Why are Today’s Hypoids Perfect Crossed-Axes Gear Pairs?
29 May,2026

In 1924, Ernest Wildhaber, a well-known gear scientist, invented hypoid gearing. Compared to spiral bevel gears, hypoid gears provide an offset that allows lowering of the body of rear-wheel-drive vehicles by 50 mm or more. This is possible because the propeller shaft between the engine/transmission and the driving axle is not positioned at the center of the drive axle but is lowered by the offset amount (Figure 1). This allows the vehicle designer to lower the floor of the vehicle and subsequently the entire body by the same amount. Lowering the center of gravity of a passenger car by 50 mm reduces the inertia responsible for sideways rolling by more than 10 percent, which provides better vehicle handling and more active safety. The lower body also reduces the CV coefficient for air resistance, providing higher gas mileage. Less than five years after the invention of hypoid gearing, all large automotive manufacturers around the world had converted their passenger cars and trucks to hypoid drive axles with a lower vehicle body.
Ernest Wildhaber emigrated from Switzerland to the USA in 1919 and was hired by The Gleason Works as a gear theoretician. Wildhaber received 279 patents, many of which changed the world of gearing. The cylindrical gear tooth profile that is today called Wildhaber-Novikov gearing was invented by Ernest Wildhaber in 1926. Mikhail Novikov, a Russian scientist with no access to Western publications, invented the same tooth profile independent of Wildhaber in 1956. The contributions of both scientists are honored today by calling this system Wildhaber-Novikov gears. Ernest Wildhaber is the father of modern gear theory. His pioneering contributions have been invaluable for the development of today’s gear calculation and manufacturing processes.










