Roller Chain Calculation Basics

Chain Construction

The Roller Chains generator is intended to design chain drives with roller and bush chains. The chains can have single strand or multiple strands. The double-pitch chains are also supported. Typical construction of roller and bush chains is shown in the following picture. The main difference is that bush chain does not have a roller.

Bush chain components

Roller chain components

  1. outer plate
  2. inner plate
  3. bearing pins
  4. bush
  5. roller

If the chain length is an even number of pitches the connection link may be used to connect two ends of the chain together. The chain power capacity is not reduced usually.

If the chain length has an odd number of pitches, an offset link may be used at one end of the chain. Then the connecting link may be used to connect two ends of the chain together. The offset link usually reduces chain power capacity. The amount of power reduction is given by type and construction of the offset link. Consider the reduction of the chain power capacity you need to decrease chain construction factor.

Repeated load tension

Chains in chain drives are loaded by cyclical tension so the chain is subject of fatigue. The typical load diagram is shown in the following picture. The load diagram may differ for different drive layouts.

Wear

Wear is important in designing roller chain drives. The roller chains are normally most affected by chain joint wear and sprocket wear.

Chain joint wear causes roller chains get longer. Sprockets for roller chains are designed to accept up to 3% (1.5% for double pitch chains) chain elongation from wear. When the chain elongates beyond that point it no longer fits the sprockets and the system will not operate properly. There might be different criteria for chain joint wear for large sprockets or drives with fixed center distance. If the worn chain is about to be replaced, we recommend that you replace the sprockets as well.

Chain joint wear

Sprocket wear is considered as modification of the teeth shape. The teeth begin to take on a hooked shape. For idler sprockets usually wear at the bottom of the tooth space. When the tooth space is worn deeply enough, the chain rollers may bind against the tooth tops as they enter and leave the idler sprocket. The sprocket wear can be source of shock loads in the chain. Reversing the sprocket on the shaft can sometimes extend the life of worn sprocket.

Worn roller chain drive sprocket

Worn roller chain idler sprocket

Lubrication

Good lubrication must be provided for the chain drive to obtain longest life from a chain. The effective lubrication is a matter of applying the correct lubricant where it is most needed. The main problem is getting enough clean lubricant to the bearing surfaces of pins, bushings, and rollers.

Manual lubrication: Oil is applied copiously with a brush or spout can at least once every 8 hours of operation. The drive is stopped and power to the drive is locked out. Volume and frequency should be sufficient to prevent overheating of the chain or red-brown (rust) discoloration in the chain joints.

Drip lubrication: Oil continuously dripped onto the upper edges of the link plates, or sidebars, from a drip lubricator. Volume and frequency should be sufficient to prevent red-brown (rust) discoloration of lubricant in the chain joints. Usually the drip rate is from 4 to 20 or more drops per minute. Precaution must be taken against misdirection of the drops by windage.

Bath lubrication: The lower strand of chain runs through a sump of oil in the drive housing. The oil level should reach the pitch line of the chain at its lowest point while operating.

Disc lubrication: The chain operates above the oil level. The disc picks up oil from the sump and deposits it onto the chain, usually with a through. The diameter of the disc should be such as to produce adequate rim speed to pick up oil effectively. Higher speeds can cause oil foaming and overheating.

Forced feed lubrication: The lubricant is supplied by a circulating pump capable of supplying chain drive with a continuous stream of oil. The oil should be directed at the slack strand and applied inside the chain loop and evenly across the chain width to ensure that the oil reaches all bearing surfaces. An oil cooler and oil filter can be used if necessary.

Lubricating oil should be free from contaminants, particularly abrasive particles.

Chain drive lubrication oil viscosity class is defined based on ambient temperature as:

Ambient temperature [°C]

-5 t +5

+5 t +25

+25 t +45

+45 t +70

Oil viscosity class

VG 68 (SAE 20)

VG 100 (SAE 30)

VG 150 (SAE 40)

VG 220 (SAE 50)

Adequate recommended lubrication is specified according to the chain size and speed and shown on following chart:

where:

A) Range of manual lubrication. Maximum chain speed is

ν = 2.8 p -0.56

B) Range of drip feed lubrication. Maximum chain speed is

ν = 7 p -0.56

C) Range of oil bath or disc lubrication. Maximum chain speed is

ν = 35 p -0.56

D) Range of forced feed lubrications

The progress of chain joint wear during chain service life with respect to quality of lubrication is shown in the following picture:

where:

 

a

No lubricated chain in soiled abrasive environment

 

b

Insufficient chain lubrication

 

c

Adequately lubricated chain

Normally at the beginning of the chain service the wear progress rapidly and this stage it is known as initial wear. Initial wear can be minimized by pre-loading the chain what some manufacturers do. The pre-load can increase chain service life.

The chain joint wear then continue and the progress is slow what is known as normal wear. If the chain is adequately lubricated the chain joint wear continue to exhibit normal wear and eventually the chain run out its useful life. At the end of the useful life of a chain, the chain joint wear starts to rapidly progress again.

Ultimate tensile strength of the chain F U

The ultimate tensile strength of the chain is the highest load that the chain can withstand in a single application before breaking. It is not allowable working load either measuring load. The main value of a specification for minimum ultimate strength is to ensure that the chain was assembled properly. Roller Chain generator uses minimum ultimate tensile strength for determination of safety factors from chain breaking. Also, using additional factors it participates in calculation of expected chain links service life or link plates fatigue.

The default value of ultimate tensile strength comes from standard recommendations for given chain size but you may wish to consult this parameter with specifications provided by your chain manufacturer. The tensile strength may differ for the same size of the chain among different chain producers as well as different materials of the chain.

Specific chain mass m

Specific mass of the chain depends on the chain size, construction, and material. The default value is taken from standard recommendations or it is closest value of steel chains produced by chain manufacturers. The specific mass is used for computing centrifugal force as well as for vibration analysis.

Chain construction factor Φ

The chain construction factor describes the actual quality of the chain. It has direct impact to chain power rating as well as chain permissible bearing area pressure. The factor is usually equal to one. It is bigger than one if the chain is made from material with better strength or the quality of the chain is better than mentioned in national standards.

Chain power rating P R

Chain power rating represents chain capacity rating for specific operating conditions. Normally, the chain capacity is limited by link plate fatigue, roller and bushing impact fatigue and galling between the pin and bushing. See the typical power rating chart on the following image.

where:

 

A

chain drive power capacity limited by link plate fatigue

 

B

chain drive power capacity limited by roller and bush impact fatigue

 

C

chain drive power capacity limited by pin-bush galling

Power correction factors

Chain power rating equations provide valid power capacity for chain drives what work under specific normal operation conditions. If your chain drive works under working condition what does not equal to the normal operation conditions, there is a need to introduce power correction factors as described below.

Normal operation conditions:

  1. a chain drive with two sprockets on parallel horizontal shafts;
  2. a small sprocket with 19 teeth;
  3. a simplex chain without cranked link;
  4. a chain length:

    120 pitches for ISO chains,

    100 pitches for ANSI, CSN chains;

  5. a speed ratio of 1:3 or 3:1
  6. an expected service life:

    15000 hours ISO, ANSI, DIN chains,

    10000 hours CSN chains;

  7. an operating temperature between -5ºC and +70ºC;
  8. sprockets correctly aligned and chain maintained in correct adjustment;
  9. uniform operation without overload, shocks, or frequent starts;
  10. clean and adequate lubrication throughout the life of the chain;

Shock factor Y

Service factor takes into account dynamic overloads dependent on the chain drive operating conditions, driver, and driven characteristics. The shock factor is used to determine size of the service factor as well as dynamic factor of safety. The peak loads caused by unexpected shocks and peak overloads can dramatically increase with large moments of inertia of driver or driven machine. By default the Chain generator uses following table to determine shock factor.

Y

Application

1.0

Smooth running

1.5

Smooth running with occasional shocks

2.0

Slight shocks, moderate temporary peak overloads

3.0

Moderate shocks, heavy temporary peak overloads

4.0

Heavy shocks, moderate constant peak overloads

5.0

Heavy shocks, heavy constant peak overloads

Service factor f 1

Service factor takes into account dynamic overloads dependent on the chain drive operating conditions and resulting, in particular, from the nature of the driver and driven elements. The valued of factor can be selected directly or using following table.

Driven machine characteristics

Driver machine characteristics

Smooth running

Slight shocks

Moderate shocks

Smooth running

1.0

1.1

1.3

Moderate shocks

1.4

1.5

1.7

Heavy shocks

1.8

1.9

2.1

Definitions of characteristics of driver machines

Driver machine characteristics

Machine type examples

Smooth running

Electric motors, steam, and gas turbines and internal combustion engines with hydraulic coupling

Slight shocks

Internal combustion engines with six cylinders or more with mechanical coupling, electric motors subjected to frequent starts (more than two per day)

Moderate shocks

Internal combustion engines with less than six cylinders with mechanical coupling

Definitions of characteristics of driven machines

Driven machine characteristics

Machine type examples

Smooth running

Centrifugal pumps and compressors, printing machines, uniformly load belt conveyors, paper calendars, escalators, liquid agitators, and mixers, rotary dryers, fans

Moderate shocks

Reciprocating pumps and compressors, with three or more cylinders, concrete mixing machines, non-uniformly loaded conveyors, solid agitators and mixers

Heavy shocks

Excavators; roll and ball mills; rubber processing machines; planers, presses, shears, pumps, compressors with one or two cylinders, oil drilling rings

By default the service factor is determined in accordance with shock factor as shown on the following chart:

where:

 

Y

shock factor [-]

Sprocket size factor f 2

Sprocket size factor takes in an account number of teeth on the small sprocket. The factor is equal to one if power rating equations consider number of teeth of the smallest sprocket in the drive. Size of the smallest sprocket may have specific impact on each portion of chain power rating.

If you customize the chain power rating you need also revise sprocket size factor. If the power rating is specified from power rating tables with respect to number of teeth of the smallest sprocket the factor should remain equal to one. If the power rating provided is obtained from power rating chart where number of teeth of the smallest sprocket is not considered then you may need to adjust size of the factor. The sprocket size factor affects the design power. By default the Chain generator determines size of the factor as

where:

 

z s

Number of teeth on the small sprocket [-]

Multiple strand factor f 3

Power ratings for single strand chains are given by power rating equations by default. The power ratings for multiple strand chains equal single-strand ratings multiplied by the multiple strand factor. By default, the program uses in-build table as shown in the following table. The multiple strand factor is also used in expected service life analysis.

Chain strands

1

2

3

4

5

6

f 3 [-]

1

1.7

2.5

3.3

3.9

4.6

Lubrication factor f 4

The lubrication factor tells the program how much inadequate lubrication impacts chain power capacity as well as service life. If the adequate lubrication is selected the size of the factor is equal to one what does not affect the analysis. If inadequate lubrication has to be used then the factor decreases chain power rating limited by pin-bush galling or the factor increases entire design power. By default the program uses following in-build table to indicate impact of selected lubrication.

Chain speed

[m/s]

Lubrication factor [-]

Lubrication

No lubrication

Recommended

Insufficient

Clean environment

Soiled environment

up to 4

1

0.6

0.3

0.15

up to 7

0.3

0.15

Inadmissible

up to 12

Inadmissible

more than 12

Center distance factor f 5

The minimum center distance is one half the sum of outside sprocket diameters to avoid tooth interference. To ensure adequate wrap on the small sprocket (approximately 120 Degrees) it is suggested to have minimum center distance of the sum of the outside diameter of the large sprocket plus one half the outside diameter of the small sprocket.

It is good practice to set the center distance at 30 to 50 times the chain pitch. The longest practical center distance is about 80 times the chain pitch because chain sag and catenary tension become very large.

The center distance factor corrects the design power and takes into account difference of the actual center distance from the normal. The reason of the center distance factor comes from modification of load tension distribution and its affect to chain fatigue. By default the center distance factor is determined as follows.

where:

 

f 5

center distance factor [-]

 

X B

number of chain links for normal operating conditions [-]

 

X

actual number of chain links in the drive [-]

Ratio factor f 6

The ratio factor corrects the design power and takes into account difference of the transmission ratio from the normal. The reason of the ratio factor comes from modification of load tension distribution and its affect to chain fatigue. By default the ratio factor is determined from the following chart with respect to actual transmission ratio.

Transmission ratio is given from number of teeth of the driver and driven sprocket.

for z 1 < z 2 the i = z 2 / z 1

for z 1 > z 2 the i = z 1 / z 2

where:

 

f 6

ratio factor [-]

 

i

transmission ratio [-]

 

z 1

number of teeth of the driver sprocket [-]

 

z 2

number of teeth of the driven sprocket [-]

Service life factor f 7

The service life factor corrects the design power and takes into account difference of the required service life from the normal. By default the ratio factor is determined as

where:

 

f 7

Service life factor [-]

 

L h

Required service life [hours]

 

L hB

Normal expected service life [hours]

Pressure in chain bearing area analysis

During the chain drive service the fluctuating tensile load acts on contact surfaces between pins and bushings what causes specific size of chain bearing area pressure. If this pressure exceeds permissible pressure in chain bearing area the chain service life might significantly decrease. The amount of the actual pressure in chain bearing area is computed from maximum tension in chain span as follows

where:

 

p B

Actual pressure in chain bearing area [Pa]

 

F Tmax

Maximum tension in taught chain span [N]

 

A

Chain bearing area [m 2 ]

Chain bearing area A

Chain bearing area is defined by width of internal chain link and pin diameter. The actual values are defined for each chain within XML data files.

A = b 2 d 2

where:

A Chain bearing area [m 2 ]

b 2 Width of internal chain link [m]

d 2 chain pin diameter [m]

Permissible pressure in chain bearing area p 0

The values of permissible pressure in chain bearing area shown on the chart below apply to normal operating conditions only. For specific operating conditions the value is corrected by specific friction factor λ what results in total permissible pressure. The total permissible pressure is then compared with the actual pressure in chain bearing area.

Permissible pressure specified here can be used for common steel chains. For chains made from different materials, you may need to adjust the permissible pressure accordingly.

The permissible pressure obtained from the previous chart is also corrected by chain construction factor so the amount of permissible pressure is defined as follows

p 0 = p B0 φ

where:

 

p 0

Permissible pressure in chain bearing area for normal operating conditions [Pa]

 

p B0

Specific permissible pressure in chain bearing for normal operating conditions [Pa]

  φ

Chain construction factor [-]

Specific friction factor λ

Specific friction factor corrects the permissible pressure in chain bearing area. The size of the factor depends on how much actual operating conditions differ from normal and it is defined as

where:

  λ

Specific friction factor [-]

 

f 1

Service factor [-]

 

f 4

Lubrication factor [-]

 

f 5

Center distance factor [-]

 

f 6

Ratio factor [-]

 

f 7

Service life factor [-]