| CAD: NTU-L09 Cycloidal Motion Mechanism |
When a circle rolls on the circumference
of another circle, each point on the rolling circle can
describe a curve, called the cycloidal curve.
If the circle rolls outside another circle, the describing
curve is an epicycloid; if the
circle rolls inside another circle, the describing curve
is a hypocycloid. The cycloidal
curves are commonly applied in the generation of gear tooth
profiles and the design of displacement curves of cam mechanisms.
It has the advantages of no interference
and undercutting problems for
gear design and having smoother acceleration curves, compared
with simple harmonic motion curve,
for cam design. The shown mechanism is used to demonstrate
an application of the cycloidal curves. It consists of a
spur gear pair, a connecting rod, a driving crank, and a
frame. The internal gear is served as the frame; the external
gear is driven by the input crank which is located behind
the model; the connecting rod is connected to the external
gear on its pitch circle with a revolute joint and is adjacent
to the frame with a prismatic joint. Since the radius of
the pitch circle of the internal
gear is double of that of the external gear, the center
of the connecting joint on the pitch circle of the external
gear will draw a straight line along the diameter of the
pitch circle of the internal gear. Hence, when the external
gear is driven, the connecting rod is forced to reciprocally
slide on the frame. Since the external gear rolls inside
the internal gear, the generating straight line belongs
to a hypocycloid.
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| SolidWorks model constructed by Hsin-Jung Ho. | |
| Download CAD file (3,688KB) Download Animation |
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