Chief Delphi

Chief Delphi (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/index.php)
-   General Forum (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=16)
-   -   How are bellypans made? (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=104554)

Conor Ryan 13-03-2012 15:34

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
I don't like to use bellypans, there are much more efficient places to place all of your electronics.

Brandon Holley 13-03-2012 15:44

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by squirrel (Post 1143599)
If you can score and snap it, it's not polycarbonate! It's most likely acrylic (Plexiglass).

You can score and snap polycarbonate. We do it all the time for making hoppers/boxes etc.



As for belly pan. We are using 1/8" 6061-T6 with a waterjet doing the cutting for us. We anodize the bellypan and it is then riveted to our frame. The electronics are held down using plastic screws tapped into the bellypan.

Also- if you do cross-hatching like 254 and ourselves do for lightening, the "vent" tool in SolidWorks is your best friend.

Photo:


-Brando

roystur44 13-03-2012 16:57

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
Some of the design parameters for this years chassis was to be lightweight, easy to maintain, simple to make. We used a CNC punch press to punch out our drive base. The material is .090" 5052. Note the simple round holes in a stagger for lighting the material.

The Cad team came up with a innovative way to incorporate the belly pan into the front and back panels. The side rails slide into the belly pan and are riveted together. We call it the clam shell design.

We use .250 high pressed in standoffs, a plastic isolator and nylon screws to attach electronics.

This chassis weighs in under 12 lbs and is very rigid and strong.

https://picasaweb.google.com/1045493...89068712771618

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znSKHoLEN5U

Undertones 13-03-2012 17:01

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
This year we used the most beast of beast baseplates... We have a 40lb 1/4 hardened steel baseplate. We could run over a landmine and likely not be too damaged (except from being thrown into the air).

As Hannibal said in the A-Team, "overkill is underrated".

PAR_WIG1350 13-03-2012 17:55

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Brandon Holley (Post 1143673)
You can score and snap polycarbonate. We do it all the time for making hoppers/boxes etc.

Based on my experience, this is true, but it doesn't always snap where you score it :rolleyes: . (I was lazy, it was 1/4 inch makrolon, I scored it with a dremmel.)
The groove wasn't of a consistent depth, this was made worse by the fact that melted debris had re-hardened to fill in other parts of the groove. After (ALMOST literally) jumping up and down on it for a while, it snapped along the grove for a couple of inches after which the break line made a slight turn splitting nearly parallel to the line for the rest of the split. It was ugly, but still close enough to the desired size to use (luckily it split in a way that I wound up with extra material instead of missing material.)

cgmv123 13-03-2012 18:09

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Conor Ryan (Post 1143671)
I don't like to use bellypans, there are much more efficient places to place all of your electronics.

Seconded. A vertical board is much more space efficient.

R1ffSurf3r 13-03-2012 18:31

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by cgmv123 (Post 1143741)
Seconded. A vertical board is much more space efficient.

we have both

MrForbes 13-03-2012 18:43

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
We went with a 45 degree angle on our electronics board this year...best of both worlds.

pmangels17 13-03-2012 18:56

Re: How are bellypans made?
 
We use two pieces of corrugated polycaronate (http://www.mcmaster.com/#corrugated-...sheets/=gnf1k0) refer to the image labeled non-corrugated. it is also called corriboard or corrugated plastic. We use two 1/8" thick pieces with the channels running in opposite directions. use srews or bolts to attach. We use an ice pick or pin to poke a hole where we want the screw to go, and then use 10-24 bolts, not screw, to attach. They tap themselves into the plastic, and the connection is sturdy without a nut as long as you dont detach and reuse the hole many time. Good Luck! Hope to see it in action next year!


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:12.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi