daveswaves
Ensign
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2002
- Messages
- 901
Re: Lower unit dissassembly 1971 Merc 800 (update with photos)
Must be raining up there too, you should be out boating. Thats why I did it in degrees for you, 2 degrees is 2 degrees no matter how big the circle. The diameter that is important would be the diameter of the pinion gear, not the driven gear....in simple terms. In complicated gear geometry like this it would be the diameter where the contact makes first. The gears are both spiral cut and beveled, so the spacing between the teeth is constant no matter where on the gear you measure.
Merc has chosen a measurement point 1 inch from the center of the drive shaft to measure their backlash.
OK so I've had a few minutes to think about this some more.
I attach a flag to the driveshaft. I can either printout a degree wheel OR use a dial indicator to measure the rotational movement, then translate that measurement (based on the radius of the measurement) to backlash. Yes?
Because this is an angular measurement, the radius of the measurement plays a role in the calculations. Now I'm lost again. Am I supposed to use the radius of the driven gear as the radius measurement to determine the backlash?
Arggghhhhhh. I'm really making this more complicated than it should be I'm sure.
Must be raining up there too, you should be out boating. Thats why I did it in degrees for you, 2 degrees is 2 degrees no matter how big the circle. The diameter that is important would be the diameter of the pinion gear, not the driven gear....in simple terms. In complicated gear geometry like this it would be the diameter where the contact makes first. The gears are both spiral cut and beveled, so the spacing between the teeth is constant no matter where on the gear you measure.
Merc has chosen a measurement point 1 inch from the center of the drive shaft to measure their backlash.