Title of Invention

HELICALLY -TOOTHED-BELT TRANSMISSION DEVICE .

Abstract Noise and vibration of a helically toothed-belt transmission device driven in a high- load or high-speed condition are reduced A backlash (D) is set large in a helically toothed-belt transmission device that transmits drive force by meshing between a helically toothed belt and a helically toothed pulley That is, a tooth helix angle (θ) is set in a range of -0 2 ≤ 1-W-tan θ /Pt ≤ 0 75, with Pt being a teeth pitch, θ a tooth helix angle, W the width of the belt The backlash (D) between the helically toothed belt and the helically toothed pulley is set to be 1 6% - 3% of the tooth pitch ( Pt)
Full Text DESCRIPTION
HELICALLY-TOOTHED-BELT TRANSMISSION DEVICE
TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates to a
helically-toothed-belt transmission device, and
particularly to a helically-toothed pulley and a
helically-toothed belt used in a belt-drive transmission
device that is driven under a heavy load or at a high-speed
rotation.
BACKGROUND ART
When using straight teeth with a belt-drive
transmission device, there exist problems of generating a
lot of noise and vibration. As a way to solve these problems,
a belt-drive transmission device that applies helical teeth,
for example, is known (KOKAI No. 4-330853 (refer to claims
and Fig. 3B) ) . However, for a power transmission device,
such as a reduction device that is driven under a heavy load
or at a high-speed rotation (e.g. 1500 rpm to 4500 rpm),
the noise and the vibration are not always effectively
reduced when using helical teeth.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION

The present invention aimed at reducing noise and
vibration in a helically-toothed-belt transmission device
that is driven under a heavy load or at a high-speed
rotation.
A helically-toothed-belt transmission device of the
present invention is a helically-toothed-belt transmission
device that transmits driving force by meshing between a
helically-toothed belt and a helically-toothed pulley. The
device is characterized in that when denoting a tooth pitch
as "Pt", a tooth helix angle as "θ", and a belt width of the
helically-toothed belt as "W", the tooth helix angle "θ" is
set in a range of -0.2 ≤ 1 - W-tan θ / Pt between the helically-toothed belt and the helically-toothed
pulley is set to be 1.6%-3% of the tooth pitch "'Pt".
A helically-toothed-belt transmission device of the
present invention is a helically-toothed-belt transmission
device that transmits driving force by meshing between a
helically-toothed belt and a helically-toothed pulley. The
device is characterized in that when denoting a tooth pitch
as "Pt", a tooth helix angle as "θ", and a belt width of the
helically-toothed belt as "W", the tooth helix angle "θ" is
set in a range of 1 - W-tan θ / Pt ≤ 0, and compressibility
of the helically-toothed belt is set to be 1.5%-5%.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE ACCOMPANYING DRAWINGS

Fig. 1 schematically shows an arrangement of an
endless helically-toothed belt installed on a
helically-toothed pulley, which is viewed from a back side
of the belt.
Fig. 2 is a schematic enlarged view showing the
relations between the teeth traces of the helically-toothed
pulley and the teeth traces of the helically-toothed belt
engaged thereto, after the belt-drive transmission device
operation is started or after the thrust has occurred.
Fig. 3 is a drawing that illustrates the definition
of a backlash between a belt tooth and a pulley tooth, and
teeth profiles of the belt and the pulley are shown.
Fig. 4 is a part of a schematic development of a
helically-toothed belt, which is applied to the first
embodiment.
Fig. 5 is a part of a schematic development of a
helically-toothed belt, which is applied to the second
embodiment.
Fig. 6 shows a form of a compressible tooth profile
applied in the second embodiment.
Fig. 7 is a graph which shows the result of noise
tests for the comparative examples 1, 2 and the inventive
example 1, when the tooth helix angles are 2°.
Fig. 8 is a graph which shows the result of noise
tests for the comparative examples 3, 4 and the inventive

example 2, when the tooth helix angles are 5°.
Fig. 9 is a graph which shows the result of noise
tests for the comparative example 5 and the inventive
examples 3 and 4, when the tooth helix angles are 8°.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
In the following, the embodiments of the belt-drive
transmission device of the present invention, which use
helical teeth, will be explained with reference to the
drawings.
With reference to Fig. 1 and Fig. 2, behavior of the
belt and generation of noise and vibration in the belt-drive
transmission device using a belt with helical teeth, will be
explained.
Fig. 1 schematically shows an arrangement of an
endless helically-toothed belt installed on a
helically-toothed pulley, which is viewed from a back side
of the belt. As shown in the figure, the helically-toothed
belt 10 is entrained around a pair of helically-toothed
pulleys 20 and 30 which are rotatable about respective axes
"L1" and "L2". For example, the helically-toothed pulley
30 is a drive pulley and the rotational power of the
helically-toothed pulley 30 is transmitted to the driven
pulley 20 via the helically-toothed belt 10. In Fig. 1,
the helically-toothed belt 10 described by a solid line

indicates an arrangement of the helically-toothed belt
immediately after the belt installation. On the other hand,
a phantom line indicated by a reference number 10'
represents a position of the helically-toothed belt 10
after the belt-drive transmission device is driven.
Immediately after the helically-toothed belt 10 is
installed on the helically-toothed pulleys 20 and 30
(before the belt-drive transmission device is driven),
teeth traces of the helically-toothed belt 10 coincide with
teeth traces of the helically-toothed pulleys 20 and 30,
so that the longitudinal direction of the helically-toothed
belt 10 is made substantially perpendicular to the
rotational axes "L1" and "L2" of the helically-toothed
pulleys 20 and 30. However, when the helically-toothed
pulley 30 or the drive pulley is driven and the load bears
upon the helically-toothed belt 10, the helically-toothed
belt 10 skids along the teeth traces of the pulleys, thus
a thrust occurs. Namely, when the belt-drive transmission
device is driven, the hellcally-toothed belt 10 skids on
the helically-toothed pulley 20 m the "A" direction along
the rotational axis "L1", and skids on the
helically-toothed pulley 30 in the "B" direction, which is
opposite to the "A" direction, along the rotational axis
"L2", as shown in Fig. 1. Thereby, the helically-toothed
belt 10, represented by the solid line, is moved to the

position 10' which is represented by the phantom line. This
type of thrust is prominent when the belt-drive
transmission device is operated under a heavy load or at
a high-speed rotation.
Fig. 2 is a schematic enlarged view showing the
relations between the teeth traces of the helically-toothed
pulley 30 and the teeth traces of the helically-toothed belt
10 engaged thereto, after the belt-drive transmission
device operation is started or after thrust has occurred.
As shown in the figure, a tooth trace 11 of the
helically-toothed belt 10 is inclined against a tooth trace
31 of the helically-toothed pulley 30 to the amount of
angles where the belt has slanted by the skid, so that the
tooth trace 11 slips out of the tooth trace 31. When a gap
is induced between the tooth trace of the helically-toothed
belt 10 and the tooth trace of the helically-toothed pulley
30, inadequate contact is generated between the pulley and
the belt, for example a shoulder (a part connecting a
working flank and a tooth tip cylinder) of the pulley
contacts a mating flank of the belt, or the like. Such
inadequate engagement generates noise and vibration. Note
that, as can be seen from Fig. 1, the same phenomena are
induced on the helically-toothed pulley 20.
In order to solve such problems, backlash between
the belt and the pulley is selectively enlarged in a first

embodiment of the present invention, so as to prevent
inadequate contact between the pulley teeth and the belt
teeth and reduce noise and vibration. Referring to Fig.
3, the definition of backlash in the present embodiment will
be explained.
In Fig. 3, (a half) tooth profiles of the belt and
pulley are shown. A solid curve "P1" describes the tooth
profile of the pulley and a broken curve "P2" describes the
tooth profile of the belt. A straight line "B", a dash-dotted
line, is the base line on a bottom land of the belt, so that
a tooth height "H" is defined by the height from the base
line B to the tip of the belt tooth. Further, an arc "C",
which is also indicated by a dash-dotted line, is an arc
that passes through a point that is distant from the base
line "B" by a half of the distance of the tooth height "H"
(1/2 H), and its center coincides with the center of the
pulley. Namely, the diameter of the arc "C" is equivalent
to a value where the tooth heights "H" are subtracted from
the outside diameter of the pulley. The backlash between
the belt and the pulley is defined by the distance "D"
between the pulley tooth and the belt tooth at a position
along the arc "C" (the distance between the intersection
of the curve "P1" and the arc "C", and the intersection of
the curve "P2" and the arc "C") .
Next, referring to Fig. 4, an angle of the helical

tooth applied to the endless belt of the first embodiment
will be explained. Fig. 4 is a part of a schematic
development of the helically-toothed belt 10, which is
applied to the first embodiment. The teeth traces of the
helically-toothed belt 10 are represented by the slanted
solid lines which lie in the lateral direction of the belt.
Here, the pitch of the belt teeth is denoted by "Pt" and
the width is denoted by "W". Further, when denoting an angle
(tooth helix angle) between the line in the lateral
direction of the belt (or the line perpendicular to the belt
longitudinal direction) and the tooth trace as "θ", a space
"d" between the end of the first tooth engagement and the
beginning of the neighboring second tooth engagement are
represented by d = Pt-W.tan θ, using the pitch "Pt", the
belt width "W", and the tooth helix angle "θ". In the first
embodiment, the tooth helix angle "θ" is set so as to satisfy
-0.2 In a conventional helically-toothed-belt
transmission device, although the backlash "D" is set to
about 1.5% with respect to the tooth pitch "Pt", the backlash
"D" of the helically-toothed-belt transmission device of the
first embodiment, is set in a range of 1.6% to 3% (D/Pt x 100)
of the tooth pitch "Pt".
Namely, in the helically-toothed-belt transmission
device of the first embodiment, an inadequate contact between

the teeth of the pulley and the belt is prevented, even when
thrust is induced on the belt when a heavy load is placed upon
the belt during operation, by setting the backlash "D" widely
(wide backlash) , such as at 1. 6% to 3% of the tooth pitch "Pt" .
Further, this is particularly effective for the tooth helix
angles "θ" that satisfy -0.2 wide range of tooth helix angles "θ" (even for a small angle
which is not very effective for a compressible tooth profile) ,
the noise and the vibration can be reduced. As described
above, according to the first embodiment, noise and vibration
are effectively reduced for the helically-toothed-belt
transmission device which is driven under a heavy load or at
a high-speed rotation.
Next, with reference to Fig. 5 and Fig. 6, a
belt-drive transmission device of a second embodiment of the
present invention will be explained. Fig. 5 is part of a
schematic development of the helically-toothed belt 10,
which is applied to the second embodiment. The teeth traces
of the helically-toothed belt 10 are represented by the
slanted solid lines which lie in the lateral direction of
the belt. Further, Fig. 6 shows a form of a compressible
tooth profile applied in the second embodiment.
In the belt-drive transmission belt of the second
embodiment, the tooth helix angle "θ" is set in a range of
d/Pt = 1 - W.tan θ / Pt
value of "d" is "0" or negative, so that the engagement of
the neighboring second tooth starts before the end of the
first tooth engagement (or simultaneous with the end of the
engagement).
In Fig. 6, a curve "P3" indicated by a solid line
represents the tooth profile of the helically-toothed
pulleys 20 and 30 of the second embodiment, and a curve "P4"
indicated by a broken line represents the tooth profile of
the helically-toothed belt 10 of the second embodiment.
Further, a dash-dotted line "B" represents the base line of
the belt when the belt is installed. A groove depth "Dp",
a depth from the base line "B" to the tooth root cylinder of
the pulley, is smaller than the tooth height "H" of the belt
by "h". Therefore, when the helically-toothed belt 10 is
entrained about the helically-toothed pulleys 20 and 30, and
tension is given, the belt teeth are pressed against the tooth
root cylinder of the pulley and compressed. Thereby,
positioning accuracy of each of the belt teeth to the pulley
grooves is improved, so that a cumulative error between the
belt teeth and the pulley teeth is reduced, and the inadequate
contact between the belt teeth and the pulley teeth is
prevented. Note that, in the second embodiment, the
compressibility (h/Hx100) of the helically-toothed belt is
set within 1.5% to 5%.
As described above, according to the second

embodiment, noise and vibration are effectively reduced
from the helically-toothed-belt transmission device where
the tooth helix angle "θ" is within the range of d/Pt =
1-W.tan 0/Pt ≤ 0, and where the device is driven under a heavy
load or at a high-speed rotation, by preventing the
inadequate contact between the belt teeth and the pulley
teeth. Note that, the helically-toothed-belt transmission
device of the second embodiment is particularly effective
around a span resonance frequency.
(EXAMPLES)
In the following, the effect of the first embodiment
and the second embodiment of the present invention will be
explained with reference to the inventive examples and the
comparative examples.
For all of the inventive examples 1-5 and the
comparative examples 1-4, helically-toothed belts having
a tooth pitch of 3mm and a belt width 25mm, were applied.
Further, the tooth helix angles of the comparative examples
1, 2, and the inventive example 1, were 2°, and the tooth
helix angles of the comparative examples 3, 4 , and the
inventive example 2, were 5°. Further, the tooth helix
angles of the comparative example 5 and the inventive
examples 3 and 4 were 8°. For all of the comparative examples
1, 3, and 5, a conventional tooth profile was applied, and
the backlash was 1.5% of the tooth pitch, and the

compressibility was 0%. However, the backlash of the
inventive examples 1, 2, and 3 was 2.4% of the tooth pitch,
and the compressibility was 0%. Further, for the
comparative examples 2,4, and the inventive example 4, the
backlash was 0.8% of the tooth pitch and the compressibility
was 4.7%.
Namely, the inventive examples 1, 2, and 3,
corresponding to the first embodiment, have the wide
backlash, and the inventive example 4, corresponding to the
second embodiment, has a compressible tooth profile. Note
that, the comparative examples 2 and 4, corresponding to
the examples where a compressible tooth profile is used,
have the tooth helix angle of the first embodiment.
In Fig. 7, the result of noise tests for the
comparative examples 1, 2 and the inventive example 1, when
the tooth helix angles were 2°, is shown. As is apparent
from Fig. 7, when the tooth helix angles were 2°, the
inventive example 1 to which the wide backlash was applied
generated noise at a little less than 64dB and showed a
significantly high noise-reduction effect compared to the
comparative example 1 with the conventional tooth profile
and the comparative example 2 with the compressible tooth
profile, which generated noise above 75dB.
In Fig. 8, the result of noise tests for the
comparative examples 3, 4 and the inventive example 2, when

the tooth helix angles were 5°, is shown. Even when the
tooth helix angles were 5°, the inventive example 2 to which
the wide backlash was applied generated noise of about 63dB
and showed a significantly high noise-reduction effect
compared to the comparative example 3 with the conventional
tooth profile and the comparative example 3 with the
compressible tooth profile, which generated noise above
68dB.
In Fig. 9, the result of noise tests for the
comparative example 5 and the inventive examples 3 and 4 ,
when the tooth helix angles were 5°, is shown. Although
the comparative example 5 having the conventional tooth
profile generated noise above 72dB, for the inventive
examples 3 and 4, the noise was about 67dB, so that a
significant noise-reduction effect was obtained compared
to the comparative example 5.
Note that, the wide backlash and the compressible
tooth profile can also be combined (e.g. the backlash of
2.3% and the compressibility of 1.5%) .
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
As described above, according to the present
invention, noise and vibration can be reduced, in a
helically-toothed-belt transmission device that is driven
under a heavy load or at a high-speed rotation.

CLAIMS
1. A helically-toothed-belt transmission device for
transmitting driving force by meshing between a
helically-toothed belt and a helically-toothed pulley, the
device being characterized in that:
when denoting a tooth pitch as "Pt" , a tooth helix angle
as "θ", and a belt width of said helically-toothed belt as "W",
said tooth helix angle "θ" is set in a range of
-0.2 a backlash between said helically-toothed belt and
said helically-toothed pulley is set to be from 1.6% to 3% of
said tooth pitch "Pt".
2. A helically-toothed-belt transmission device for
transmitting driving force by meshing between a
helically-toothed belt and a helically-toothed pulley, the
device being characterized in that:
when denoting a tooth pitch as "Pt" , a tooth helix angle
as "θ", and a belt width of said helically-toothed belt as "W",
said tooth helix angle "θ" is set in a range of
1 - W-tan 0 / Pt ≤ 0, and;
compressibility of said helically-toothed belt is set
to be from 1.5% to 5%.

Noise and vibration of a helically toothed-belt transmission device driven in a high-
load or high-speed condition are reduced A backlash (D) is set large in a helically
toothed-belt transmission device that transmits drive force by meshing between a
helically toothed belt and a helically toothed pulley That is, a tooth helix angle (θ) is
set in a range of -0 2 ≤ 1-W-tan θ /Pt ≤ 0 75, with Pt being a teeth pitch, θ a tooth
helix angle, W the width of the belt The backlash (D) between the helically toothed
belt and the helically toothed pulley is set to be 1 6% - 3% of the tooth pitch ( Pt)

Documents:

1875-KOLNP-2005-(27-01-2012)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

1875-KOLNP-2005-(27-01-2012)-FORM 27.pdf

1875-KOLNP-2005-CORRESPONDENCE 1.1.pdf

1875-KOLNP-2005-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

1875-KOLNP-2005-FOR ALTERATION OF ENTRY.pdf

1875-KOLNP-2005-FORM 27 1.1.pdf

1875-KOLNP-2005-FORM 27.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-abstract.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-assignment.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-claims.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-correspondence.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-description (complete).pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-drawings.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-examination report.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-form 1.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-form 18.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-form 3.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-form 5.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-gpa.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

1875-kolnp-2005-granted-specification.pdf

1875-KOLNP-2005-PA.pdf


Patent Number 226153
Indian Patent Application Number 1875/KOLNP/2005
PG Journal Number 50/2008
Publication Date 12-Dec-2008
Grant Date 08-Dec-2008
Date of Filing 20-Sep-2005
Name of Patentee GATES UNITTA ASIA COMPANY
Applicant Address 4-26, SAKURAGAWA 4-CHOME, NANIWA-KU, OSAKA-SHI
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 HIRONAKA AKIHIRO C/O NARA FACTORY OF GATES UNITTA ASIA COMPANY, 172, IKEZAWA-CHO, YAMATOKORIYAMA-SHI
PCT International Classification Number F16H 7/02
PCT International Application Number PCT/JP2004/004873
PCT International Filing date 2004-04-02
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 2003-099971 2003-04-03 Japan