Gears made of plastics are
growing larger, more precise, more complex in
geometry, and more powerful. High-performance
resins and long-fiber compounds are aiding this
evolution.
Plastic gears have gone from curiosity to industrial
mainstay in the past 50 years. Today they transfer
torque and motion in products as diverse as cars,
watches, sewing machines, building controls and
missiles. Even with all the ground they've gained,
their evolution is far from over as new and more
demanding gear applications continue to emerge.
The strongest growth area has been the automotive
sector. As amenities have become central to competitive
success, automakers have sought to power a variety
of vehicle subsystems with motors and gears rather
than muscle, hydraulics and cables. This has introduced
plastic gears into applications ranging from lift
gates, seating and tracking headlights to break
actuators, electronic throttle bodies and turbo
controls.
Appliances also make broad use of plastic power
gears. Some larger applications, like clothes-washer
transmissions have pushed the limit on gear size,
often as a replacement for metal. Plastic gears
are present in many other areas, for example,
damper drives in HVAC zone controls, valve actuators
in fluid devices, automatic flushers in public
restrooms, power screws that shape control surfaces
on small aircraft, and gyro and steering controls
in military applications.
The growth of plastic gears is based majorly on
the advances in molding and materials that allow
for larger, more precise and more powerful gears.
Early plastic gears tended to be spur gears, typically
less than 1 inch. across, that delivered no more
than 0.25 hp. Now gears are made in many configurations
and commonly operate at 2 hp in diameters of 4
to 6 in. Gears are molded with diameters as large
as 18 inches. By 2010, power levels should rise
to 10 hp or more.
Processors face many challenges in creating gear geometries that maximize power while minimizing transmission error and noise. Such gears call for great precision in molding concentricity, tooth geometry and other properties. Some gears, like helical types, can involve complex mould movements to release the finished product, while others need cored teeth in thicker sections to control shrinkage. Although the latest polymers, equipment and tooling put the next generation of plastic gears within reach of most moulders, the true challenge any processor faces is in adapting its entire operation for such high-precision.
Manufacturers of precision gears also need specialized measuring equipment to verify gear quality, such as double-flank roll checkers for quality control and computer-controlled inspection to evaluate gear teeth and other features. But having the right equipment must be coupled with adaptation of moulding environment to ensure that the gears are as uniform as possible from shot to shot and cavity-to-cavity. A focus on staff and operating procedures could therefore be the deciding factor in producing precision gears.
Moulders need good environmental
controls in the moulding area because gear dimensions
can be affected as temperature shifts from season
to season and even by opening an outside bay door
to permit passage of a forklift. Other factors
needing attention include having a stable power
supply, the right drying equipment to control
polymer temperature and moisture level, and a
consistent airflow over cooling parts. Some shops
use robotics to remove gears from the mold and
place them on conveyors the same way time and
again to ensure uniform cooling.
The most common plastic gears are spur, cylindrical
worm and helical gears, although nearly all gears
made in metal have also been made in plastic.
Gears are often made in split-cavity moulds. Tooling
for helical gears calls for attention to detail
because it must allow either the gear or the gear
ring forming the teeth to rotate during ejection.
Worm gears, which generate less noise than spur
gears, are removed after molding either by being
unscrewed out of the cavities or by using
multiple slides. If slides are used, they must
be highly precise to prevent leaving significant
parting lines in the gear.
Today's slate of engineering thermoplastics gives
processors more options for precision gears than
ever before. Acetal, PBT, and nylon, the most
common choices, create gear sets having good fatigue
and wear resistance, lubricity, rigidity for high
tangential forces, and toughness in shock-loaded
situations such as in reciprocating motors. These
crystalline polymers must be molded hot enough
to promote full crystallinity. Otherwise, gear
dimensions can shift if end-use temperature rises
above the mold temperature and causes additional
crystallization.
Acetal has been a primary gear material in automobiles,
appliances, office equipment, and other applications
for over 40 years. It provides dimensional stability,
high fatigue and chemical resistance at temperatures
up to 90 C. It has excellent lubricity against
metals and plastics.
PBT polyester produces extremely smooth surfaces
and has a maximum operating temperature of 150
C for unfilled and 170 C for glass-reinforced
grades. It works well against acetal and other
plastics, as well as against metal, and is often
used in housings.
Nylons offer great toughness and wear well against
other plastics and metals, often in worm gears
and housings. Nylon gears operate to temperatures
to 175 C for glass-reinforced grades and to 150
C for unfilled ones. But nylons are unsuitable
for precision gears because their dimensions change
as they absorb moisture and lubricants.
Polyphenylene sulfide (PPS) offers high stiffness,
dimensional stability, and fatigue and chemical
resistance at temperatures as high as 200 C. It
is finding broad use in demanding industrial,
automotive, and other end uses. Liquid-crystal
polymers (LCP) offer great dimensional stability
in small, precision gears. It tolerates temperatures
to 220 C and has high chemical resistance and
low mold shrinkage. It has been molded to tooth
thickness of about 0.066 mm, or two-thirds the
diameter of a human hair.
Thermoplastic elastomers help gears run quieter
and make them more flexible and better able to
absorb shock loads. A copolyester TP elastomer,
for instance, is being used in lower-power, higher-speed
gears because it allows them to tolerate inaccuracies
and reduce noise while providing sufficient dimensional
stability and stiffness. One such application
involves gears in window-blind actuators.
Polyethylene, polypropylene, and ultra-high-molecular-weight PE have been used in gears at lower temperatures in aggressive chemical and high-wear environments. Other polymers have been considered for gears, but many impose severe limitations on gear function. Polycarbonate, for instance, has poor lubricity and resistance to chemicals and fatigue. ABS and LDPE generally cannot meet the fatigue endurance, dimensional stability, and heat and creep-resistance requirements of precision gears. Such polymers are most often found in basic, low-load or low-speed gears. |