Calculating gear teeth & ratios.

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The discussion centers on calculating the number of teeth on the distributor gear (D) based on the teeth counts of the crankshaft gear (A), gear (B), and gear (C). Gear A has 14 teeth, gear B has 21 teeth, and gear C has 9 teeth, leading to the conclusion that gear D should have 12 teeth. The lecturer's solution involves complex ratios, while an alternative method simplifies the calculation by recognizing the direct relationship between the gears. The problem is identified as a compound gear train, where the rotation of gear B directly corresponds to gear C. The final consensus is that gear D indeed has 12 teeth, confirming the calculations.
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1. This is a question that I've asked a few people and have not been able to get a solid explanation to:

The crankshaft gear (A) has 14 teeth. It drives gear (B) with 21 teeth which is on a shaft & on the other end of the shaft is gear (C) with 9 teeth. The distributor is driven off gear (C); calculate the number of teeth on the distributor gear (D).




2. In normal 4 stroke internal combustion engines, the distributor rotates at 1/2 the speed of the crankshaft. This means the distributor gear would have twice the number of teeth of the crankshaft gear (A) but in this case, not true due to the addition of gears (B) & (C).



3. My lecturer has given us a solution to this question, but it's long-winded & confusing & I'm in doubt of it because this is not his field of specialty.

Lecturer's solution:
Given gear (A) = 14 teeth gear (B) = 21 teeth gear (C) = 9 teeth, gear (D) = ?
B/A = 3/2 so 2 revolutions of B = 3 revolutions of A.
If gear A)makes 2 revolutions then gear C makes:
2/3 * 2 = 4/3
2 revolutions of Gear (B) = 2 revolutions of Gear (C) so:
4/3 * 9 = 12.
Answer: 12 teeth.

My solution:
Since the distributor gear (D) should have double the teeth of the crankshaft gear (A) & the ratio provided by gears (B) and (C) is 9/21 then:
28 * 9/21 = 12 teeth.
Answer: 12 teeth.

I don't know if either of these answers are correct or if the approach to the solutions are correct so any logical information will useful and much appreciated, thank you in advance!

 
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Nobody?
 
This is kind a "gotcha" problem... Gear B is directly attached to gear C via the shaft. One turn of B equals one turn of C.
 
You have what is called a compound gear train. It has at least 4 gears on 3 shafts (can have more). The intermediate shaft has 2 gears and ratios can be determined by treating them as simple gear trains as you have done.

Another way is to use the formula in the site below. In your case the gear ratio is 2:1 so enter 2 in the left side of formula and solve for D.
http://www.dynamicscience.com.au/tester/solutions/hydraulicus/gears1compound.htm
This formula can be used for any number of gear sets
 
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