Whilst we cannot make our food mixer gearwheel just using joining processes, we could make it out of several pieces that could be joined together.
Watch Videos 5 and 6 of laser welding gears and press-fitting differential gears. As you watch, think about how much easier it is to make the teeth on a gearwheel if they can be formed on a separate ring that is joined to the body of the gear in a separate operation.
In practice, any of the joining processes (soldering, adhesion and welding) would allow the wheel to be built up from bits. Wooden gearwheels and waterwheels used in mills many years ago, known as cog wheels, were made by joining together individual parts that could easily be replaced if any wore out after prolonged use. However, these were on a different scale from that of a gearwheel from a food mixer. So although building a gear would be possible, it is not really a practical proposition. At the extreme, imagine trying to build a gearwheel from parts; each tooth would need to be manufactured individually and then screwed, glued or welded together to the central ring. A great number of hours would be spent manufacturing each one.
Although the gearwheel itself is not suitable for being made through an assembly process, it is itself assembled into the food mixer, which has many discrete parts, made from a range of processes. There is always a stage at which a single product is likely to be assembled in some form into a larger product for a particular use.
Imagine you were making a large sculpture. List three reasons why you would make it in several pieces and join them together and three concerns you might have as a result of that decision.
Some of my reasons:
Some concerns are:
You may have suggested other, equally valid, factors.
OpenLearn - Introducing engineering
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