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-   -   Belt Tensioners (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=102371)

christianmh 09-02-2012 14:43

Belt Tensioners
 
Anybody know where I could get belt tensioners on short notice?

Dale 09-02-2012 16:32

Re: Belt Tensioners
 
Usually for time, weight and space reasons teams end up building their own belt and chain tensioners. There's no comprehensive guide to doing ithis that I've found but you might get some ideas from my drive train presentation at http://www.slideshare.net/oregonfirs...trains-9723833

The chain tensioning section starts around slide 26.

Alex.q 09-02-2012 16:41

Re: Belt Tensioners
 
Do you mean for toothed belts like from Gates, or for the polycord (round urethane belts) teams often use in their collectors?

For the polycord, you can just cut and remake the loop shorter (heat if solid, barbs if hollow).

For Gates belts, you can probably just make your own tensioners. Heres a picture of 1625s tensioner in a gearbox http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...6&postcount=33

I don't know how well this idea worked, but another team just used the andymark chain tensioners. http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...elt+tensioning

Keep in mind I don't have a lot of personal experience with either of these two methods, I just saw pictures.

TerryS 10-02-2012 03:05

Re: Belt Tensioners
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Alex.q (Post 1123226)

I don't know how well this idea worked, but another team just used the andymark chain tensioners. http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...elt+tensioning

These chain tensioners worked great for us last year. Made it to the Hawaii regional semis without any belt slippage. Hardly any wear on the delrin tensioners.

s_forbes 10-02-2012 03:40

Re: Belt Tensioners
 
Using belts on our drivetrain for the first time, we've been having fun with belt tensioning issues. Here is what 842 has come up with to take out that last bit of slack from the belt (see the light grey plate on the left side of the image; it is the support for the idler poking through the hole in the frame). Constructed from fiberglass pultrusions and ball bearings for the idler.



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