Anti-backlash mechanism for machine drive

4554842
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Inventors

Wood, III, David B.

Application #

487962

Filed

Apr-25-1983

Published

Nov-26-1985

Current US Class

074/409
074/410
074/411
074/440

International Classes

F16H 055/18; F16H 057/00

Field of Search

74/409 74/440 74/410 74/411 74/445

Assignee

Cincinnati Milacron Inc. (Cincinnati, OH)

US Patent References

4422344   Load proportional...

Referenced by:

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Citation

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Abstract
An anti-backlash mechanism for a machine drive is disclosed, wherein a shaft carries a rotary worm wheel having drive connections to the tangs of two back-to-back clutch units. The first clutch unit is connected to a rotatable shaft, concentric with the worm wheel, and having a first helical gear on its end. A second helical gear on the support shaft is torsionally and axially free to slip. The second gear is connected to the second clutch unit by a torque tube permitting relative axial movement to occur between the two. A first actuator biases the two gears apart, and a second actuator between the second helical gear and the clutch units provides clamping force to engage the mechanism. An output bull gear is in mesh with the pair of helical gears. To engage the mechanism, the second actuator is energized, impressing a snugging force on the discs of the clutch units, and driving the second helical gear in an axial direction toward the first helical gear. Continued movement in an axial direction causes the clearance to be taken up between the teeth of the helical gears and the tooth space of the bull gear and will cause the gears to roll with respect to one another, thus taking the shake out of the spline teeth and drive tang connections between the clutch units and the worm wheel. When the second helical gear "bottoms", pressure build-up in the second actuator will cause maximum clamping force to be realized by the clutch units thereby preloading all parts for maximum drive stiffness.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. An anti-backlash mechanism for a machine drive, comprising:

(a) a machine base;

(b) a drive mechanism carried by said base;

(c) a support shaft, rotatably carried by said base;

(d) a torque input member rotatably carried by said shaft, in driving connection with said drive mechanism;

(e) first and second clutch units, each coupled to said torque input member;

(f) first and second helical gears carried coaxially on said shaft, said first gear torsionally and axially fixed with respect to said shaft, and said second gear torsionally and axially free to slip with respect to said shaft;

(g) means for keying said first gear to said first clutch unit;



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to anti-backlash gearing systems constructed to take the shake and backlash out of mating gears in a power drive. Even though mating gears are constructed with the same tooth form, there will generally be clearance around a gear tooth in a mating gear tooth space, due to manufacturing tolerances and certain alignment inaccuracies. In machines of the metal chip removing type wherein heavy gear loads are seen, certain inertial effects may cause a driven gear to move around the driving gear tooth, thus creating a banging and hammering of gears. Further, on machines requiring a drive reversal, backlash clearance must be taken up first by driving gear movement, thus resulting in lost motion of the follower gear.

Many inventions in the prior art have addressed themselves to the problem of removing backlash from mating gears, and one popular system involves taking either the driven or driving gear and splitting it into two separate thinner gears which are countertorqued against one another to take up the tooth clearance. One common infirmity of these types of designs which will be discussed hereafter is that the countertorque forces are generally fixed, and may create undesirable tooth loads when the drive system is not engaged in a power cut. For example, in a rapid traverse movement, a high rate of pitch line velocity is seen, and it is often desirable to have a lessened countertorque force at that time.
 
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