Rob, Have you looked at the two ebay stores I posted a few days ago? Harvey On 1/7/2017 4:25 PM, Rob roomberg@... [Homebrew_PCBs] wrote: > > I ran into this very same issue. > I did not have any gear making tools here set up that could just knock > out a metal gear and > slip onto the motor D shaft. > After week of searching the internet I concluded that there was not > any instant source to replace > my plastic gears unless I wanted to pay $75 for a custom made gear. > http://www.learnmorsecode.com/laminator/slowmotor.jpg > So I resorted to RC car gear suppliers and bought a pile of nearly > acceptable gears. > I say nearly because I will have to drill out the smaller shaft holes > to fit the lamnator. > > As far as designing gears being above your pay grade goes..... > We are pushing rollers in a laminator. > We don't care if we don't get it perfectly right. > Look up gear making on the web and you find guys making gears out of > plywood > and guy making gears with hand tools. > > > On 01/07/2017 01:19 PM, Harvey Altstadter hrconsult@... > [Homebrew_PCBs] wrote: >> >> Rob, >> >> Unfortunately, knowing the spacing of the gear teeth is only the >> beginning of cutting gears. After I looked at the geargenerator >> website, I realized that it had terms that were undefined, and as a >> layman, I could not use that site. I found the definitions of the >> terms in the Nomenclature section: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gear >> >> At that point, I decided that designing gears was above my pay grade, >> and went back to searching for ready made metal gears. This is less >> difficult, if you can find gear sets having the same diameters and >> number of teeth as your original set. The gears don't have to be >> identical to your original gears, they just have to fit the space and >> mesh. The problem that I have encountered is that I have found a gear >> set that almost meets that description, and it is difficult, without >> physically trying the fit, to determine if there is enough slop in >> the fit to allow them to mesh with the existing shaft spacing. >> >> The reason that the diameters have to match the existing gears in the >> HF laminator, is that the motor gear drives one of the roller gears, >> which drives the other. This is a hard mount, with no springs. This >> means that there is no adjustment available between them. The motor >> position has some small degree of adjustability, but if the roller >> gears don't mesh properly, the game is over. I am still looking to >> find the time to determine whether the plastic structure that >> supports the roller bearings can take temperatures over 200�C for >> extended periods of time. >> >> Harvey >> >> >> On 1/7/2017 10:45 AM, Rob roomberg@... [Homebrew_PCBs] wrote: >>> >>> YES...better yet... IF YOU HAVE THE TECHNOLOGY >>> This geargenetator.com script only runs on-line >>> can NOT be stowed locally on your PC >>> AND >>> the reason I went to the trouble of documenting : >>> How to mark a gear to cut teeth ....any size... any number of teeth >>> http://www.learnmorsecode.com/gears/index.html >>> >>> was because some of us have really bad internet connections that >>> will not be getting any better any time >>> soon so PDFs and bigger better faster complicated javascripts >>> running server side calculations and YOUTUBE videos are off limits >>> to these guys..... >>> soooo >>> drop back and punt.... go old school an show how to to it with a $10 >>> calculator and a pencil. >>> >>> I AM NOT a mathematician. >>> But a mathematician made a YOUTUBE video showing >>> SIN(DEG/2)2 read as: SIN of (degrees divided by 2) times 2 >>> will yield a number that you multiply the circle radius and have the >>> distance to mark on whatever you are cutting... metal..plastic.... >>> and I thought it would be best to know this method and share it. >>> >>> >>> On 01/07/2017 11:48 AM, 'K5ESS' k5ess.nothdurft@... >>> [Homebrew_PCBs] wrote: >>>> >>>> Better yet: >>>> >>>> http://geargenerator.com/#200,200,100,6,1,0,0,4,1,8,2,4,27,-90,0,0,16,4,4,27,-60,1,1,12,1,12,20,-60,2,0,60,5,12,20,0,0,0,2,-563 >>>> >>>> Mike N. >>>> >>>> *From:* Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com >>>> [mailto:Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com] >>>> *Sent:* Saturday, January 07, 2017 12:33 AM >>>> *To:* Homebrew PCBs >>>> *Subject:* [Homebrew_PCBs] How to mark a gear to cut teeth ....any size >>>> >>>> How to mark a gear to cut teeth ....any size... any number of teeth >>>> http://www.learnmorsecode.com/gears/index.html >>>> >>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> >> > >
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Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] How to mark a gear to cut teeth ....any size offline
2017-01-07 by Harvey Altstadter
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