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Motor Used for Shooting
Just curious as to what motors people are using to siege the opposing towers with. With the unlimited-ness of non-CIM motors, what are people going for?
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We haven't finalized anything, but we've been prototyping with a CIM.
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775pro at 2:1 ftw
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Do you mean for shooting/throwing boulders or for climbing?
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Apologies, it clearly says in the thread title.
775Pro motors are working very well for us |
Re: Motor Used for Shooting
We've so far been pretty successful using 775pros on a 4:1 versaplanetary gearbox with 4" wheels at ~4500RPM (max rpm for this setup). Once the stages come in we'll be upping that to 3:1, for a shooting speed of around 6000RPM.
If I had to give any advice, it would mostly be that versaplanetary gearboxes with low reductions are wonderful, not only for powering your wheel, but mounting it to your frame. A helpful note, using a CIM adapter on a versaplanetary and gearing it 1:1 (no reduction stages) is a wonderful way to easily and sturdily drive a flywheel with a CIM or Mini-CIM. This setup on a Mini-CIM nets around the same top RPM (~4500) as with our setup mentioned above. See Ri3D Greenhorns for an example of this use case. I'd suggest using the 775pros (or 775s from Banebots), as opposed to BAG motors, CIMs, or Mini-CIMs, for the higher top RPM and power-to-weight ratio, seeing as a shooting mechanism is very unlikely to torque-stall and burn out the motor during regular operation. However, I'm sure there are ways to make any of those power a successful shooter. |
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We've stuck with mini-cims our entire prototyping process and have been pleased with the results. I posted a video of said results in Robot Showcase. Our final design incorporates this motor. Actually, almost all our high power motors in the current design are mini-cims, including the drive system.
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Been toying with the need for encoder to get consistent speed. Parts for prototype should be here tomorrow, so snowstorm-allowing, we'll get going with a prototype and hopefully find out.
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Can someone do a quick rundown of plus and minus of each (Mini Cim, Bag and 775 Pro) for shooters thanks.
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A miniCIM... In a vex pro ball shifter :yikes:
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Hands down, 775pro!
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We made a prototype 2 wheeled shooter with 6 inch wheels and 2 mini-cims direct drive. For the final design we are going to switch over to the 775pro's with a 3:1 versa Planetary
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But in reality, I would have to agree. 775pros have been our best motor to shoot the balls. |
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But in all seriousness we used it to test our 6" wheeled shooter and loved the performance. The power per weight is unmatched at this point in time. |
We are using 3:1 versaplanetarys with 775pros on a greenhorn style 2 wheel horizontal variable angle shooter.
Cims and mini Cims do decent at 1:1 bags don't work at all unless you go for a 5:1 or higher gear ratio. |
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So if you have a 775Pro geared at 3:1 and want to control the wheel speed at 6000 RPM you won't have a lot of battery voltage left to work with. |
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We're planning to pull our catapult with an AM PG71 (motor is a 9015), taken down another factor of 3.6 (at initial design) with sprockets and #25 chain. The encoder is already in place on the COTS assembly.
We'll probably use another PG-71 (no encoder, just limit switches) for our mechanism to lift the ball over the bumpers and into the launcher. Roller pickup TBD. |
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We have been using bb550 motors on versa planetary 3:1 gearboxes with a four inch wheel. It has been working great for us. We have used these motors in the past with great success and I am surprised i haven't seen anybody else using these motors.
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Our team has tested both the miniCIMs and the CIM's. We are using two CIM's to "launch" the boulder. Good luck to all teams this year!
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We're also looking at using a 775pro at a 3:1 but I'm having trouble figuring out how to attach a longer shaft to the VersaPlanetary Gearbox shaft.
I figure in order to gain efficiency it would be better to drive the shooter wheels directly from the gearbox, without adding a second set of gears, belt/pulley or sprocket/chain set-up. We don't have a lathe, so is our only option to not directly drive the shooter wheel? |
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The advantage to a Mini CIM is that you can direct drive and be at around the right RPM, the disadvantage is that you can't really go any faster than free speed unless you gear up - which is silly. The Bag, 775, or 550 all have high free speeds and require some gearing down, but a versa planetary box makes that really easy. 550s are a little weird this year since you can't get them from VP or AM. Also consider packaging and where your motor / shooter will live inside the robot. |
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We're using 775Pro's through a Versaplanetary, geared to appropriate reductions for the wheel size (still not determined). Other than power:weight as has been stated, I like the open air cooling that's perfect for a high duty cycle use case like what a shooting wheel does. For shooters that use low compression on the ball, it's perfect.
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Roy |
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We have have exceptional results with our prototype using a single RS 775-18 geared 2:1 driving a pair of 4" wheels. We run the motor anywhere between 8.5v and 10v.
Our intent is to run a pair of 775pro's geared 3:1 (60:19 to be exact) and (This is for you, Ether) Bang-Bang to control the rate of the wheel. Our plan is to use a single retro reflective section and just measure the period to determine the rate the wheel is spinning. We may end up with two sections to preserve balance in the wheel. |
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We have done some more testing of the 550's on a 3:1 with 4 in wheels and are able to get a very straight shot at full speed. |
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http://www.vexrobotics.com/217-4008.html |
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We are using a miniCIM to power a ratcheting shift-to-freefall gearbox.
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Considering we are making 4 of these joints, that would be $80 for the couplers. :eek: |
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