A Wuest type herringbone gear, invented by Swiss engineer Caspar Wüst-Kunz in the early 20th century, is a type of herringbone gear wherein "the teeth on opposite sides of the center line are staggered by an amount equal to one half the circular pitch".[1] This staggering of the two rows of teeth causes the gear to wear more evenly, at the slight cost of strength.[2]
^Daniels, Fred R. (September 1921). "Producing Large Herringbone Gears by the End-Milling Process at the Woodward Machine Co's Plant in Wooster, Ohio". Machinery. 28: 1. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
^Kent, William (1912). Industrial Engineering and the Engineering Digest. Industrial Engineering Publishing Company.
and 2 Related for: Wuest type herringbone gear information
A herringbonegear, a specific type of double helical gear, is a side-to-side, rather than face-to-face, combination of two helical gears of opposite...