[Da...] Posted May 12 Share Posted May 12 Quick questions on the following acronyms on the attached file called “Gear Report Clarification.png”. I did look in the help file as well in the presentation you sent us but still can’t find the answer. Est St Wk Eet et FrD Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Ri...] Posted May 12 Share Posted May 12 et is the gap width; Eet is the gap width variance. st is the tooth thickness; Est is the tooth thickness variance. Wk is the span width; in this example it shows a k value of 2, so a span measurement over (2) teeth. MrK is the Measurement Over One Ball MdK is the Measurement Over Two Balls MdR is the Measurement Over Two Pins Da is the Major Diameter FrD is the Runout of the Major Diameter Df is the Minor Diameter FrD is the RUnout of the Minor Diameter 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Ri...] Posted May 12 Share Posted May 12 (edited) 659_0dfb1189342fdd63147d204d93c08358.pdf Edited May 12 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Ch...] Posted May 13 Share Posted May 13 Richard beat me to it. That's the exact infographic I train my lab techs on. I've gotten more positive feedback by sharing this infographic with associates while discussing gears than any other infographic on any other topic. Zeiss really nailed it with this one. Way better than the AI slop Calypso GDT package training videos they just released. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Ri...] Posted May 13 Share Posted May 13 Slightly off-topic, but I'm so glad that the Gear world invented and embraced gear nomenclature because some of the descriptions I've seen on drawings are wild, but as long as they put the correct nomenclature (Fβ, fu, etc....) I can always get them what they need. I mean, I'm looking at a gear spec right now that says "Tooth Alignment - Total" for the Fβ, and then they next one says "Total Lead Variation" for the Fβ. 😅 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Da...] Posted May 13 Author Share Posted May 13 Richard, Thanks for this information! You are correct, the Gear world has its own language! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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