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Re: designing a three motor gearbox
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Re: designing a three motor gearbox
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If you want the motors to share the load proportionally to their maximum output power, then you want to gear them so that the speed vs. torque curves of all motors are superimposed (or that at least they're as close as possible within the relevant range). If you want motors to share unequally at different loads,2 then you can orient those motor curves arbitrarily. 1 I have some incremental updates to these I've been meaning to complete and post. (Mostly updated motor lists for 2012, and minor formatting/functionality improvements.) One of these days.... 2 That's a pretty rare requirement. Maybe one motor is a can motor with a fan that has a minimum effective speed, and you are willing to load it more at high speed, in order reduce its load when high torque is demanded (at low speed when cooling is ineffective). |
Re: designing a three motor gearbox
My apologies. I forgot for a moment that the MiniCIM and CIM were different RPMS. However, going from all MiniCIM to all CIM wouldn't be a problem. You should definitely use a slight reduction on the MiniCIM, though I am not positive on the exact ratio required.
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Re: designing a three motor gearbox
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Re: designing a three motor gearbox
How close do the gear ratios need to be?
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Re: designing a three motor gearbox
They don't. Slower motors will act as loads on faster motors. If you're incorporating CIMs and MiniCIMs in the same gearbox, you can use 12-tooth pinions on the CIMs and 11-tooth pinions on the MiniCIMs (or 14t and 12t respectively), which will get you close enough. In all honesty, you can probably use the same pinions on the motors, and they'll balance each other out without too much stress.
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Re: designing a three motor gearbox
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The answer is, they WILL be the same, eventually, due to the single gear they both go to--it can't travel at two different speeds at the same time. However, having the speeds wildly different is going to really annoy one motor or the other or both. Given that you're talking about 5K RPM and 6K RPM motors, I'd shoot for within 100-200 RPM difference; that should be close enough to work with and within the rated speed tolerance. Just in case you were asking about the different gear ratios in the gearbox, though, the answer is "it depends". Depends on design, depends on designed speed(s). Each reduction stage, as a rule of thumb, should be less than a 10:1 reduction by itself (total reduction of the gearbox can be a LOT more). |
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