Lovely stuff. How do you design them? Do you draw the gear profile then copy and paste an expanded version over top with the difference in diameters being geometrical equivalent to depth with 45 degree cut? If that makes sense?! Making myself a milling table for my router and could do with learning how to make these t
Thanks, I am not sure how I came up with this. I looked at a lot of gears, and had made wood clock(not my design) prior to this. But that is a bit different than coming up with pattern and cutting process to make bevel gears. I guess it just occurred to me one day that it could be done this way. I have not seen it anywhere before.
Great video! I haven't attempted to cut a cog however I think it might be helpful to pin the centre of the cog to the wedge so you can spin the cog into position to cut it?
Mike Hesp I'll be, I thought I did. I had to go back and watch, I must have been thinking of a different gear I made, a much smaller version of the same gear out acrylic but I never upload the video for it. Either way its good idea, thanks.
...pressed enter to soon! Basically, they'd be useful for translating movement to handles! Anyway, also, do you have plans for the helicopter? It's awesome!!
+Daniel Sevier I kind of just guessed dividing up a circle till looked good. Too small of teeth and it would be hard to cut , too big and it will be prone to getting stuck. Once I had given number of teeth the rest kind of works itself out. Like thickness has to be enough for a angled cut of certain distance.
Was ist das nur für ein Holz und was für Sägen. Die schneiden wie Butter. Wer kann mir da weiter helfen? Pappel ist es nicht. Balsa auch nicht. Aber was dann ?
I am not sure I understood your questions, it do not think Google translate worked very well.The wood is Baltic Birch Plywood. I attached the patterns with painters tape and a glue stick. The saw is a scroll saw and the blade, I believe was a #5 or #2. The speed of the cutting sequences are sped up.
I just love the way you think outside the box for you plans. Hope to see more.
Thank you for the video. You always do nice thought provoking projects.
I will be sure to check it out. Sometime these things stew around my head for years before I sit down and make them.
Nice video. I am just now getting into this and was curious about a low bucks approach to beveled gears. Thanks for the ideas.
Great job sir💯
Lovely stuff. How do you design them? Do you draw the gear profile then copy and paste an expanded version over top with the difference in diameters being geometrical equivalent to depth with 45 degree cut? If that makes sense?! Making myself a milling table for my router and could do with learning how to make these t
Thanks, I am not sure how I came up with this. I looked at a lot of gears, and had made wood clock(not my design) prior to this. But that is a bit different than coming up with pattern and cutting process to make bevel gears. I guess it just occurred to me one day that it could be done this way. I have not seen it anywhere before.
Great video! I haven't attempted to cut a cog however I think it might be helpful to pin the centre of the cog to the wedge so you can spin the cog into position to cut it?
Mike Hesp I'll be, I thought I did. I had to go back and watch, I must have been thinking of a different gear I made, a much smaller version of the same gear out acrylic but I never upload the video for it. Either way its good idea, thanks.
This is just a rough approximation of a gear as the gear teeth have no involute geometry it will have a noisy and jerky operation.
...pressed enter to soon! Basically, they'd be useful for translating movement to handles! Anyway, also, do you have plans for the helicopter? It's awesome!!
How did you make that template (Printed Paper Stuck to the Wood)? Is there any software!
Hi, How do you do the calculations for right-angle peg gears (numbers of pegs per arc distance, length/diameter of peg, etc)? Thanks!
+Daniel Sevier I kind of just guessed dividing up a circle till looked good. Too small of teeth and it would be hard to cut , too big and it will be prone to getting stuck. Once I had given number of teeth the rest kind of works itself out. Like thickness has to be enough for a angled cut of certain distance.
Very pretty!
Awsome!
that is awesome, thanks for sharing
Thanks, it to some effort to come up with a process that worked.
JEPLANS I can imagine, the hard was paid off though. The final outcome is excellent. I haven't tried cutting at an angle yet, it looks intriguing.
Awesome, Thanks
you have speaker hum
Thank you,
Hero!
Thanks
Suman Mondal
Was ist das nur für ein Holz und was für Sägen. Die schneiden wie Butter.
Wer kann mir da weiter helfen? Pappel ist es nicht. Balsa auch nicht. Aber was dann ?
I am not sure I understood your questions, it do not think Google translate worked very well.The wood is Baltic Birch Plywood. I attached the patterns with painters tape and a glue stick. The saw is a scroll saw and the blade, I believe was a #5 or #2. The speed of the cutting sequences are sped up.
Ah, just found the helicopter plan.
great skill but looks dangerous........
!