Eureka - Innovative Engineering Design
 
   
Search :   Search Help    login

Armed to the teeth 22/01/2008
 
planetary gear, speed reduction, robotics Substantial speed reductions can be achieved in a robust mechanism that occupies minimal space by using planetary gears with two diameters in different sections, with different numbers of teeth.

Design engineer Dr John Vranish, who works at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Centre in Maryland, USA, and has his name on a whole host of patents, has developed the concept. Initially, it was aimed at space applications, but now the idea is being offered for general use and is likely to find major applications in robotics.

Vranish calls this idea, a “phase-oriented gear system”, and a recent Nasa article has described how it might be employed in what it described as a “relatively simple speed reducing differential planetary transmission”. This consists of a sun gear, idler gear, three identical planet gears, a ground internal ring gear, and an output internal ring gear of slightly greater diameter and number of teeth.

* An in-depth version of this article appears in the February 2008 issue of Eureka.
 
Author
Tom Shelley
 
 
Supporting Information
 
 http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/
 
Email this article
 
News Item
Linked Companies
 
 NASA Tech Applications Team
 
 
News Item
Similar News Articles
 
  Essential differential for chain-driven cars
 
  Planetary gear units help to move seven enormous roof panels
 
  CVTs to aid ‘greener’ motorsport
 
  Automatic guitar tuner’s tiny motors
 
  Seminar on plastic gears
 
 
News Item
Similar Reference Library Articles
 
  Essential differential
 
  Formula for success
 
  Planetary reduction gets simpler
 
  Armed to the teeth
 
  Dual-drive gears eliminate play