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-   -   Banebot P60 Help (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=103230)

BurkeHalderman 18-02-2012 20:55

Banebot P60 Help
 
We are having problems with our elevator motor. We are using a 550 motor with a 16:1 P60 gearbox and for some reason it only spins occasionally. We are controlling it with a jaguar and whenever the operator pushes the button to activate the motor the jaguar gets signal but the motor doesn't always move. If we get it starting by pulling the belt, the motor will start working but without that it is very inconsistent. Any ideas?

EricH 18-02-2012 21:10

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
You don't have enough torque available to the belt. That's what is probably causing the motor to bind up before you apply a little starting pull. If that's what the problem is, your pattern will probably be something like:

Full battery, fresh off the charger, it works.
After a couple minutes, it doesn't work if there's a ball in there, but runs unloaded.
A minute or two after that, it doesn't work without the pull-start.

You're probably going to want to add another 550, or upgrade to a 775 or one of the AM motors.

kevin.li.rit 18-02-2012 23:22

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by EricH (Post 1129809)
You're probably going to want to add another 550, or upgrade to a 775 or one of the AM motors.

Actually I think he'll want to swap the 16:1 gearbox for another gearbox with a higher reduction. Probably somewhere in the neighborhood of 64:1 for the RSS775-18 and 128:1 for the RS550. However that really depends on how hard it is to push up your elevator lift... IE how heavy it is.

Swapping out for a higher ratio gearbox for the 550 would probably be easiest if you had one on hand...

kevin.li.rit 18-02-2012 23:29

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by BurkeHalderman (Post 1129797)
We are having problems with our elevator motor. We are using a 550 motor with a 16:1 P60 gearbox and for some reason it only spins occasionally. We are controlling it with a jaguar and whenever the operator pushes the button to activate the motor the jaguar gets signal but the motor doesn't always move. If we get it starting by pulling the belt, the motor will start working but without that it is very inconsistent. Any ideas?

Like Eric said, you don't have enough torque to move your lift. Electric motors have a "start-up current" that is higher than the normal current it draws. Since your motor is under such a high load it cannot electrically overcome the initial resistance. When you move it,physically you are physically providing the force the motor needs to startup.

Ether 18-02-2012 23:45

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Coffeeism (Post 1129940)
Electric motors have a "start-up current" that is higher than the normal current it draws. Since your motor is under such a high load it cannot electrically overcome the initial resistance. When you move it,physically you are physically providing the force the motor needs to startup.

It sounds like you are saying that a brushed DC motor outputs more torque when moving than when stalled. That's not what you meant, is it?



kevin.li.rit 18-02-2012 23:49

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
I believe I am trying to say that there is more resistance at rest than when moving for the motor.

Correct me if I am wrong.

EricH 18-02-2012 23:51

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
I think by "resistance", he means "inertia". The motor isn't able to provide enough torque to overcome the inertia on startup; if an outside source provides some force to overcome some of that inertia, the motor can run the system just fine.

Ether 19-02-2012 00:15

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Coffeeism (Post 1129949)
I believe I am trying to say that there is more resistance at rest than when moving for the motor.

There is little or no resistance in the motor itself.

Are you referring to static friction in the gearbox?


kevin.li.rit 19-02-2012 00:17

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ether (Post 1129962)
There is little or no resistance in the motor itself.

Are you referring to static friction in the gearbox?


I was trying to refer to the combination little to no resistance in the non-moving motor and the friction of the system.

Ether 19-02-2012 00:20

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by EricH (Post 1129952)
The motor isn't able to provide enough torque to overcome the inertia on startup;

Three thoughts:
- inertia, unlike friction, can't stop a force or a torque. it can only slow it down.

- inertia is constant. it doesn't change when something is moving vs stationary

- a brushed DC motor's torque is maximum when stalled


Ether 19-02-2012 00:23

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Coffeeism (Post 1129965)
I was trying to refer to the combination little to no resistance in the non-moving motor and the friction of the system.

That seems reasonable. The motor has trouble overcoming the static friction of the load. Pulling on the belt changes to kinetic friction, which is smaller.

Don't know whether or not that's what's actually going on here, but it's a working hypothesis.



mehrkam 19-02-2012 08:13

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Besides the fact the a 16:2 P60 gear box is not really good for lift applications, with bag & tag / shipment on Tuesday, here are some options.

If you don't have a higher gear ratio P60, then you need to increase the overall gear ratio. Reduce the sprocket size on the motor and increase the other.

I have assemble and disamebled thes P60s numerous times and found that ever now and then the smaller ones tend to bind up easily when tightening the screws. Make sure that the motor mount and shaft plates stay flat. Tigheten as though you were doing your car wheels in a cross pattern. Don't tighten up in CW or CCW pattern like some do. That will bind up the gear box and prevent it from turning.

Hope this helps.

Good luck

jreuter 19-02-2012 08:49

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Some suggestions:

Run the motor/transmission when disconnected from your collector. If it still behaves the same, disassemble and look for debris mixed in with the grease. We had a plastic chip get into the gearbox and made it behave similarly.

Run the motor from a bench power supply, if you have one. With a 26:1 banebots transmission and an RS550, we see about 2.8 Amps with no load. Note that it will start 1/2 to 1 amp higher, and slowly drop down as the gears wear in a bit. If you see a higher current, you may have the internal binding that someone else mentioned.

-Jeff

DonRotolo 19-02-2012 13:23

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jreuter (Post 1130041)
Run the motor/transmission when disconnected from your collector.

Burke,
The P60 gear boxes need some time to break in and run freely. If you just grease it and run it, the gearbox will bind up and take a lot of the power.

I recommend greasing up the P60, then running it for about an hour - 30 minutes in each direction. For the first few minutes, keep a watch on the temperature of the gearbox and motor, if either gets too hot to hold, stop and let it cool down.

After this break-in period, disassemble the gearbox, clean it well, and re-grease it.

FRCTEAM1847 19-02-2012 13:38

Re: Banebot P60 Help
 
A great KOP solution is the AndyMark PG71 motor that already has a 71:1 gear ratio. You just need a coupling for the 10mm out put shaft. Also, these gearboxes have mounting holes for a face mount, as opposed to the P60 that has mounting holes on the side of the gearbox. AM sells a hub that mounts directly on the output shaft or a shaft adapter for mounting into the half inch hubs or sprockets that most people have.


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