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pic: McCannot Wheel
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Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
It's like a planetary transmission that doesn't need a ring gear!
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Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
I posted this because there is some disagreement whether Mecanum wheel rollers will roll when driving straight forward or backwards. Some people say they will roll, and some people say they will stay stationary.
In my experience, I've noticed that Mecanum wheels often spin faster than the robot is moving, even when driving straight forward and backwards, much like the McCannots would, except not nearly as badly. Many say that it's because the Mecanum wheels are losing traction with the carpet, but I didn't see that being 100% the case. My theory is that the Mecanum rollers do roll, even when going straight forward or backward. I think it's fairly obvious that these "McCannot" wheel rollers will definitely roll when driven straight forwards or backwards, resulting in less than ideal robot movement. My question is for those who believe that mecanum rollers WON'T spin when driving straight forward or backwards. How many degrees do you need to start angling the McCannot rollers until they stop rolling completely when driving straight forward or backward? 90? 45? 1? 0.00000001? I don't know the answer to this, but I'd be curious to see what others think... |
Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
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Change theta from 45 to 35 to 25 to 15 to 5 to 1 to 0.00000001 and then from 45 to 55 to 65 to 75 to 85 to 89 to 89.999999 and observe what happens to the forces and wheel speeds. Then think about what happens if roller friction or axial free play is non-zero. |
Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
It seems like your "McCannot" wheels are just Omniwheels, minus the axle.
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Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
Nevermind, the wheels go a different way.
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Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
It is interesting that you posted this. I've been giving this design some thought recently as a way of proving that force applied through a roller can be effectively lost with no useful conversion.
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I believe this is similar to what happens in a mecanum drive going straight forward. If you only look at a diagonal pair of wheels they contribute motion in a 45 degree angle. If you watch a robot doing that, you will see the rollers spinning. When you run all the wheels, the opposite diagonal set is pushing the wheels along the axis transverse to the rollers. The net effect should be (in a perfect setup) that the rollers don't spin because the opposite diagonal sets are countering the movement lost to the rollers. Quote:
Andy |
Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
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Unfortunately, with no team this year I can't test this myself, but I have a theory that part of what you're seeing might actually be due to the fact the circumference of the wheels have the visual breaks in them. If you have some under-utilized newbies, maybe you could convince them to convert a regular wheel (or construct something like an 8" wheel), by drawing on the marks to make them look mecanumish and then roll them around and see if it is a visual effect... Here are some items that I highly recommend anyone with access to a mecanum drivetrain try for themselves to help their understanding: 1) draw some lines on the sides of the rollers so that it is much easier to see if/when they are spinning. 2) mechanically lock all wheels/axles so they cannot spin (rollers should be left to spin freely). push your drivetrain around. |
Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
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Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
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Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
Spoiler alert: the rollers don't spin when the wheel is driving forward or back unless they are losing traction. Same as any independently driven wheel. If they are spinning it means that you can make modifications to the drive train to increase its performance.
You can test this your self by slowly rolling then and marking the roller's position. Just make sure not to wobble or translate the wheel while you do it. |
Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
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Andy |
Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
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Think of all the cool things in science / architecture / building / etc. All went up because the math worked. Things went up and fell down because the math didn't work. Even the Roman and early cathedrals worked because some math was done. If Ether says it will fail and you build it and it fails, you owe a "Math wins again post" And let me tell you as a mentor when you come up with the "WE WILL CRUSH THE OTHER TEAMS WITH THIS IDEA" and a rookie roboteers says "Well according to the math you fall over here." it's a great day, another idea dies without metal being involved. Nobody likes to see metal fail in the wild. But I'm new here, feel free to experiment. :) |
Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
Couldn't you just put some traction wheels of the same diameter on one side of a robot and your mecanum wheels on the other and drive straight? If it turns one way you'll know you have rollers causing loss of forward motion on that side.
For that matter, use your encoders to rotate your wheels a known number of revolutions. Calculate the distance you should travel based on circumference of your wheels and check that against the actual distance traveled. I just feel like this is a great opportunity to go and try it to figure out the answer. Unless I'm missing something and neither of those would give the answer you are looking for. |
Re: pic: McCannot Wheel
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My point being that yes, some force is "wasted" by the mecanum, but it is a sideways force :) The mecanum puts out the same force as a regular wheel in the same direction. |
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