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Motor driven catapult gear ratio
For those with motor driven catapults, what are your setups?
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Edit: That's pulling the catapult down -- we are not using the motors to throw the ball. It's unclear what you're after here. |
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To OP, 15.33:1 for our shooter |
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Yes we are looking to change our catapult firing mechanism from springs to motor driven.
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He means that the catapult arm can only be stopped halfway through its motion path with a great deal of effort in a fairly unsafe manner. We had the same problem in 2008 with a spring driven catapult. Also, dry firing was extremely risky, for us.
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Re: Motor driven catapult gear ratio
We use a motor driven catapult with a toughbox+2CIMs+35 chain and sprockets.
Total reduction with gearbox and chains is about 25:1. We also use a pneumatic cylinder on the back with ~8" lever arm that applies 40 lbs of pressure or so. It can score with just the motors but the range is limited to a small window around 8' out, withe the pneumatics it is significantly stronger. |
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Re: Motor driven catapult gear ratio
6 cims, 12.75:1 gear reduction (3 cim toughboxes) and a 2:1 chain reduction totaling 25.5. We can pour the ball off the front, shoot from 18ft, full court or anywhere between.
Here is our reveal video wich showcases our close end adjustability: http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=qPc_Vi_9Pww |
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What is your catapult arm made of? |
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Our arm is basically 1/8 x 2" aluminum riveted to 3/4" angle aluminum for support. It is a flattened "J" curve in shape. The center of the ball is ~17" from the fulcrum.
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There are JVN style pegs to the back made of schedule 40 fiberglass tubing (PVC would work just as well). We are stilll determining the optimal lenth. |
Re: Motor driven catapult gear ratio
We are using 2 CIMs + 2 775s. The two 775s are in a dual input adapter Versaplanetary with a 4:1 ratio. That gearbox and the 2 CIMs are plugged into a VEXpro single speed gearbox at 5.33:1. After that there is a 12:26 and 15:26 stage.
Arm length, arm travel time, release angle, cradle construction, cradle geometry and a lot of other variables go into making a motor catapult work well. We're still tuning ours. For consistent shots, the arm geometry and also the motor speeds play a huge rule. We have both a pot and an encoder on our arm to do both position and velocity feedback. |
Re: Motor driven catapult gear ratio
Ours are 15:1 Modulox transmissions driven by CIM motors. Lots of power, shoots quite far consistently, looks pretty cool too on our non professionally made 3/4" marine grade plywood shooting frame. :ahh:
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we use a ~50:1 overall ratio for 2 full size Cim's on a 2 ft arm, but we are still tweaking the numbers.
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1x Bag Motor
1x VersaPlanetary 25:1, 1x VersaPlanetary 10:1 totaling 250:1 reduction. 1x Choo-choo 468lbs worth of springs. It works. The orbital gears like to shatter sometimes but I'm 98.979% sure we fixed that. |
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8:1 Toughbox with 2 Cims. Then another stage reduction on the chain that drives the arm. Mini Toughbox didn't have enough torque to get the ball to full speed in the travel time of the arm.
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2 CIMs to a toughbox mini to a chain drive (not sure of the sprocket's tooth numbers)
Works like a champ! |
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4 775's on 5:1 Versas with a secondary reduction on 2:1 for a grand total of 10:1.
Its a linear shooter not a traditional catapult |
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For us, we are using dual mini-toughboxes with 1-CIM and mini-CIM, one on each side, then double chain reduction of 15 from the CIM output to a 26 tooth sprocket, then a 36 tooth sprocket to a 96 tooth sprocket. Total reduction should be nearly 27:1. We are using 1/2 EMT loop connected to two arms. The 96 tooth sprockets were made by our sponsor (Andy Mark six hole pattern - 1.875 inch bolt circle).
We're throwing the ball from white line past the other white line, over the truss, during the Southfield MI event. We missed some shots because we didn't have the shooter dialed in perfectly (made 2, missed maybe 5, 10 pointers) and hit the upper target area bouncing over the top. We also calibrated for shooting into the 1 point goal over robots. We were 1 for 2 with little practice. Thanks CD for previous posts that led us in the direction to have more velocity and less torque (F = 1/2 * mass * velocity squared) Our design is based on the Boom Done design completed in the Robot for 3 Days competition. This year's motto: If Joe's team can do it in 3 days, we can do it in 6 weeks!" (4-6 high school students, 1-1/4 engineers, 1 dad for 6-8 hours). Best regards, |
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Our Choo Choo winch consists of:
2 RS-775 18V motors connected with the VexPro dual input mount. One VexPro Versaplantary transmission at 300:1 3 stages (10:1,10:1, 3:1) winding a set 18:84 VexPro gears. 1400:1 total gear reduction Pulling down 2 7" trampoline springs to 14" takes less than 8 seconds provides over 240 lb stall load (unloaded output) |
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our team uses 2 rs 775's in a dual input adapter which goes into a 4:1 vex versaplanetary which runs into a 153:1 2000lbs ATV winch gearbox with anot outside reduction with our sprockets which i believe is 1.8:1 or so. It rounds out to about 1150:1. for out shooting mechanism we are using 2 snowmobile suspension springs out of a early 1980's Polaris.
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