Sri_Vars
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Do I have to sum the inertia of all the gears and shafts? If so, how to do that?
No, because all gears and shafts don't necessarily have the same angular velocity. You can do a free body diagram for each rotating component which will give you a set of equations to solve (1 equation for 1 unknown).Sri_Vars said:Do I have to sum the inertia of all the gears and shafts? If so, how to do that?
Yes. And you have to calculate the inertia of each component reflected to a common point in order to include the effects of gear ratios. Having done this calculation more than a few times, here's the procedure that I use. It's the same as the procedure in the post linked in Post #6 by @jack action above, just stated differently.Sri_Vars said:Do I have to sum the inertia of all the gears and shafts?
Hello,jrmichler said:Yes. And you have to calculate the inertia of each component reflected to a common point in order to include the effects of gear ratios. Having done this calculation more than a few times, here's the procedure that I use. It's the same as the procedure in the post linked in Post #6 by @jack action above, just stated differently.
1) Calculate the inertia of each rotating assembly.
2) Calculate all gear ratios.
3) Define the starting point. It's normally the input shaft.
4) The input shaft is geared to the second shaft with a gear ratio. The inertia of the second shaft reflected to the input shaft is the inertia of the second shaft multiplied by the square of the gear ratio between the two shafts.
5) Proceed to the third shaft. The inertia of the third shaft reflected to the input shaft is the inertia of the third shaft multiplied by the square of the gear ratio between the input and third shafts.
6) The inertia of each shaft is the total inertia of the rotating components attached to that shaft.
7) When you have the inertia of all rotating components reflected to the input, then sum them. That's the inertia of the gearbox at the input shaft.
If you want the inertia at the output shaft, the procedure is similar, except that you start at the output shaft and work back to the input shaft.