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Evaluation of advanced lubricants for aircraft applications using gear surface fatigue testsSurface pitting fatigue life tests were conducted with five lubricants, using spur gears made from a single lot of consumable-electrode vacuum melted (CVM) AISI 9310 steel. The gears were case carbonized and hardened to a Rockwell c-60 and finish ground. The gear pitch diameter was 8.89 cm. The lot of gears was divided into five groups, each of which was tested with a different lubricant. The test lubricants can be classified as synthetic polyol-esters with various viscosities and additive packages. Test conditions included bulk gear temperature of 350 K, a maximum Hertz stress of 1.71 GPa (248 ksi) at the pitch line, and a speed of 10,000 RPM. The lubricant with a viscosity that provided a specific film thickness greater than one and with an additive package produced far greater gear surface fatigue lives than lubricants with a viscosity that provided specific film thickness less than one. A low viscosity lubricant with an additive package produced gear surface fatigue lives equivalent to a similar base stock lubricant with 30 percent higher viscosity, but without an additive package. Lubricants with the same viscosity and similar additive packages gave equivalent gear surface fatigue lives.
Document ID
19910057026
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Townsend, Dennis P.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Shimski, John
(U.S. Navy, Naval Air Propulsion Center Trenton, NJ, United States)
Date Acquired
August 15, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1991
Subject Category
Mechanical Engineering
Report/Patent Number
AIAA PAPER 91-1907
Report Number: AIAA PAPER 91-1907
Accession Number
91A41649
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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