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Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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If you did not account for the slowing, the time to fill a 35 in^3 tank from zero pressure would be based on the volume of this gas after it were returned to ambient. Since 120 = 15 * 8, we started with 8 x 35 in^3 = 280 in^3 = .162 ft^3 outside the tank, in the atmosphere. For a 1 cfm pump, this would take about 9.7 seconds to compress. I haven't measured it, but it seems that the sound of an air compressor drops about two octaves as it goes from zero to 120 psi. Assuming the same amount of air is compressed in each cycle, this means that at the end, it is pumping about 1/4 cfm, which would take 39 seconds to fill. Your time of 20 seconds to fill from 60 to 120 sounds about right. |
Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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Kids always stress over the need to have ten tanks on the robot and then they complain that the compressor runs for the whole match. When we reduce it to three or four tanks, the compressor may run twice a match, but for only 15-20 seconds each time. Unless you need to dump 80 cubic inches of air at a time, you rarely need 80 cubic inches of storage. |
Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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I believe some students on my team have some interesting graphs we made of "real-time" pressure at the cylinder inlet throughout the shot varying the amount of reservoir tanks both HP and LP side, but besides the point...::rtm:: |
Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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- that moment when you realize you need to make a big change, and it's almost week 5 :( |
Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
If you go to the link Mr Forbes provided you'll find another tab labeled refill rates. Of course those are only valid with the listed sizes and pressure ranges. Of course the listed pressure ranges are not exactly what we see in FRC and it is unlikely that you are using a .5 gallon tank. However you could probably use that data along with the CFM at the different pressures to derive how it would work with your tank size and pressure range.
The thing to keep in mind is that it is a piston type compressor. That piston has a set volume however you don't get to use all of that volume with each stroke. At zero psi the entire volume of the cylinder is discharged. As the pressure rises the initial portion of the stroke is used to reach the current tank pressure and no air flows out of the cylinder until the current pressure is met. The other thing is that at zero psi there is minimal load on the compressor's motor. As the pressure rises the load on the motor increases so it's rpm decreases. Not that the chart lists different current consumption at different pressures to reflect that change in load and rpm of the motor. The listed CFM in the chart is what flows out of the compressor when working against a given pressure but the air does cool and contract when it reaches the tank further complicating the calculations. |
Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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When designing our pneumatic system this year, our first focus was on actual air usage - how often would our "ideal" system be able to actuate. From there, we worked backwards to determine how much air was required at working pressure. This helped to directly inform us of the required storage volume - how many times do you want to be able to activate your mechanism before you run out of storage? How much airflow do you need to support the system over the entire match? Can the compressor handle it? In the end, our math showed that we could handle the load at our theoretical top actuation speed (a speed we'll probably never actually hit, but it's good to have a bit of a cushion in these calculations). It also showed us the affect we would have if we had 2 tanks for storage, or 4, or 8. Doing the math to figure out how much the storage pressure drops with each activation is critical! |
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Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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I'm not sure I trust Viair's CFM data...has anyone actually measured it. It doesn't jive mathematically if you look at the 0.5 gallon and 1.0 gallon performance...(assuming my calculation is right). If there's a math mistake please late me know.
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Re: Help Calculating time to recharge air tanks
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I did the calculations based on constant temperature (not right, but probably closer), and came up with 2 minutes and 9 seconds for 0-120 on a 1 gallon tank. This is still shorter than Viair's 3 minutes, but a good bit closer. There does seem to be a disagreement between the "performance" and "fill rate" data. |
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