MSD 101 Cams
Cams convert ordinary shaft rotation into a more complicated pattern of motion. This is accomplished by keeping one or more followers in contact with the surface of a rotating cam. The follower may move as a slider, reciprocating in a linear direction, or as a rocker, oscillating around a fixed pivot.
There can be overlapping functionality between cams and linkages (such as crank-rockers). Where this overlap occurs, the cam usually provides the quicker design solution while presenting a more difficult manufacturing prospect. However, cams go beyond the function of linkage mechanisms, allowing a tremendous range of possibilities for the output motion.
Depending on the application, the follower may be required to perform some tricky maneuvers. In a simple case, it may have to move to a critical position "on time" while maintaining velocity and/or acceleration parameters, hold this position, or dwell, for a set time, and return to the original position under a different set of velocity/acceleration parameters. This could represent one cycle of the input shaft.
Questions & answers
Q: What are the pros and cons of the different follower contacts?
A: Rolling followers are versatile, durable, and readily available. Followers that slide along the cam, such as flat-faced or pointed, generate more friction than rolling followers, but are attractive due to size and simplicity. Flat-faced followers resist jamming, but cannot trace concave cam profiles. Pointed followers can be useful for detailed cam profiles, but are subject to wear and generate high contact stress.
Q: Which is preferable, rocker or slider motion?
A: A translating follower (slider) can often rotate freely about its shaft. This can be used to help distribute wear by offsetting a flat-faced follower. A follower with a wheel-type contact, though, must remain aligned. Rocker followers often approximate straight-line motion adequately while remaining fixed about their arms.
Q: What if I want both axial and radial follower motion?
A: Combined axial-radial cams are not unheard of. They are sometimes called three-dimensional cams or camoids. q&ueasntsiownesrs
If you liked this month's MSD 101.
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
Acceptable Use Policy blog comments powered by Disqus




