Gear Hobs—Cutting Tools and Manufacturing Technologies for Spur Gears: The State of the Art
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. A Literature Review
2.1. The Gear Hobbing Processes
2.1.1. The Mechanism of the Gear Hobbing Process
- Main cutting motion as the rotation about the gear hob’s own axis, characterized by the cutting velocity , the rotation , and the angular speed ;
- Circular feed motion as the rotation of the blank about its own axis, characterized by the rotation , and the angular velocity .
- Axial feed motion is the linear motion of the gear hob slider along the workpiece’s axis.
2.1.2. Chip-Forming
2.1.3. Cutting Forces
2.1.4. Temperature during the Gear Hobbing Process
2.1.5. Wear and Durability of Gear Hobs
2.1.6. Other General Aspects of Gear Hobbing Processes
2.1.7. Gear Hobbing Machine Tools
2.2. Gear Hobs
- The constructive solution (single block vs. cutting inserts);
- Design;
- Cutting materials;
- The rake face and regrinding;
- Undercuts.
2.2.1. The Constructive Solution
- A positive rake angle, which provides good cutting conditions through the way the cutting edge approaches the workpiece;
- A planar rake face, tilted against the gear hob’s axis.
2.2.2. Designing the Gear Hobs
2.2.3. Cutting Materials
2.2.4. The Rake Face and Its Regrinding
2.2.5. Undercuts
2.2.6. Manufacturing of Gear Hobs
- Gear hobbing in several aspects, such as chip-forming, temperature in the cutting area and lubrication, cutting forces, cutting parameters, and others;
- Manufacturing (and maintenance—regrinding/sharpening) of the gear hobs.
3. Discussion
3.1. A Literature Systematization
3.2. Some Gaps and Bottlenecks in the Current Research
- Still assuming simplifying hypotheses in determining the gear hobs geometry, with bad consequences on the gear hobs’ geometrical precision;
- The CAD/CAM systems facilities are not exploited enough for their entire potential in simulating the cutting processes and designing the gear hobs, observing interferences between the cutting tool and workpiece, and hence undercuts;
- The gear hobs used for finishing are designed and produced exclusively with a 0° rake angle, with bad implications for the cutting conditions—unjustified big cutting forces;
- The gear hobs lose their precision after regrinding because of the decrease in diameter and alteration of the cutting angles and the edge line shape;
- Undercuts do not allow the correct regrinding of the gear hob;
- A gear hob having a planar rake face would be free of some problems related to determining the cutting edge profile and regrinding;
- The problem of low geometrical precision of the composite gear hob persists, and is not studied enough;
- Despite cooling being a sensible issue at gear hobbing, inner cooling is neither applied, nor studied;
- The clearance faces of the gear hob teeth are turned and ground on the relieving lathe; thus, due to the helical relieving process, the side relief angles result in small values;
- Almost not at all exploited the specific features of CNC machine tools in gear hobs manufacturing.
3.3. Future Research Directions
3.3.1. General Directions for Research on Gearing Cutting Tools and Processes
3.3.2. Future Research Directions
- Adopting new, innovative strategies to determine the gear hobs profile, which do not need simplification, so they lead directly to a real profile that matches perfectly the theoretical one;
- New principles of designing, manufacturing technologies, and regrinding technologies that preserve the correctness of the gear hob precision (shape) after regrinding;
- New geometries of the gear hobs that allow regrinding without undercuts; here can be mentioned the possibility of designing and producing gear hobs with a planar rake face;
- New, or improved technologies to determine the theoretical profile of the gear hob on the rake face positively angled. The result would be a two-in-one gear hob that combines the effectiveness of the roughing gear hobs (positive rake angle) with the precision of the finishing gear hobs (zero-angled rake face);
- New but still machinable shape of the clearance face that ensures an adequate clearance angle of the side-cutting edges.
3.3.3. Main Requirements for Improving the Gear Hobbing Technologies
- Higher productivity (effectiveness), with the following measures to be taken:
- Applying to an extended scale the high-speed machining;
- Cutting processes with increased feed rate;
- Optimized cutting parameters;
- New cutting materials that offer the cutting tool increased durability;
- Use gear hobs with adequate geometry that allow both roughing and finishing gears by the same gear hob.
- Higher geometrical and dimensional precision of the products: gear hobs, and hence the gears machined, with the following measures to be taken:
- Designing and producing gear hobs with a teeth profile free of errors;
- Designing and producing gear hobs able to preserve the profile precision after regrinding;
- Adequate clearance angle along the entire cutting edge of the gear hob teeth;
- Cutting methods that ensure an even wear of all the teeth of the gear hob.
- Eco-friendly technologies with the following measures to be taken:
- Applying the MQL lubricating, and mostly, dry machining;
- Giving up the mineral lubricants, and replacing them with eco-friendly cutting fluids;
- Applying inner cooling;
- Any measure meant to save energy;
- Approaching the cutting tools (design and production) and cutting processes in an integrated manner that takes into account the carbon footprint along the entire life of the product.
4. Conclusions
- A systematization of the literature, according to two main areas, gear hobs, and gear hobbing processes, with their subdomains;
- Identifying some gaps in the literature that need to be filled in by new research;
- Stating some new future research directions.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Hodgyai, N.; Máté, M.; Oancea, G.; Dragoi, M.-V. Gear Hobs—Cutting Tools and Manufacturing Technologies for Spur Gears: The State of the Art. Materials 2024, 17, 3219. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133219
Hodgyai N, Máté M, Oancea G, Dragoi M-V. Gear Hobs—Cutting Tools and Manufacturing Technologies for Spur Gears: The State of the Art. Materials. 2024; 17(13):3219. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133219
Chicago/Turabian StyleHodgyai, Norbert, Márton Máté, Gheorghe Oancea, and Mircea-Viorel Dragoi. 2024. "Gear Hobs—Cutting Tools and Manufacturing Technologies for Spur Gears: The State of the Art" Materials 17, no. 13: 3219. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133219
APA StyleHodgyai, N., Máté, M., Oancea, G., & Dragoi, M. -V. (2024). Gear Hobs—Cutting Tools and Manufacturing Technologies for Spur Gears: The State of the Art. Materials, 17(13), 3219. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133219