Over the years, there have been many claims made concerning the relative noise performance of Austempered Ductile Iron (ADI) versus steel as a gearing material. This paper presents results from a systematic experimental study to ascertain these differences. A back-to-back test rig was used to run speed sweeps at multiple loads of profile-modified spur gears. Speed sweep data over a broad speed range was analyzed using the Vold-Kalman filtering procedure to make comparisons between the two materials. Also presented are predictions based on measured tooth topographies of the transmission error and “sum of forces” gear noise metrics. These predictions show that the iron gears should be slightly quieter than the steel gears at loads beneath the transmission error optimization “notch” torque and slightly louder above this torque. The laboratory measurements show that the iron gears are on average slightly quieter (0 to 1.5 dB) than the steel gears, but at some conditions, the steel gears are quieter than the iron gears. However, the measured differences are very small, with the values being beneath the noise difference detectable by the human ear and also beneath the measurement accuracy and repeatability of the experiment.
- Edition:
- 16#
- Published:
- 09/01/2016
- Number of Pages:
- 25
- File Size:
- 1 file , 1.2 MB
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