive teeth in SolidWorks. The user seeks guidance on ensuring correct meshing between the worm and gear while performing finite element analysis. There is a consensus that instructional resources, including videos and standard data, are available online to assist in the design process. Concerns are raised about the compatibility of gear and shaft dimensions, particularly regarding bearing sizes in relation to gear diameter. It is emphasized that the worm and worm wheel profiles must be matched for effective operation, with suggestions for utilizing manufacturer resources for technical specifications.
Eddie714
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Hello i am having trouble figuring out the proper profile to use for the worm and the gear. I need to model it in solidworks and everything i am finding online is for spur gears. I need to get the worm and gear to mesh correctly so i can do some finite element analysis on it. I have calculated my pitch diameters for both and i have what i believe to be the correct addendum and dedendum dimensions for my worm gear.

Can someone point me in the right direction? how does one get the proper involute for their teeth?
 
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Are you just needing a standard worm gear in solidworks? Or are you making your own
 
Joppy said:
Are you just needing a standard worm gear in solidworks? Or are you making your own

im supposed to make my own. right now i am doing the gear with this technique i found https://grabcad.com/questions/tutor...te-gears-in-solidworks-and-show-design-intent
and i found a similar gear train to what i designed on paper on grabcad it came with the solidworks file of how the person created it.

Am i in the right direction?
 
I think you are yes. If you need to design your own worm gear, then find some instructional videos on youtube (there are plenty), and what you are currently using looks good too.

I guess the main things you need to consider are the teeth profiles and so on, which, there happens to be a lot of standard data for online
 
Joppy said:
I think you are yes. If you need to design your own worm gear, then find some instructional videos on youtube (there are plenty), and what you are currently using looks good too.

I guess the main things you need to consider are the teeth profiles and so on, which, there happens to be a lot of standard data for online

Thanks. I tried youtube already and can't seem to find much on worm gears. My main concern is that i don't know if what i am using (the link) is a spur gear? can the wheel in a worm train be a spur gear?
 
Yes, you can drive it with a spur gear
 
Joppy said:
Yes, you can drive it with a spur gear

Alright that's good to know then. I got my assembly almost done, but i ran into an issue. My gears diameter is rougly 80mm and i have some calculations(might be wrong) in which i need to use a 25mm diameter shaft. This sounds good in paper but i downloaded some 25mm diameter bearing solidworks file from McMaster-Carr and the bearings are almost as big as my gear!... it doesn't look reasonable to me. Any thoughts on it?
 
The worm and worm wheel must be matched. The worm can have any profile, pitch or starts of “thread”.
The worm wheel must be a profile that mates with the worm.

Imagine a worm with cutting flutes like a threading tap. Then turn the worm to cut the teeth in the wheel.

High power worm gears have a non-cylindrical worm that is more rigid, stronger and makes greater contact with the wheel than would a simple screw.
 
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