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Re: [TowerTalk] Fulton 2500 winch single or dual speed?

To: Patrick Greenlee <patrick_g@windstream.net>, towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Fulton 2500 winch single or dual speed?
From: Jon Pearl - W4ABC <jonpearl@tampabay.rr.com>
Date: Fri, 04 Apr 2014 17:02:49 -0400
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Hi Patrick,

Not being a mechanical engineer, I knew what I wanted to say in response to you, but I didn't know how to express it.

It's not the ratio, but the way the gear teeth mesh that determines whether or not there will be spur gear 'creep'.


From http://acmegear.com/worm.htm

Worm gears are used when large gear reductions are needed. It is common for worm gears to have reductions of 20:1, and even up to 300:1 or greater. The worm can easily turn the gear, but the gear cannot turn the worm. This is because the angle on the worm is so shallow that when the gear tries to spin it, the friction between the gear and the worm holds the worm in place. A worm is a gear that resembles a screw. It is a species of helical gear, but its helix angle is usually somewhat large (i.e., somewhat close to 90 degrees) and its body is usually fairly long in the axial direction; and it is these attributes which give it its screw like qualities. A worm is usually meshed with an ordinary looking, disk-shaped gear, which is called the "gear", the "wheel", the "worm gear", or the "worm wheel".

The prime feature of a worm-and-gear set is that it allows the attainment of a high gear ratio with few parts, in a small space. Helical gears are, in practice, limited to gear ratios of less than 10:1; worm gear sets commonly have gear ratios between 10:1 and 100:1, and occasionally 500:1. In worm-and-gear sets, where the worm's helix angle is large, the sliding action between teeth can be considerable, and the resulting frictional loss causes the efficiency of the drive to be usually less than 90 percent, sometimes less than 50 percent, which is far less than other types of gears.


73,


Jon Pearl - W4ABC
www.w4abc.com


On 4/3/2014 3:32 PM, Patrick Greenlee wrote:
Worm drives with a greater ratio than "the critical ratio" will not motor back and freewheel. They "Park" wherever they are left. This is a safe situation. Worms with lesser ratios will freewheel and can cause injury, death, or at least mess up your tower when it rockets to earth. Now if one of the mechanical gurus will please step up and remind us of the critical ratio please.

Patrick NJ5G


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