On Mon, 08 Jun 2009 16:25:32 -0400, you wrote:

>> What belt stretch? Once they are adjusted up, that's it. 
>
>When using a belt to transfer rotary motion from one pulley to another, 
>belt stretch is usually negligible.  That is very much NOT the case when 
>using a toothed belt to convert rotary motion to linear motion.
>
>> Timing belts have steel strands in them, to add strength and ensure they
>> don't stretch.
>
>Everything stretches, including steel.

Perhaps I should clarify.

A toothed belt, installed and adjusted correctly, and used within it's
design criteria and load won't stretch further within its normal
lifetime (for HTD 8-10,000 hrs) . What's often referred to as "best
stretch" is actually wear and erosion of the teeth and inner surface.
It's usually caused by poorly designed/worn pulleys or misalignment.
Belt erosion is much less prevalent on rounded tooth type forms.

MXL, XL, L, H, XH, XXH and T types are the worse types for both wear and
accuracy, HTD better and GT or GT2 the best.

Steve Blackmore
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