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pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
Though a 4 speed robot would be cool to see, my first suggestion would be to eliminate your transmission and get your speed and torque changes by a difference in the diameter of your wheels. If you have a small traction wheel and a large omni wheel, you'll get pushing power when in traction mode and speed when in omni mode. This will reduce complexity and give you more room to mount your pneumatic pistons for actuating the modules by making the modules smaller.
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
I'm curious whether he intends to do a 4-speed or not. The major tactical advantage of keeping a 1:1 ratio between the omni & traction wheels is to be able to change from one to the other at full speed. There is also another (huge, IMO) build advantage to this setup which should help answer the actuation question, and it is outlined on slide 3 of this paper:
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/2968 I think I need more detail on how the drive train will be run before commenting further. For example, do you plan to use 1 serpentine belt or two belts per side? |
Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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While I agree that you could change modes on the fly, I don't see a major advantage of this. If you're changing to traction mode, you're either trying to push or not be pushed. In that case, it'd be better to have the switch to low gear already built into the change of modes than to have to switch to low gear after changing modes. To put it simply, what advantage would low-gear omni mode give you? What advantage would high-gear 4-wheel traction give you? From my experience, a major goal when developing a drivetrain should be to reduce the mental load on the driver. Having 4 possible drivetrain states for the driver to keep track of sounds like too much. Quote:
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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High-gear traction provides faster straight-line movement since the 4 traction wheels on the corners make it harder for the robot to turn itself. This is tremendously useful in autonomous 'drive straight' routines like 2011. Changing to high-gear traction at speed can prevent a robot from being knocked off course while still beating a defender to a point straight ahead. On the surface I agree with your last point, that 4 modes is a bit much. Yet for the team to be successful with any "butterfly" drive, they will need practice. The modes I've described are fairly intuitive, so it wouldn't be an issue for a team with a nominal amount of practice. I've driver coached lots of students over the years only a few of them would not have been able to handle a more intuitive setup of the modes. From a mechanical maintenance perspective, 4 modes can be a nightmare given that there are 6 subsystems* with 6 actuation points in the current CAD above and 4 subsystems with 4 actuation points in the 624 design. I like that your design has only 4 subsystems with 4 actuation points and is effective yet simple, but I also know how my team does autonomous and driver training, so it wouldn't be right for us. That's a tradeoff the OP has to decide on as well. *subsystem here is a contained system which is actuated (i.e. not the drive train frame or wheels which are not actuated). Each shifting gearbox is 1 subsystem, but a non-shifting gearbox is not. |
Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
aside from some of the points people have had you are gonna want to put some kind of support between the ballshifters because just having those angle bracket supporting the shifter won't be enough on their own to be supported well
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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Another question, with the traction wheels on the outside, its possible that with a scrub-steer setup and 4wd; That the robot won't be able to turn smoothly since the wheelbase is so long. It would essentially jitter (bounce) over the ground as the side wheels move in opposite directions. Not saying it would happen to this robot, since I don't know it's final weight; but my recommendation would be to place the omni's on the outside and the traction on the interior. It's what nearly every other implementation of Butterfly uses. See this butterfly implementation Good Luck from your Cross-Town Rivals, see you at BB |
Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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Suppose I should have made that clearer. Most teams I've seen run on the Omni's the majority of the time, and the axle is run through that wheel because it's the primary wheel. The axle placement on the traction wheel, at least to me, implied that the traction wheel was the primary. |
Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
We found that the pneumatic pistons worked really well (and were pretty small) to switch between omni and traction mode (plus gave the effect of low rider :D)
If you have any questions, feel free to ask me or the team and they can probably field your questions about it. |
Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
I am having trouble seeing how the Omni wheels get their power. Also, I didnt see a shaft for the omni wheels....
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
You could flip the orientation of the ball-shifter and puting on a double 25 chain sprocket inside the 1x2 and route chains to either module.
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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Re: pic: Can anybody give me advice on my Butterfly drive that I am working on?
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http://www.teamneutrino.org/seasons/...bot/butterfly/ |
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