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AustinH 23-04-2014 21:33

pic: Gear Drive Concept
 

Chris is me 23-04-2014 21:39

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
A few comments.

First, your Colsons are on backward. The features on one side of the hub are intended to prevent the wheel and hub from rubbing against the stationary parts of the bearing, entirely contacting the inner race. Having them on the outside defeats their purpose.

Second, it seems you have the exact same gear on the output of your ball shifter as you do in the gear drive line. In that case, why not face mount the Ball Shifter to the tube and have the second stage output drive the other gear? Your current setup is just redundant.

Third, I would be very concerned with just how much you're pocketing the top and bottom of the tube to make room for gears. Your tube's profile gets closer and closer to resembling a pair of thin plates, which is susceptible to bending. Bending would be the absolute worst thing for a gear drive, which relies on rigidity to work. Gears in a tube are not necessarily a bad idea, but you would want a bigger tube if you were to go that route.

Fourth, have you thought about how you'll actually get the gears in those slots? They are smaller than the diameter of the gear.

A good start, I just wanted to throw these out there to keep you working :)

pandamonium 23-04-2014 21:44

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
Going the all gear route you might as well just go 10 wheels if you can squeeze them in.

BBray_T1296 23-04-2014 22:01

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by pandamonium (Post 1378132)
Going the all gear route you might as well just go 10 wheels if you can squeeze them in.

Use smaller wheels. He said they are 5". There are plenty of sizes smaller than that, you could use 1-7/8" if you were so inclined :P

That Getting-the-gear-in-the-slot problem would be a killer for the design.

I like the idea. I am always a fan of differing drive ideas. (Now on to that 2-CIM-in-an-axle swerve drive)

cadandcookies 23-04-2014 23:20

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by BBray_T1296 (Post 1378135)
Use smaller wheels. He said they are 5". There are plenty of sizes smaller than that, you could use 1-7/8" if you were so inclined :P

I'd second this. Unless we have a crazy terrain for the field next year, smaller wheels are probably going to serve you better. Less reduction, smaller gears, less weight all around to spend on other mechanisms. Plusyou could probably solve both the cheese problem (the top slots) and save some money at the same time.

cbale2000 23-04-2014 23:30

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
We found that using 4in wheels with 50t gears on both the wheels and the idlers works pretty good for spacing.

Naveed Riaziat 24-04-2014 01:43

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
Personally, I think belt may be a more elegant solution to this. No need to pocket any tube, just make the axle go all the way through the box tubing and put a pulley on each. Team 649 does this with our 6 wheel WCD and we love it! Great start!

DampRobot 24-04-2014 02:11

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
What's the benefit of using gears in the drivetrain over belts or chain?

IMO, gears are heavier, less flexible, more expensive, and easier to jam than either chains or belts. Perhaps they're harder to break (ie, to break them such that they will stop transmitting power), but I'd bet they're a lot easier to jam by getting something sucked into them. Also, having so many gear to gear contacts, I see a lot of places to lose efficiency.

cbale2000 24-04-2014 02:13

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Naveed Riaziat (Post 1378192)
Personally, I think belt may be a more elegant solution to this. No need to pocket any tube, just make the axle go all the way through the box tubing and put a pulley on each. Team 649 does this with our 6 wheel WCD and we love it! Great start!

I'd venture to guess the gears take less space (horizontally) though, and honestly we used dry lube on our gear drive when we assembled it and never had to deal with it after that. Regardless, without knowing their reasoning for using this style drive it's hard to know one way or another what an ideal configuration is for it.

Chris is me 24-04-2014 07:56

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by DampRobot (Post 1378193)
What's the benefit of using gears in the drivetrain over belts or chain?

IMO, gears are heavier, less flexible, more expensive, and easier to jam than either chains or belts. Perhaps they're harder to break (ie, to break them such that they will stop transmitting power), but I'd bet they're a lot easier to jam by getting something sucked into them. Also, having so many gear to gear contacts, I see a lot of places to lose efficiency.

Properly designed, on a system already using 8 or more wheels, gears are a small weight increase in exchange for not needing a lot of maintenance or attention like chain can. Chain or belts can be better but it's not an absolute; for some teams / robots a gear drive is a valid solution. Don't really know what you mean by "flexible" or why it matters here.

AustinH 24-04-2014 09:06

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
This was purely a mental exercise to see if a gear drive could fit in the smallest possible envelope (much like chain in tube, except different). Originally, the thought was that 4" wheels would be the way to go. Unfortunately, that left 0.150" of clearance between the lowest gear and the floor. Depending on the terrain/use case, that may work.

The bottom face of the tube is pocketed almost twice as much as the top plate in order to open up installation options for the gears. Oddly enough, there is constant contact between the hex bearings on either side of the tube owing to the 0.700" diameter boss on the vex gears which contacts the inner races of both opposing hex bearings. No idea how that would work under sudden side loading, but I'd hazard a guess that it's better on the tubing than a completely unsupported sidewall.

How much would a riveted/brazed bellypan help those side tubes?

Joe G. 24-04-2014 09:19

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
If the bottom is even further pocketed, you're going to have structure problems with or without a bellypan -- with dramatic pocketing, there's no easy way to mount the bellypan to the box except at the ends short of welding it, and the bellypan itself would need to be heavily pocketed under the gears, and would provide only marginal reinforcement.

I would suggest using a larger tube, and choosing your gears such that the smaller gears are completely contained within the tube with little/no pocketing required above them.

BBray_T1296 24-04-2014 11:08

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
Perhaps it may be possible to find 3x1 tubing?

MetalJacket 24-04-2014 12:15

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by BBray_T1296 (Post 1378240)
Perhaps it may be possible to find 3x1 tubing?

http://www.onlinemetals.com/merchant...268&top_cat=60

That is possible ... If I recall correctly, I think 610 is using something like 4x1 this year.

EDIT - This is the drive I was thinking of, not sure if they are using something similar on their competition bot.

AustinH 24-04-2014 12:54

Re: pic: Gear Drive Concept
 
So, some interesting things happen with 3" tube and a 50t-72t spacing.
http://i.imgur.com/pE2oye8.jpg?1

Lots more structural webbing is available even if you open up slots large enough for installation of the 72t gears through the top. A 50t gear on a 1/8in drop center pattern has a minimum of ~0.015 clearance to the inside wall of the tube. Unfortunately, since McMaster Carr lists a wall thickness tolerance of +/- 0.019", odds are at some point it'll interfere. I may try a 44t gear next (though this will shorten the wheelbase even further). The other option would possibly be to eliminate the drop center and add omnis to the front and back and sizing the wheels down or up to either 4" or 6".


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