Attending the Motion + Power Technology Expo isn’t just about exploring the latest products and services, it’s also an opportunity to invest in your workforce’s growth.
Our wide range of technical seminars, taught by industry leading experts, cater to all levels of experience. From entry-level employees to seasoned professionals, everyone can benefit from this valuable one-stop-shop for education and exploration. When you attend our courses, you can expect a diverse curriculum designed to enhance your team’s skills and knowledge.
Monday, October 16 – Wednesday, October 18
AGMA Fall Technical Meeting
Technology is changing manufacturing, so to keep up in today’s marketplace, designers and manufacturers must follow emerging trends and communicate the latest ideas with fellow experts in the field. AGMA’s in-person Fall Technical Meeting (FTM) is the perfect forum for this. AGMA selects authors to write peer-reviewed technical papers on gear industry topics. Topics include: design, analysis, manufacturing, quality, materials, metallurgy, heat treatment, operation, maintenance, efficiency, and gear failure. Authors present their papers in a single-track conference. Full registrants receive copies of all papers, can see all presentations, ask the presenters questions, and network with their peers over three days.
Tuesday, October 17
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Basics of Gearing
William Mark McVea, KBE+, Inc.
Dramatically improve your knowledge and productivity through Basics of Gearing. This course will be presented in a two-day format and will give you a comprehensive overview of standard gearing nomenclature, gear involute geometry, inspection procedures, and much more.
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Integration and Trade-Offs in Gear and Bearing Systems
Michael Berhan, Ford Motor Company
The purpose will be to cover the concurrent design and analyses of gears and bearings in integrated systems like gearboxes, transmissions, and electric motor drives, so as to allow for good integration and faster optimization of the overall system. This will help gear engineers and suppliers better determine the trade-offs with the bearings, help bearing engineers and suppliers similarly with the gears, and system engineers better understand both. The examples covered are generic but should be useful both within and across industries that use these components and systems.
8:00 am – 12:00 pm
Design Basics for Spur and Helical Gears
Terry Klaves
Learn how to develop and understand customer gear drive application specifications and target performance expectations. Review, calculate and select basic gear terminology variables and design parameters which define tooth bending and contact rating safety factors on two real-life examples. Learn how to optimize gear fatigue Safety Factors for a given target design life and fit new gear designs and ratios into existing center distance using profile shift. Use commercially available software to develop gear geometry factors, calculate and optimize gear set power density and performance. Review common gear failure modes if the design or final accuracy does not meet application requirements. Discuss time and cost of more than 20 other gear drive component functions and drive development steps through prototypes to shipment of compliant assembled production drives. There will be an opportunity to discuss gear design challenges which may be unique to participant industries.
1:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Loaded Tooth Contact Analysis
Terry Klaves
Evaluation of loaded tooth contact and development of tooth modifications using commercially available software to improve Khb and optimize power density. Two real life gearing examples will be presented in the course, one will have a cantilever mounted pinion, the other a shaft pinion straddled non-symmetrically by bearings. Both examples demonstrate component deflections under load which significantly reduce tooth mesh contact which is then corrected with developed helix and profile modifications. Other gear performance optimization tools will also be briefly discussed: Profile Shift, Isotropic Finishing, Shot Peening, Accuracy, and Material Selection.
Wednesday, October 18
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Basics of Gearing
William Mark McVea, KBE+, Inc.
Dramatically improve your knowledge and productivity through Basics of Gearing. This course will be presented in a two-day format and will give you a comprehensive overview of standard gearing nomenclature, gear involute geometry, inspection procedures, and much more.
8:00 am – 12:00 pm
Integration and Trade-Offs in Gear and Bearing Systems
Michael Berhan, Ford Motor Company
The purpose will be to cover the concurrent design and analyses of gears and bearings in integrated systems like gearboxes, transmissions, and electric motor drives, so as to allow for good integration and faster optimization of the overall system. This will help gear engineers and suppliers better determine the trade-offs with the bearings, help bearing engineers and suppliers similarly with the gears, and system engineers better understand both. The examples covered are generic but should be useful both within and across industries that use these components and systems.
1:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Why Bearings are Damaged
ABMA
The American Bearing Manufacturers Association is offering this course on rolling element bearings for those involved in industrial equipment design, reliability, and maintenance. It will include a basic overview of rolling bearings, their selection, precision and mounting considerations, service life estimation, and lubrication-related influences. A hands-on damage analysis session will be the featured portion of this program.
Thursday, October 19
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Modern Automated Gear Quality Assessment Technology
William Mark McVea, KBE+, Inc.
This course is intended to provide you with a thorough understanding of the information contained within a typical gear inspection report. Specifically, we will look at the contents and meaning of the information contained within the gear charts, as well as the techniques used by the gear measurement system to assess gear quality. An explanation of basic gear measurement techniques, how measurement equipment and test machines implement these techniques, and how to interpret the results from these basic measurements will be covered. We will also discuss how to interpret the results and what corrective actions may be considered if the quality of a particular gear is unsatisfactory.
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Materials Selection and Heat Treatment of Gears
AGMA and ASM International
Because of their unique contribution to the operation of so many machines and mechanical devices, gears have received special attention from the technical community for more than two millennia. New developments in gear technology, particularly from the materials and heat treatment perspectives, have improved gear performance. This course, developed jointly by AGMA and ASM International, will provide an overview of materials selection and heat treatment of gears. Topics covered include: Gear material selection, heat treatment, material hardenability, allow steel selection, gear failure concerns, manufacturing considerations, material form, cast iron, powdered metal, bronze and brass, and plastics.
Advance Member (ends Oct. 4) | Advance Nonmember (ends Oct. 4) | Late Member (ends onsite) | Late Nonmember (ends onsite) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fall Technical Meeting Full Pass | $1,350 | $1,650 | $1,450 | $1,750 |
Fall Technical Meeting Single Sessions | $400 | $500 | $425 | $525 |
Fall Technical Meeting Student Pass | $200 | $200 | $250 | $250 |
Fall Technical Meeting Professor Pass | $450 | $450 | $500 | $500 |
Basics of Gearing | $1,000 | $1,075 | $1,025 | $1,100 |
Integration and Trade-Offs in Gear and Bearing Systems | $875 | $950 | $900 | $975 |
Design Basics for Spur and Helical Gears | $425 | $500 | $450 | $525 |
Why Bearings are Damaged | $425 | $500 | $450 | $525 |
Loaded Tooth Contact Analysis | $425 | $500 | $450 | $525 |
Modern Automated Gear Quality Assessment Technology | $650 | $725 | $675 | $750 |
Materials Selection and Heat Treatment of Gears | $650 | $725 | $675 | $750 |