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first_newbie 12-14-2015 09:29 PM

FRC shifting gears
 
What do teams use to shift gears on gear boxes. Other motors? pneumatics?

arc25565 12-14-2015 09:36 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Our team uses pancake Pneumatic cylinders from vex pro. They work quite well, allowing the robot to shift fast and reliably but require a pneumatic system. They can be found here: http://www.vexrobotics.com/217-2778.html

R.C. 12-14-2015 09:36 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by first_newbie (Post 1512332)
What do teams use to shift gears on gear boxes. Other motors? pneumatics?

This would be a great question to use the search tool here on cd. There are quite a few threads about this subject.

asid61 12-14-2015 09:41 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Pneumatic cylinders usually, and in the old days I believe servos were more common than they are now.

EricH 12-14-2015 10:06 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by asid61 (Post 1512338)
Pneumatic cylinders usually, and in the old days I believe servos were more common than they are now.

Other way around, actually. FRC-legal servos are WEAK. I'd tell you young'uns when my team tried that, but I'd feel really old... and we went with pneumatics because of the servo response (and AM had a handy conversion kit for their Gen2 Shifter).

Did you know that before 2005, every team got two shifting gearboxes in the KOP?*

The thing is that most shifting gearboxes take force to shift. Servos have a hard time providing enough force to actually shift. Ball-shifters, I think are the exception for that, and a 3-speed ballshifter could really use a servo's "infinite" positioning, but as a general rule a short-throw small-bore cylinder per gearbox (and per gear change in the gearbox) say about a 1" throw 3/4" diameter unit in the old days, is by far preferable. Pancake cylinders are more common now because they're smaller, lighter, and don't take as much air. Servos are sluggish, and tend to need to be ganged together to shift. Ain't worth it.

You could also use an electrical solenoid actuator, but the power limits on those are even more restrictive than on servos.


*Two drill motor transmissions, to go with the drill motors generally used for drive. Shifting took a little machining, creativity, and luck during matches, but it was present. Before my time the full drill was included...

jkelleyrtp 12-14-2015 10:13 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by EricH (Post 1512350)
Other way around, actually. FRC-legal servos are WEAK. I'd tell you young'uns when my team tried that, but I'd feel really old... and we went with pneumatics because of the servo response (and AM had a handy conversion kit for their Gen2 Shifter).

What kind of force is needed? I saw a supershifter demo with a servo that put out around 9 lbs but it was no where near as snappy as the pistons.

EricH 12-14-2015 10:15 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jkelleyrtp (Post 1512354)
What kind of force is needed? I saw a supershifter demo with a servo that put out around 9 lbs but it was no where near as snappy as the pistons.

9 lbf is not a legal FRC servo. Unless it's insanely slow... servos are only 4W in FRC, and I find it very difficult to comprehend a 9 lb force out of a 4W servo. Also, factor in the load of a moving drivetrain.

60 psi on a 3/4" diameter cross-section seems to do the trick nicely.

mrnoble 12-14-2015 10:15 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
I just want to say how glad I am that First Newbie has been asking these questions. You'll go far by approaching problems this way. Way to go!

IndySam 12-14-2015 10:17 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jkelleyrtp (Post 1512354)
What kind of force is needed? I saw a supershifter demo with a servo that put out around 9 lbs but it was no where near as snappy as the pistons.

"It's a cylinder, not a piston"

Brought to you by the IACNAP campaign.

jkelleyrtp 12-14-2015 10:18 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by EricH (Post 1512357)
9 lbf is not a legal FRC servo. Unless it's insanely slow... servos are only 4W in FRC, and I find it very difficult to comprehend a 9 lb force out of a 4W servo. Also, factor in the load of a moving drivetrain.

Here is the shifter in question: http://www.andymark.com/product-p/am-2297.htm

Doesn't look like people like it very much, and I don't see a power rating on it.

IndySam 12-14-2015 10:23 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jkelleyrtp (Post 1512361)
Here is the shifter in question: http://www.andymark.com/product-p/am-2297.htm

Doesn't look like people like it very much, and I don't see a power rating on it.

If you call the good folks at AndyMark they will recommend you shift with air. FIRST legal servos (as of previous years rules) will have great difficulty shifting under load. I have seen teams use window motors to shift successfully but nothing beats the instant snap of a 3/4" cylinder.

You can get a lot of shifts out of a couple filled tanks.

GeeTwo 12-14-2015 10:29 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Most commonly pneumatics, though a few use servos, especially if the robot will not have any other pneumatic systems. AndyMark and VexPro shifters have pneumatic parts or kits referenced from their web pages, and AM also has servo kits. Due to the limits of servos allowed by recent FRC rules, servos do not provide as much force or speed in shifting, making pneumatics the favored method.

Lil' Lavery 12-14-2015 11:01 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by IndySam (Post 1512360)
"It's a cylinder, not a piston"

Brought to you by the IACNAP campaign.

While you're correct that devices like these are pneumatic cylinders, the portion of the cylinder applying a force to shift gears would be a piston. What he said is not incorrect.

Peyton Yeung 12-14-2015 11:14 PM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jkelleyrtp (Post 1512361)
Here is the shifter in question: http://www.andymark.com/product-p/am-2297.htm

Doesn't look like people like it very much, and I don't see a power rating on it.

For video of it in action check this out.

Tristan Lall 12-15-2015 04:21 AM

Re: FRC shifting gears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by EricH (Post 1512357)
Unless it's insanely slow... servos are only 4W in FRC, and I find it very difficult to comprehend a 9 lb force out of a 4W servo.

They're not even 4 W. (Servo manufacturers who publish ratings based on free speed × stall torque are falsifying or don't understand the power output of a DC brush motor.)


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