US3716905A - Method of making connection between a printing drum and torsion shaft - Google Patents

Method of making connection between a printing drum and torsion shaft Download PDF

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US3716905A
US3716905A US00073644A US3716905DA US3716905A US 3716905 A US3716905 A US 3716905A US 00073644 A US00073644 A US 00073644A US 3716905D A US3716905D A US 3716905DA US 3716905 A US3716905 A US 3716905A
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shaft
drum
contacting surface
hardened
connection
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US00073644A
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M Soderstrom
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NCR Voyix Corp
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41JTYPEWRITERS; SELECTIVE PRINTING MECHANISMS, i.e. MECHANISMS PRINTING OTHERWISE THAN FROM A FORME; CORRECTION OF TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS
    • B41J29/00Details of, or accessories for, typewriters or selective printing mechanisms not otherwise provided for
    • B41J29/02Framework
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S29/00Metal working
    • Y10S29/035Shrink fitting with other step
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49826Assembling or joining
    • Y10T29/49863Assembling or joining with prestressing of part
    • Y10T29/49865Assembling or joining with prestressing of part by temperature differential [e.g., shrink fit]

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT A printing drum is connected to a shaft in such a 2? 8 figg f manner as to withstand the severe stresses created in d 5 the connection therebetween when the drum is 1 0 I operated in a mode of intermittent rotary motion.
  • a 101/93 C hardened external contacting surface on the shaft is plated with a layer of copper, and a hardened internal
  • References and contacting surface on the drum is shrink-fitted on said UNITED STATES PATENTS external contacting surface to form said connection.
  • This invention relates to a rotary drum-type printer which is operated at extremely high stepping rates in an intermittent rotary motion mode, and is particularly concerned with the connection between the printer drum and the shaft on which it is mounted.
  • the type drum rotates at a constant velocity, with printing being done on-the-fly as the type drum rotates. Because the drum on which the type characters are located is in continuous rotary motion during printing, any deviation in the time of print hammer impact against said characters results in vertical misregistration of the resulting printing.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 3,309,988 A printer of the type to which this invention is related is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,309,988, which issued Mar. 21, 1967, on the application of William S. Touchman and is assigned to the assignee of the present invention.
  • the printer disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,309,988 utilizes a unique method for precision indexing the type drum past the print hammers.
  • the indexing motion of the drum results from rotating a portion of a shaft (on which the drum is mounted) at a constant velocity rotation, and also superimposing a torsional oscillation on another portion of the shaft.
  • the torsional oscillation cycle includes a negative motion component and a positive motion component. When the negative motion component increases to equal the magnitude of the forward constant velocity rotation, the effective motion of the drum becomes zero.
  • the print hammer strikes the aplitiste character on the drum, which is momentarily stationary, to effect the printing free of print smear.
  • the drum is accelerated in the direction of the forward rotation by the shaft until it reaches a velocity which is substantially twice that of the constant velocity forward rotation, and then the negative motion increases to complete the cycle.
  • the drum and shaft system operate at resonance.
  • This invention relates to the connection between a shaft and a type drum in a printer operating under the principles disclosed in said U.S. Pat. No. 3,309,988, and to the method of making said connection.
  • the shaft has a hardened external contacting surface thereon, and the type drum has a hardened internal contacting surface therein.
  • the shaft diameter and the internal diameter of the type drum at said contacting surface are so dimensioned as to provide an interference fit therebetween prior to assembly.
  • a layer of metal like copper, which is softer than said contacting surfaces, is deposited on the shaft at its contacting surface, after which the type drum is shrink-fitted on to the shaft so as to provide a shrink-fit connection between said hardened surfaces.
  • Such a connection provides an unexpectedly strong joint which is capable of transmitting the torsional oscillations of the shaft and is economical to produce.
  • FIG. 1 is a general perspective view, partly in crosssection, of this invention, showing the connection between the shaft and the type drum for a printer system which operates on the principles disclosed in said U.S. Pat., No. 3,309,988.
  • FIG. 1 is a general perspective view of a portion of a printer system in which the connection of this, invention may be used.
  • the printer system includes supports 10 and 12, in which bearings 14 are located to rotatably support a shaft 16.
  • the shaft 16 has an enlarged diameter portion 18 in the center thereof, and two driving surfaces 20 (only one shown), located equidistantly from said portion 18.
  • Each driving surface 20 has its own driving pulley 22 operatively connected thereto, and each pulley 22 is driven in timed relation with the other at a constant rotary velocity by its own driving belt 24.
  • a cylindrical type drum 25, having printing characters (not shown) thereon, is secured to the portion 18 of the shaft 16 by a connection to be described later. As the pulleys 22 are rotated, the shaft 16 and the drum 25 are rotated clockwise, as viewed in FIG. 1.
  • a torsional oscillation is imposed on the shaft 16 in FIG. 1 by the following construction.
  • an oscillator or exciter 26 Near each end of the shaft 16, there is positioned an oscillator or exciter 26.
  • the rotor and stator members of each oscillator 26 are in flux coupling relationship with each other, and each oscillator 26 is equidistantly located from its associated driving surface 20.
  • As the shaft 16 and the drum 25 are rotated clockwise (as viewed in FIG. 1) by the pulleys 22, and as they approach operating speed of about 950 to 1,900 R. P.
  • each oscillator 26 works to rotate its associated end of the shaft 16 counterclockwise, so as to bring that end to a momentary dwell. Then each oscillator 26 works to rotate its end clockwise, enabling the shaft to reach an angular velocity which is approximately twice that supplied by the pulleys 22, whereupon each oscillator then operates to rotate its end counter-clockwise to complete a cycle.
  • the oscillators 26 (FIG. 1) operate at rates of 1,000 to 2,000 cycles per second, so as to provide as many indexes of the drum 25 per second.
  • the drum 25, the shaft 16, and the oscillators operate as a balanced system, so that, when both oscillators 26 are operating on the shaft 16 to rotate the ends of the shaft counterclockwise (as viewed in FIG. 1), so as to approach a dwell in that direction, the drum 25 is approaching maximum velocity while rotating in the opposite, or clockwise, direction.
  • both oscillators 26 are operating on the shaft 16 to rotate their respective ends clockwise, so as to approach maximum angular velocity in that direction, the drum 25 is approaching a dwell while rotating in the opposite, or counter-clockwise, direction. It is apparent that, with such high stepping rates, the connection between the drum 25 and the shaft 16 is subjected to extreme stress concentration.
  • the shaft 16, the type drum 25 (FIG. 1), and the connection therebetween are constructed as follows.
  • the shaft 16 in the embodiment shown is roughmachined to the shape shown from MS] 52100 vacuum melt steel. After a conventional, heat-treating, stressrelieving operation, the shaft 16 is finish-machined. The shaft 16 is then packed in charcoal to keep the surface of the shaft from decarburizing during a following heat-treating operation.
  • a holder (not shown) is welded to one end of the shaft 16 to provide a means for suspending the shaft from that end during the heattreating operation.
  • the shaft 16, while suspended from said holder is given a conventional heat treatment to produce an austenitic structure for the specified steel.
  • the shaft 16 After this heat treatment, the shaft 16, while suspended from said holder, is quenched in an oil bath. After quenching, the shaft 16 is examined for eccentricity or runout. The shaft 16 is then placed in a tempering furnace in a horizontal position, so as to place any high side which appears on the shaft in the up position, and a load (up to 500 pounds) is placed on the high side during this tempering operation (to reduce runout without inducing internal stresses), which takes place in a forced-air furnace at 450 Fahrenheit for a period of 2 hours. After this tempering operation, the shaft 16 is conventionally stabilized by freezing the shaft at minus l20 Fahrenheit for a period of 2 hours. The shaft 16 is then put into a forced-air tempering furnace at 450 Fahrenheit for a period of 2 hours, during which time no load is permitted on the shaft. The portion 18 of the shaft 16 should now record a Rockwell hardness reading of 58 to 60.
  • the holder is removed, and the entire surface of the shaft is ground in a grinding operation, and elliptical fillets 40 are ground on both sides of the portion 18, as shown, with the longer radius of the ellipse being tangent to the length of the shaft 16.
  • These elliptical fillets 40 minimize stress concentration better than strictly radial fillets do.
  • a layer of copper of about 0.005 inch (not shown) is deposited on the portion 18 of the shaft by a conventional plating operation. After the copper layer is deposited, the portion 18 is finish-ground to leave about 0.0005 inch of copper on the portion 18.
  • the rotational inertia is of primary significance in establishing the geometry of the torsional system shown in FIG. 1. Because the length of the drum 25 is established by the printing column capacity of the system shown, and the diameter of the drum is established to a great extent by the size of characters selected to be formed on the drum, the primary effort to reduce rotational inertia wasdirected towards its weight-distribution. After experimentation with various metals, the drum 25 was made of A-l0 tool steel with a wall thickness of about 0.125 inch except for the center portion 32 at the center thereof.
  • This center portion 32 was made to a thickness of about 0.50 inch and is stepped as at 34 between the internal diameter 36 of the center portion 32 and the thin wall 38 to provide for a preferential distribution of the load at the connection between the shaft 16 and the drum25.
  • the drum 25 is then heat treated by conventional techniques to harden it.
  • the internal diameter 36 thereof at the center portion 32 is finish-ground to have it about 0.004 inch smaller than the external diameter of the portion 18 of the shaft 16 with the layer of copper thereon.
  • the type characters (not shown) are then formed on the periphery of the drum 25 by conventional machining techniques. After the characters are formed on the drum 25, the drum is heated to about 450 Fahrenheit, and the shaft is frozen at about minus Fahrenheit to enable the drum to be slipped over the shaft to effect a shrink-fit connection between the portion 18 on the shaft 16 and the center portion 32 of the drum 25. After the drum 25 is positioned on the shaft 16, the assembly is allowed to reach equilibrium at room temperature to effect said shrink-fit connection.
  • a group of sound-damping rings 42 are secured to the inner wall of the drum 25 as shown.
  • These rings 42 are made of phenolic material and have grooves on their outside wall to receive an adhesive, like epoxy, which is used to cement the rings in spaced relation along the interior of the drum 25.
  • the rings 42 are spaced to prevent contact with one another to avoid the generation of noise.
  • the pulleys 22 are shrink-fitted on their respective driving surfaces 20 by conventional techniques. These driving surfaces 20 are located at nodal points along the shaft 16. After the pulleys 22 are secured to the shaft 16, the rotors 28, which are made of soft steel, are conventionally shrink-fitted on their respective ends of the shaft 16, and the ends of the shaft 16 are mounted in their respective bearings 14.
  • said heat-treating step (b) comprises the steps of f. suspending said shaft, which is made of steel, from one end thereof in a heated atmosphere to austenitize the structure thereof;
  • step (c) includes a grinding step to provide an interference fit of about 0.004 inch between said internal and external contacting surfaces; and in which said depositing step ((1) includes the following steps:

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Abstract

A printing drum is connected to a shaft in such a manner as to withstand the severe stresses created in the connection therebetween when the drum is operated in a mode of intermittent rotary motion. A hardened external contacting surface on the shaft is plated with a layer of copper, and a hardened internal contacting surface on the drum is shrink-fitted on said external contacting surface to form said connection.

Description

United States Patent Soderstrom 14 1 Feb. 20, 1973 [54] METHOD OF M AKlNG CONNECTION 5,222,922 33(3) geynomimi "29/43/21);
, ugan e a... BETWEEN A PRINTING DRUM AND 2,787,956 4/1957 Kirby et a1 ..29/447 X TORSION SHAFT 3,014,266 12/1961 Samuels et a1..... ..29/148.4 [75] Inventor, Melvin A. Soderstmm, Dayton 3,105,292 10/1963 Le Jeune ..29/447 Ohio 3,143,012 4/1964 Deperthes ..29/447 X 3,177,563 4/1965 Pennell ..29/447 X [73] Assignee: The National Cash Register Com- 3,259,059 7/1966 Daersamw 3 C pany Dayton hi 3,322,063 /1967 Hida et a1. ..101/93 C [22] Filed: Sept. 18, 1970 Primary'ExaminerCharlie T. Moon [2]] Appl 73644 Attorney-Albert L. Sessler, Jr. et a1.
Related US. Application Data [62] Division of Ser. No. 763,118, Sept. 27, 1968, Pat. [57] ABSTRACT A printing drum is connected to a shaft in such a 2? 8 figg f manner as to withstand the severe stresses created in d 5 the connection therebetween when the drum is 1 0 I operated in a mode of intermittent rotary motion. A 101/93 C hardened external contacting surface on the shaft is plated with a layer of copper, and a hardened internal [56] References and contacting surface on the drum is shrink-fitted on said UNITED STATES PATENTS external contacting surface to form said connection.
1,775,981 9/1930 Warner ..29/447 UX 4 Claims, 1 Drawing Figure 24 24 26 in 30 (2e '6 42 36 32 38 28 26 PATENTED 3,716,905
24 24 (22 in 36 2s 30 METHOD OF MAKING CONNECTION BETWEEN A PRINTING DRUM AND TORSION SHAFT This application is a division of application Ser. No. 763,118, filed on Sept. 27, 1968, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,556,003, by Melvin A. Soderstrom, for Print Drum Mounting Means and Intermittent Drive Means Therefor.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to a rotary drum-type printer which is operated at extremely high stepping rates in an intermittent rotary motion mode, and is particularly concerned with the connection between the printer drum and the shaft on which it is mounted.
In a conventional drum printer, the type drum rotates at a constant velocity, with printing being done on-the-fly as the type drum rotates. Because the drum on which the type characters are located is in continuous rotary motion during printing, any deviation in the time of print hammer impact against said characters results in vertical misregistration of the resulting printing.
A printer of the type to which this invention is related is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,309,988, which issued Mar. 21, 1967, on the application of William S. Touchman and is assigned to the assignee of the present invention. The printer disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,309,988 utilizes a unique method for precision indexing the type drum past the print hammers. The indexing motion of the drum results from rotating a portion of a shaft (on which the drum is mounted) at a constant velocity rotation, and also superimposing a torsional oscillation on another portion of the shaft. The torsional oscillation cycle includes a negative motion component and a positive motion component. When the negative motion component increases to equal the magnitude of the forward constant velocity rotation, the effective motion of the drum becomes zero. At this instant, the print hammer strikes the ap propriate character on the drum, which is momentarily stationary, to effect the printing free of print smear. After the dwell, the drum is accelerated in the direction of the forward rotation by the shaft until it reaches a velocity which is substantially twice that of the constant velocity forward rotation, and then the negative motion increases to complete the cycle. In order to achieve the required angle of oscillation in the shaft (which undergoes torsional strain) while operating with a feasible power level, it is necessary that the drum and shaft system operate at resonance.
Indexing a type drum of the variety shown in said patent at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 steps per second creates a tremendous torque in the shaft and requires that the connection between the type drum and the shaft be capable of transmitting high cyclic loads. The connection must also be able to transmit the torsional angle of oscillation of the shaft to the type drum without loss or slippage. If slippage exists, energy is dissipated, and the system will not oscillate. In addition, slippage generates excessive heat build-up and produces the destructive condition of fretting corrosion at the connection. Fretting corrosion results in surface damage, generally, when there is relative motion between solid surfaces in contact under pressure. This corrosion could very well destroy the bond between the type drum and the torsion shaft on which it is mounted and render the system inoperative.
In an effort to overcome the problem of producing a connection between the shaft and the type drum which has the necessary strength and is able to transmit the torsional angle of oscillation in a printer of the type shown in said U.S. Pat. No. 3,309,988, various mechanical methods of joining the type drum and the shaft were investigated. The connection shown in said U.S. patent is satisfactory from a performance standpoint; however, it is extremely expensive to produce. The connection between the type drum and the shaft shown in this application performs satisfactorily and is very economical to produce.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to the connection between a shaft and a type drum in a printer operating under the principles disclosed in said U.S. Pat. No. 3,309,988, and to the method of making said connection. The shaft has a hardened external contacting surface thereon, and the type drum has a hardened internal contacting surface therein. The shaft diameter and the internal diameter of the type drum at said contacting surface are so dimensioned as to provide an interference fit therebetween prior to assembly. A layer of metal like copper, which is softer than said contacting surfaces, is deposited on the shaft at its contacting surface, after which the type drum is shrink-fitted on to the shaft so as to provide a shrink-fit connection between said hardened surfaces. Such a connection provides an unexpectedly strong joint which is capable of transmitting the torsional oscillations of the shaft and is economical to produce.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIG. 1 is a general perspective view, partly in crosssection, of this invention, showing the connection between the shaft and the type drum for a printer system which operates on the principles disclosed in said U.S. Pat., No. 3,309,988.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT FIG. 1 is a general perspective view of a portion of a printer system in which the connection of this, invention may be used. The printer system includes supports 10 and 12, in which bearings 14 are located to rotatably support a shaft 16. The shaft 16 has an enlarged diameter portion 18 in the center thereof, and two driving surfaces 20 (only one shown), located equidistantly from said portion 18. Each driving surface 20 has its own driving pulley 22 operatively connected thereto, and each pulley 22 is driven in timed relation with the other at a constant rotary velocity by its own driving belt 24. A cylindrical type drum 25, having printing characters (not shown) thereon, is secured to the portion 18 of the shaft 16 by a connection to be described later. As the pulleys 22 are rotated, the shaft 16 and the drum 25 are rotated clockwise, as viewed in FIG. 1.
A torsional oscillation is imposed on the shaft 16 in FIG. 1 by the following construction. Near each end of the shaft 16, there is positioned an oscillator or exciter 26. Each oscillator 26, which may be magnetically operated, includes a rotor member 28, which is fixed to the shaft 16 to rotate therewith, and a stator member 30 secured to the respective adjacent supports 10 and 12. The rotor and stator members of each oscillator 26 are in flux coupling relationship with each other, and each oscillator 26 is equidistantly located from its associated driving surface 20. As the shaft 16 and the drum 25 are rotated clockwise (as viewed in FIG. 1) by the pulleys 22, and as they approach operating speed of about 950 to 1,900 R. P. M., the oscillators 26 are energized. Upon energization, each oscillator 26 works to rotate its associated end of the shaft 16 counterclockwise, so as to bring that end to a momentary dwell. Then each oscillator 26 works to rotate its end clockwise, enabling the shaft to reach an angular velocity which is approximately twice that supplied by the pulleys 22, whereupon each oscillator then operates to rotate its end counter-clockwise to complete a cycle.
The oscillators 26 (FIG. 1) operate at rates of 1,000 to 2,000 cycles per second, so as to provide as many indexes of the drum 25 per second. The drum 25, the shaft 16, and the oscillators operate as a balanced system, so that, when both oscillators 26 are operating on the shaft 16 to rotate the ends of the shaft counterclockwise (as viewed in FIG. 1), so as to approach a dwell in that direction, the drum 25 is approaching maximum velocity while rotating in the opposite, or clockwise, direction. Likewise, when both oscillators 26 are operating on the shaft 16 to rotate their respective ends clockwise, so as to approach maximum angular velocity in that direction, the drum 25 is approaching a dwell while rotating in the opposite, or counter-clockwise, direction. It is apparent that, with such high stepping rates, the connection between the drum 25 and the shaft 16 is subjected to extreme stress concentration.
The shaft 16, the type drum 25 (FIG. 1), and the connection therebetween are constructed as follows. The shaft 16 in the embodiment shown is roughmachined to the shape shown from MS] 52100 vacuum melt steel. After a conventional, heat-treating, stressrelieving operation, the shaft 16 is finish-machined. The shaft 16 is then packed in charcoal to keep the surface of the shaft from decarburizing during a following heat-treating operation. A holder (not shown) is welded to one end of the shaft 16 to provide a means for suspending the shaft from that end during the heattreating operation. The shaft 16, while suspended from said holder, is given a conventional heat treatment to produce an austenitic structure for the specified steel. After this heat treatment, the shaft 16, while suspended from said holder, is quenched in an oil bath. After quenching, the shaft 16 is examined for eccentricity or runout. The shaft 16 is then placed in a tempering furnace in a horizontal position, so as to place any high side which appears on the shaft in the up position, and a load (up to 500 pounds) is placed on the high side during this tempering operation (to reduce runout without inducing internal stresses), which takes place in a forced-air furnace at 450 Fahrenheit for a period of 2 hours. After this tempering operation, the shaft 16 is conventionally stabilized by freezing the shaft at minus l20 Fahrenheit for a period of 2 hours. The shaft 16 is then put into a forced-air tempering furnace at 450 Fahrenheit for a period of 2 hours, during which time no load is permitted on the shaft. The portion 18 of the shaft 16 should now record a Rockwell hardness reading of 58 to 60.
After the shaft 16 has been formed and heat treated as previously explained, the holder is removed, and the entire surface of the shaft is ground in a grinding operation, and elliptical fillets 40 are ground on both sides of the portion 18, as shown, with the longer radius of the ellipse being tangent to the length of the shaft 16. These elliptical fillets 40 minimize stress concentration better than strictly radial fillets do. Following the grinding operation, a layer of copper of about 0.005 inch (not shown) is deposited on the portion 18 of the shaft by a conventional plating operation. After the copper layer is deposited, the portion 18 is finish-ground to leave about 0.0005 inch of copper on the portion 18.
In constructing the drum 25, the rotational inertia is of primary significance in establishing the geometry of the torsional system shown in FIG. 1. Because the length of the drum 25 is established by the printing column capacity of the system shown, and the diameter of the drum is established to a great extent by the size of characters selected to be formed on the drum, the primary effort to reduce rotational inertia wasdirected towards its weight-distribution. After experimentation with various metals, the drum 25 was made of A-l0 tool steel with a wall thickness of about 0.125 inch except for the center portion 32 at the center thereof. This center portion 32 was made to a thickness of about 0.50 inch and is stepped as at 34 between the internal diameter 36 of the center portion 32 and the thin wall 38 to provide for a preferential distribution of the load at the connection between the shaft 16 and the drum25. The drum 25 is then heat treated by conventional techniques to harden it.
After the drum 25 is constructed, as stated above, the internal diameter 36 thereof at the center portion 32 is finish-ground to have it about 0.004 inch smaller than the external diameter of the portion 18 of the shaft 16 with the layer of copper thereon. The type characters (not shown) are then formed on the periphery of the drum 25 by conventional machining techniques. After the characters are formed on the drum 25, the drum is heated to about 450 Fahrenheit, and the shaft is frozen at about minus Fahrenheit to enable the drum to be slipped over the shaft to effect a shrink-fit connection between the portion 18 on the shaft 16 and the center portion 32 of the drum 25. After the drum 25 is positioned on the shaft 16, the assembly is allowed to reach equilibrium at room temperature to effect said shrink-fit connection.
It is not understood why a shrink fit connection between the shaft 16 and the drum 25 (FIG. 1) of the type described functions so well in handling the tremendous cyclic loads imposed upon it; however, it performs much better than two hardened surfaces which are conventionally shrink-fitted together. A hardened drum 25 was necessary for producing satisfactory printed characters, and a hardened shaft was necessary for handling the cyclic loads involved. These two requirements negated the use of a conventional shrinkfit connection.
After the drum 25 is connected to the shaft portion 18, a group of sound-damping rings 42 are secured to the inner wall of the drum 25 as shown. These rings 42 are made of phenolic material and have grooves on their outside wall to receive an adhesive, like epoxy, which is used to cement the rings in spaced relation along the interior of the drum 25. The rings 42 are spaced to prevent contact with one another to avoid the generation of noise.
The pulleys 22 are shrink-fitted on their respective driving surfaces 20 by conventional techniques. These driving surfaces 20 are located at nodal points along the shaft 16. After the pulleys 22 are secured to the shaft 16, the rotors 28, which are made of soft steel, are conventionally shrink-fitted on their respective ends of the shaft 16, and the ends of the shaft 16 are mounted in their respective bearings 14.
What is claimed is:
1. The method of joining a drum to a shaft to form a joint capable of transmitting high cyclic loads, compris ing the steps of:
a. forming said drum and shaft;
b. heat treating said drum and shaft so as to form a hardened internal contacting surface on said drum and a hardened external contacting surface on said shaft;
c. forming the internal and external contacting surfaces of said drum and shaft respectively in order to effect a shrink-fit connection therebetween;
d. depositing a layer of metal softer than said hardened contacting surfaces on one of said contacting surfaces; and
e. shrink-fitting said drum on said shaft so as to form said joint between said contacting surfaces.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1 in which said heat-treating step (b) comprises the steps of f. suspending said shaft, which is made of steel, from one end thereof in a heated atmosphere to austenitize the structure thereof;
g. quenching said shaft; and
h. tempering and stabilizing said shaft.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1 in which said forming step (c) includes a grinding step to provide an interference fit of about 0.004 inch between said internal and external contacting surfaces; and in which said depositing step ((1) includes the following steps:
i. depositing a layer of copper on said external contacting surface of about 0.005 inch in thickness; and
j. finish-grinding said shaft to leave about 0.0005
inch thickness of copper on said external contacting surface.
4. The method as claimed in claim 1 in which the layer of metal of step (d) is copper.

Claims (3)

1. The method of joining a drum to a shaft to form a joint capable of transmitting high cyclic loads, comprising the steps of: a. forming said drum and shaft; b. heat treating said drum and shaft so as to form a hardened internal contacting surface on said drum and a hardened external contacting surface on said shaft; c. forming the internal and external contacting surfaces of said drum and shaft respectively in order to effect a shrink-fit connection therebetween; d. depositing a layer of metal softer than said hardened contacting surFaces on one of said contacting surfaces; and e. shrink-fitting said drum on said shaft so as to form said joint between said contacting surfaces.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1 in which said heat-treating step (b) comprises the steps of f. suspending said shaft, which is made of steel, from one end thereof in a heated atmosphere to austenitize the structure thereof; g. quenching said shaft; and h. tempering and stabilizing said shaft.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1 in which said forming step (c) includes a grinding step to provide an interference fit of about 0.004 inch between said internal and external contacting surfaces; and in which said depositing step (d) includes the following steps: i. depositing a layer of copper on said external contacting surface of about 0.005 inch in thickness; and j. finish-grinding said shaft to leave about 0.0005 inch thickness of copper on said external contacting surface.
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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0935117A3 (en) * 1998-02-06 2000-08-16 Rheinmetall W & M GmbH Method for force fitting a tubular liner in the outer tubular case of a gun barrel
US20160076624A1 (en) * 2014-09-17 2016-03-17 Nabtesco Corporation Motor with speed reducer
EP2441954B1 (en) 2010-10-18 2016-08-24 Gamesa Innovation & Technology, S.L. Joint between the gearbox input shaft and the rotor rotation shaft

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US3177563A (en) * 1960-06-28 1965-04-13 Laval Turbine Method of treating gears and the like
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EP0935117A3 (en) * 1998-02-06 2000-08-16 Rheinmetall W & M GmbH Method for force fitting a tubular liner in the outer tubular case of a gun barrel
EP2441954B1 (en) 2010-10-18 2016-08-24 Gamesa Innovation & Technology, S.L. Joint between the gearbox input shaft and the rotor rotation shaft
US20160076624A1 (en) * 2014-09-17 2016-03-17 Nabtesco Corporation Motor with speed reducer
CN105422739A (en) * 2014-09-17 2016-03-23 纳博特斯克有限公司 Motor With Speed Reducer

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