Platinum Enthusiast
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There are arc-length integrals to compute the length of any arbitrary curve in 3 dimensions, but your problem is easier due to the coil's symmetry: Just unroll it.
This transforms each complete turn of the coil into a 21° right triangle with an adjacent leg L equal to the circumference of the enclosed cylinder. The problem is to find the length H of the hypotenuse.
From basic trig we have L/H = cosine(21°) = 0.93358+ With a diameter of 20 mm we have L = 20(pi) = 62.83+ mm. So H = 62.83/0.99358 = 67.30 mm.
BTW, the length of the triangle's opposite side is H*sin(21°) = 24.1+ mm. This is the coil's pitch -- the distance between turns.
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Platinum Enthusiast
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Oh, helical gears. Sorry, Kendor, I took 21° to be the angle w/ respect to a perpendicular to the axis. So in the above analysis just change 21° to 69° (or change cosine to sine).
Sine(21°) = cosine(69°) = 0.3584. So the answer is 20(pi)/.3584 = 175.33 mm. per turn. If that still looks wrong then I guess I'll need a diagram or other clarification.
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