
Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781259696558
Author: SMITH
Publisher: MCG
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Textbook Question
Chapter 6.13, Problem 43AAP
What is the relationship between engineering strain and percent elongation?
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Students have asked these similar questions
The gears shown in the figure have a diametral pitch of 2 teeth per inch and a 20° pressure angle.
The pinion rotates at 1800 rev/min clockwise and transmits 200 hp through the idler pair to gear
5 on shaft c. What forces do gears 3 and 4 transmit to the idler shaft?
TS
I
y
18T
32T
This
a
12
x
18T
C
48T
5
Question 1. Draw 3 teeth for the following pinion and gear respectively. The teeth
should be drawn near the pressure line so that the teeth from the pinion should
mesh those of the gear. Drawing scale (1:1). Either a precise hand drawing or
CAD drawing is acceptable. Draw all the trajectories of the involute lines and the
circles.
Specification: 18tooth pinion and 30tooth gear. Diameter pitch=P=6 teeth /inch.
Pressure angle:20°, 1/P for addendum (a) and 1.25/P for dedendum (b). For fillet,
c=b-a.
5. The figure shows a gear train. There is no friction at the bearings except for the gear tooth forces.
The material of the milled gears is steel having a Brinell hardness of 170. The input shaft speed (n2)
is 800 rpm. The face width and the contact angle for all gears are 1 in and 20° respectively. In this
gear set, the endurance limit (Se) is 15 kpsi and nd (design factor) is 2.
(a) Find the revolution speed of gear 5.
(b) Determine whether each gear satisfies the design factor of 2.0 for bending fatigue.
(c) Determine whether each gear satisfies the design factor of 2.0 for surface fatigue (contact stress).
(d) According to the computation results of the questions (b) and (c), explain the possible failure
mechanisms for each gear.
N4=28
800rpm
N₁=43
N5=34
N₂=14
P(diameteral pitch)=8 for all gears
Coupled to 2.5hp motor
Chapter 6 Solutions
Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering
Ch. 6.13 - (a) How are metal alloys made by the casting...Ch. 6.13 - Why are cast metal sheet ingots hot-rolled first...Ch. 6.13 - What type of heat treatment is given to the rolled...Ch. 6.13 - Describe and illustrate the following types of...Ch. 6.13 - Describe the forging process. What is the...Ch. 6.13 - What is the difference between open-die and...Ch. 6.13 - Describe the wire-drawing process. Why is it...Ch. 6.13 - Distinguish between elastic and plastic...Ch. 6.13 - Define (a) engineering stress and strain and (b)...Ch. 6.13 - Define (a) modulus of elasticity, (b) yield...
Ch. 6.13 - (a) Define the hardness of a metal. (b) How is the...Ch. 6.13 - What types of indenters are used in (a) the...Ch. 6.13 - What are slipbands and slip lines? What causes the...Ch. 6.13 - Describe the slip mechanism that enables a metal...Ch. 6.13 - (a) Why does slip in metals usually take place on...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 16KCPCh. 6.13 - What other types of slip planes are important...Ch. 6.13 - Define the critical resolved shear stress for a...Ch. 6.13 - Describe the deformation twinning process that...Ch. 6.13 - What is the difference between the slip and...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 21KCPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 22KCPCh. 6.13 - What experimental evidence shows that grain...Ch. 6.13 - (a) Describe the grain shape changes that occur...Ch. 6.13 - How is the ductility of a metal normally affected...Ch. 6.13 - (a) What is solid-solution strengthening? Describe...Ch. 6.13 - What are the three main metallurgical stages that...Ch. 6.13 - Describe the microstructure of a heavily...Ch. 6.13 - Describe what occurs microscopically when a...Ch. 6.13 - When a cold-worked metal is heated into the...Ch. 6.13 - Describe what occurs microscopically when a...Ch. 6.13 - When a cold-worked metal is heated into the...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 33KCPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 34KCPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 35KCPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 36KCPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 37KCPCh. 6.13 - Why are nanocrystalline materials stronger? Answer...Ch. 6.13 - A 70% Cu30% Zn brass sheet is 0.0955 cm thick and...Ch. 6.13 - A sheet of aluminum alloy is cold-rolled 30% to a...Ch. 6.13 - Calculate the percent cold reduction when an...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 42AAPCh. 6.13 - What is the relationship between engineering...Ch. 6.13 - A tensile specimen of cartridge brass sheet has a...Ch. 6.13 - A 0.505-in.-diameter rod of an aluminum alloy is...Ch. 6.13 - In Figure 6.23, estimate the toughness of SAE 1340...Ch. 6.13 - The following engineering stress-strain data were...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 49AAPCh. 6.13 - A 0.505-in.-diameter aluminum alloy test bar is...Ch. 6.13 - A 20-cm-long rod with a diameter of 0.250 cm is...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 52AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 53AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 54AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 55AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 56AAPCh. 6.13 - A specimen of commercially pure titanium has a...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 58AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 59AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 60AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 61AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 62AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 63AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 64AAPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 65SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 66SEPCh. 6.13 - A 20-mm-diameter, 350-mm-long rod made of an...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 68SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 69SEPCh. 6.13 - Consider casting a cube and a sphere on the same...Ch. 6.13 - When manufacturing complex shapes using cold...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 74SEPCh. 6.13 - Draw a generic engineering stress-strain diagram...Ch. 6.13 - (a) Draw a generic engineering stress-strain...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 77SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 78SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 79SEPCh. 6.13 - The material for a rod of cross-sectional area...Ch. 6.13 - What do E, G, v, Ur, and toughness tell you about...Ch. 6.13 - A cylindrical component is loaded in tension until...Ch. 6.13 - Referring to Figures 6.20 and 6.21 (read the...Ch. 6.13 - (a) Show, using the definition of the Poissons...Ch. 6.13 - A one-inch cube of tempered stainless steel (alloy...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 87SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 88SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 89SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 90SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 91SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 92SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 93SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 94SEPCh. 6.13 - Starting with a 2-in.-diameter rod of brass, we...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 96SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 97SEPCh. 6.13 - Prob. 98SEPCh. 6.13 - The cupro-nickel substitutional solid solution...Ch. 6.13 - Prob. 100SEP
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- 1. The rotating steel shaft is simply supported by bearings at points of B and C, and is driven by a spur gear at D, which has a 6-in pitch diameter. The force F from the drive gear acts at a pressure angle of 20°. The shaft transmits a torque to point A of TA =3000 lbĘ in. The shaft is machined from steel with Sy=60kpsi and Sut=80 kpsi. (1) Draw a shear force diagram and a bending moment diagram by F. According to your analysis, where is the point of interest to evaluate the safety factor among A, B, C, and D? Describe the reason. (Hint: To find F, the torque Tд is generated by the tangential force of F (i.e. Ftangential-Fcos20°) When n=2.5, K=1.8, and K₁ =1.3, determine the diameter of the shaft based on (2) static analysis using DE theory (note that fatigue stress concentration factors need to be used for this question because the loading condition is fatigue) and (3) a fatigue analysis using modified Goodman. Note) A standard diameter is not required for the questions. 10 in Darrow_forward3 N2=28 P(diametral pitch)=8 for all gears Coupled to 25 hp motor N3=34 Full depth spur gears with pressure angle=20° N₂=2000 rpm (1) Compute the circular pitch, the center-to-center distance, and base circle radii. (2) Draw the free body diagram of gear 3 and show all the forces and the torque. (3) In mounting gears, the center-to-center distance was reduced by 0.1 inch. Calculate the new values of center-to-center distance, pressure angle, base circle radii, and pitch circle diameters. (4)What is the new tangential and radial forces for gear 3? (5) Under the new center to center distance, is the contact ratio (mc) increasing or decreasing?arrow_forward2. A flat belt drive consists of two 4-ft diameter cast-iron pulleys spaced 16 ft apart. A power of 60 hp is transmitted by a pulley whose speed is 380 rev/min. Use a service factor (Ks) pf 1.1 and a design factor 1.0. The width of the polyamide A-3 belt is 6 in. Use CD=1. Answer the following questions. (1) What is the total length of the belt according to the given geometry? (2) Find the centrifugal force (Fc) applied to the belt. (3) What is the transmitted torque through the pulley system given 60hp? (4) Using the allowable tension, find the force (F₁) on the tight side. What is the tension at the loose side (F2) and the initial tension (F.)? (5) Using the forces, estimate the developed friction coefficient (f) (6) Based on the forces and the given rotational speed, rate the pulley set. In other words, what is the horse power that can be transmitted by the pulley system? (7) To reduce the applied tension on the tight side, the friction coefficient is increased to 0.75. Find out the…arrow_forward
- The tooth numbers for the gear train illustrated are N₂ = 24, N3 = 18, №4 = 30, №6 = 36, and N₁ = 54. Gear 7 is fixed. If shaft b is turned through 5 revolutions, how many turns will shaft a make? a 5 [6] barrow_forwardCE-112 please solve this problem step by step and give me the correct answerarrow_forwardCE-112 please solve this problem step by step and give me the correct answerarrow_forward
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