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Gates belt theroy questions
After using the WCP belt calculator and learning the math behind it from the Gates belt theroy book I found on discrepancy that caught my attention. The calculations were for a HTD 5 180 tooth timing belt between two 24 tooth pulleys.
The math that I ended up with using the math in the Gates theroy book was: pitch*(Belt teeth - pulley teeth)/2 = c to c distance 5mm*(180t-24t)/2 = 390mm The under lying equation from WCP seemed to be: pitch*(Belt teeth - pulley teeth)/2 +0.001"= c to c distance So my question is what is the point of that extra .001" added to the distance? *Sent from my phone(quickly during class...)* |
Re: Gates belt theroy questions
Pretension. Make a tighter belt. Prevent belt from flying off?
Most FRC teams can't even manufacture to the tolerance of 0.001" anyways... |
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Re: Gates belt theroy questions
See page 182 in the Gates Power Drive Design manual. The standard pre-tensioning center distance should be in the .02 to .03 inch range for most HTD or GT3 belting sizes used in robotics.
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In FRC, however, fixed c-c distances work great because of the limited run-time of our robots, and are generally designed to be exact or a couple of thousandths large. |
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The belts are normally rated for 8000 hours, so run time isn't a FRC issue. Adequate Tension for the required load and speeds is a concern for reliability. |
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Not super scientific, but we generally run .005" over on our loaded belt runs. Even that is in the range where it starts to get hard to install in an exact C-C application.
Also.... Theroy Jenkins! |
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With regards to the specs - the center distance equations are the same. You'll notice the WCP calculator has a field called "center distance adder" that is set to .001 by default - that is where the term comes from. Leaving this at one thou is fine if you want. Doesn't seem to make much difference either way. If you needed to be within one thou of a specific exact distance for belts to work, you wouldn't be able to run them with exact centers anyway because almost nobody holds those tolerances in FRC. As for the rest of the specs - keep in mind they are referring to mechanisms with far higher runtimes than FRC things. They are very conservative. |
Re: Gates belt theroy questions
Thank you for all of the information. Would the pure calculation or adding a few thousandth to the distance yeild a drive that would be less likely to snap a belt?
Also I have heard that mixing different belt with htd5 pulleys can result in less failure than just using HTD 5. Is there any merit to that? |
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5 thou or less added seems like it would be fine. Using GT2 belts with HTD pulleys is slightly stronger than HTD / HTD, but weaker than GT2 / GT2. I don't think you need to do this - if your belt strength is marginal enough for this to make the difference you don't have a big enough safety factor. Remember, 15mm wide for 24T pulleys in a drivetrain. |
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This brochure from Gates does a pretty good job of explaining what belts interface with what pulleys. The one thing it doesn't include is the GT3 series of timing belts, which interface with GT2 pulleys. |
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