What is the impact of WHT08-63-8Z reducer box material on noise?
Publish Time: 2026-02-25 Origin: Site
The impact of the WHT08-63-8Z reducer box material on noise is indeed a key part of the equipment noise reduction design. Everything from the acoustic properties of the material itself to the structural stiffness directly affects vibration transmission and noise radiation levels. Combining current engineering practice and simulation research, the noise reduction performance of cast iron boxes is better than that of cast steel in the middle and low frequency bands, but the specific effect also depends on the internal damping characteristics of the material, wall thickness design and surface treatment process.
1. The direct impact mechanism of cabinet materials on noise
The damping characteristics of the material determine the vibration attenuation capabilityThe
box is a carrier of vibration energy, and the internal friction (damping) performance of its material determines whether the vibration can quickly attenuate. Cast iron (especially gray cast iron HT250) contains flake graphite and has high internal damping, which can effectively absorb the impact vibration generated by gear meshing and reduce structural noise radiation. In contrast, cast steel, although high in strength, has lower damping properties and makes vibrations more likely to continue to propagate, resulting in higher noise levels.Elastic modulus and density affect sound radiation efficiencyThe stiffness (elastic modulus) and mass (density) of
a material jointly determine its sound radiation efficiency. High-density materials such as cast steel (ρ≈7850kg/m³) have large mass and high inertia under the same excitation, which is theoretically beneficial to suppressing vibration amplitude; however, if the stiffness is too high and the damping is insufficient, it will enhance the sound radiation in the high frequency band. Therefore, properly matching stiffness and damping is key.The rigidity of the cabinet affects the resonance frequency distributionIf the rigidity of the cabinet material is insufficient
or the wall thickness design is unreasonable, resonance will easily occur at the gear meshing frequency and its multiples, significantly amplifying the noise. By selecting high-rigidity materials or optimizing the stiffener layout, the resonance point can be moved out of the operating frequency band to avoid the resonance amplification effect.
2. The synergistic impact of processing accuracy and material coordination on noise
The machining accuracy of the box hole affects the bearing support stiffness. The dimensional accuracy, coaxiality and parallelism of
the box hole directly affect the installation status of the bearing. If the hole diameter deviation is too large, the bearing outer ring will loosen, which will cause high-frequency vibration of the bearing and be transmitted to the box, becoming one of the noise sources. Studies have shown that when the matching clearance between the box hole and the bearing outer ring is ≤0.01mm, the contribution of the bearing to the overall machine noise can be significantly reduced.Manufacturing and assembly errors aggravate vibration transmissionEven
if the material itself has good acoustic properties, if there are tooth direction errors, tooth shape errors or radial runout during the manufacturing process, vibration will still be excited. These vibrations are transmitted to the box through the shaft system. If the box material has low damping, it will be difficult to effectively suppress it and will eventually be radiated out in the form of air noise.Surface treatment process can assist in noise reductionApplying damping coating (such as epoxy resin-based composite material)
to the inner and outer walls of the box can further improve the surface damping performance, especially in the suppression of mid- and high-frequency noise. In addition, precision machining of the joint surface and coating of sealant can also reduce secondary noise caused by fretting looseness.