Rob Gibbons 1 | 10/11/2020 21:04:09 |
4 forum posts 7 photos | Hello all I've been hanging around here taking in all the advice given, thank you. I now would like some direct help, I have found these among some tooling that I acquired and wondered if anyone could give me a clue as to what they are and who might of produced them? They look like gear tooth profile gauges, I have found similar types of things using qoogle but those are similar to thread gauges and are not "complete gears" as these are. Thank you. |
Michael Gilligan | 11/11/2020 09:00:44 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Greetings, Rob I’m sure you are on the right track with them being test gauges, but sorry ... I’ve never seen the like of them before. MichaelG. |
Thor 🇳🇴 | 11/11/2020 09:19:06 |
![]() 1766 forum posts 46 photos | Hi Rob, As MichaelG, I have never seen anything like these. The markings indicate 0.3 MOD etc. so I assume that means Module used for metric gear wheels, so could they be gear wheels gauges? Thor |
Stuart Bridger | 11/11/2020 09:49:41 |
566 forum posts 31 photos | Looks from the photo's that they are made from aluminum alloy? If so I wouldn't have thought that they would be durable enough for a gauge? I am thinking either apprentice test work or perhaps some form of sales samples. |
John Haine | 11/11/2020 10:06:41 |
5563 forum posts 322 photos | Lots of people post questions like "how do I identify the modulus or pressure angle" of this gear? I would think that a quick test against the correct one of these would answer the question very quickly. OK the few teeth you use for a quick test might get worn a bit but there are others round the periphery. |
Phil P | 11/11/2020 10:09:51 |
851 forum posts 206 photos | Maybe for use in a college as a teaching aid ? They could be used on a shadowgraph for comparing gear teeth. Phil |
Brian H | 11/11/2020 10:20:20 |
![]() 2312 forum posts 112 photos | Hello Rob and welcome. That's quite a debut, to get so many people guessing! Hopefully someone will come up with the definitive answer. Brian |
Neil Wyatt | 11/11/2020 11:17:26 |
![]() 19226 forum posts 749 photos 86 articles | As they have no slot for a driving key they are not intended for practical use as gears (I think the possibility they are a set of emergency metric idlers is vanishingly small). They are probably either gauges, a teaching aid or exercise, or test pieces to prove a set of cutters. I imagine the first is the most likely, it's easier to judge how two gears fit by rolling them together than by trying to match a small segment. Neil |
John MC | 11/11/2020 12:08:51 |
![]() 464 forum posts 72 photos | I've seen used and occasionally used myself a similar set of "gears" for teaching. A demonstration of meshing, profile shift, undercutting and so forth. Not as many gears but an effective teaching aid. John |
Bo'sun | 11/11/2020 12:23:19 |
754 forum posts 2 photos | I like the idea of their use on a shadowgraph, but they may be too thick to produce an accurate profile. Too many I think, and probably too precise for a teaching aid. I guess it could be missing, but as a teaching aid, they would need some sort of mounting board with adjustable shafts. Interesting non-the-less. I can't wait for a definitive answer. |
Marischal Ellis | 11/11/2020 13:48:49 |
77 forum posts 27 photos | Moving sideways....are they draughtsmans templates? Just a thought but they look clean and well looked after. Not so sure about the smaller ones though as they look difficult to use but........Working of the centres only would be OK.
Hope everyone is keep safe. |
Bill Davies 2 | 11/11/2020 15:06:00 |
357 forum posts 13 photos | They seem too thick for templates. It's difficult to see why there would be so many, just to highlight, say, module size. If they were very well finished, I might say master gears for use on a gear rolling tester, but they don't seem to be ground finished. |
Henry Brown | 11/11/2020 15:34:23 |
![]() 618 forum posts 122 photos | Master gears was my first thought but the quality just isn't there and the big ones probably don't have enough face width. My moneys on teaching aides with the big ID letters and numbers. |
SillyOldDuffer | 11/11/2020 16:29:01 |
10668 forum posts 2415 photos | Stack of blank gears of different sizes and modules, clearly marked and mounted on a stand. Sherlock Duffer concludes they're counter gauges. Customer walks into the shop and produces a gear from his latest bargain, the wobbulator off a Vickers Vespa. Got one of these mate he asks? Easiest way to identify Gears is to compare them with a gauge. Rather than scrabble about looking for easily lost strip gauges, a couple of those on the counter solve the problem. Any situation where someone needs to identify an unidentified gear. Can we see a picture of one of the big gears? Although the small ones have all their teeth, I think the lower examples are gappy, and more obviously gauges. Dave |
Rob Gibbons 1 | 12/11/2020 19:53:13 |
4 forum posts 7 photos | To answer a couple of your questions, yes they are an aluminium alloy and the larger gears do have teeth all way around. Thank you all for your responses. |
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