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-   -   White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=32013)

Joe P 30-12-2004 17:07

White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Thread created automatically to discuss a document in the White Papers.

Nothing But Dewalts by Joe P

Max Lobovsky 30-12-2004 17:12

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Great! Thanks Joe and Joe. I'm disappointed to see that its a bit more work than I had thought, but after the additional testing that OCCRA gave it, I think we can be assured that its up to the job.

I thought Joe Johnson had said that he had interfaced the drill motors with it, too. Is this true?

Finally, what exactly does Lou Odin provide in this kit of his? The aluminum and plastic plates for the Chiaphua, neccesary bolts, and the modification of the sun gear? What kind of lead time can we expect during build?

Again, thanks for the great work.

Joe P 30-12-2004 21:24

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Max Lobovsky
Great! Thanks Joe and Joe. I'm disappointed to see that its a bit more work than I had thought, but after the additional testing that OCCRA gave it, I think we can be assured that its up to the job.

I thought Joe Johnson had said that he had interfaced the drill motors with it, too. Is this true?

Finally, what exactly does Lou Odin provide in this kit of his? The aluminum and plastic plates for the Chiaphua, neccesary bolts, and the modification of the sun gear? What kind of lead time can we expect during build?

Again, thanks for the great work.

MAx,
The kit id Drawing 1,2, 3, and 5. You have to send him the carrier gear to be modified.
Yes you can interface the drill motors however we didn't do it in this paper because they may not be in this years kit.

Stu Bloom 30-12-2004 21:28

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Great paper - thanks so much for those details. Have any of you done any testing to determine the motor "curves" (torque/speed/current data) for the various motor/transmission assemblies at different reduction settings (1st, 2nd, 3rd gear)?

Max Lobovsky 30-12-2004 23:39

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Is there any reason that the Globe and Fisher Price versions are shown without a shifter?

Arefin Bari 31-12-2004 01:21

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
This is Very Cool. Thanks joe for the whitepaper. even though this maybe be time consuming, its definitely worth it. and its not even that much money only 65 dollard. Again, Thanks Joe. :)

Joe P 31-12-2004 09:50

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Max Lobovsky
Is there any reason that the Globe and Fisher Price versions are shown without a shifter?

No reason
I did it on the Chiaphua and didn't want to repeat it over again in the paper.

meaubry 31-12-2004 09:54

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Max Lobovsky
Is there any reason that the Globe and Fisher Price versions are shown without a shifter?

It is because the shifter is on the transmission side and therefore can be coupled with any of the motor transmission combinations relatively easily. Last year we drove with the motor transmission described without a single issue or repair of the motor transmission set.

Joe P 31-12-2004 10:02

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Arefin Bari
This is Very Cool. Thanks joe for the whitepaper. even though this maybe be time consuming, its definitely worth it. and its not even that much money only 65 dollard. Again, Thanks Joe. :)

There is one mistake in the paper that I want everyone to know about.
Page 17 - Step 3. for the Fisher Price - The distance from the top of the pinion gear to the front of the motor case should be 0.72 inches. not .072 inches. Had a bad day with decimal points.

Joe P 31-12-2004 16:14

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Stu Bloom
Great paper - thanks so much for those details. Have any of you done any testing to determine the motor "curves" (torque/speed/current data) for the various motor/transmission assemblies at different reduction settings (1st, 2nd, 3rd gear)?

STU,
We just got a prototype chassis running with the CIM Dewalts. We haven't had time to think about this yet. Maybe someone on Team 47 has done some work on this, I don't know?

jimfortytwo 01-01-2005 11:28

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Why did you decide to throw out the first stage of the DeWalt for the CIM interface? Did you find a problem with using an input pinion as in the other arrangements?

So these modules were attached to the robot only by the aluminum clamp? Did you ever have problems with slippage?

Thanks for sharing this paper. I had been looking to discard the yellow clamshell, but I'm impressed by your use of it.

Max Lobovsky 01-01-2005 16:06

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
I'm not sure what their reason to discard the first stage for the CIM was, but there is a very good reason I can think of. The gearbox is surely designed for a very high rpm, low torque motor (like the drills from our kit of parts) and the CIM probably has 2 or 3 times the torque of the motor it was designed for. A mas produced gearbox like this is most likely engineered down pretty close to the specs its needed for. It wouldn't take 2 or 3 times the torque.

jimfortytwo 01-01-2005 16:47

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
My notes say the advertised output torque for the 18V XRP drill is 500 inch-pounds = 56Nm. The stall torque of the CIM (at 107A) is 2.2Nm. So the CIM put through the 46:1 reduction of first gear represents a 101Nm output, or just about twice the number DeWalt puts on the box.

I know someone out there was building CIM-Bosch-DeWalt combos in the off season, and I'm under the impression that the DeWalts survived that fine. Does anyone know if they were using the full reduction?

Ryan Foley 01-01-2005 21:30

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jimfortytwo
My notes say the advertised output torque for the 18V XRP drill is 500 inch-pounds = 56Nm. The stall torque of the CIM (at 107A) is 2.2Nm. So the CIM put through the 46:1 reduction of first gear represents a 101Nm output, or just about twice the number DeWalt puts on the box

Just a note, the CIM assembly involves dropping the first stage of the transmission, so the gear reductions on the CIM assembly are 3:1, 4:1, 12:1. The CIM puts out .79Nm at 40A (which was the amp limit last year) so after the 12:1 gear reduction, the whole assembly puts out about 9.5Nm (assuming I did math right of course!).

Great paper Joe, thanks for posting it. Hopefully more teams can have shifters with this method, since it is so much easier and cheaper than building one from scratch.

Edit: Jim, I believe that Andy Brockway and Team 716 were the people trying out the XRP transmission with the FP and Bosch motors linked.

jimfortytwo 01-01-2005 23:10

Re: White Paper Discuss: Nothing But Dewalts
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ryan Foley
Just a note, the CIM assembly involves dropping the first stage of the transmission, so the gear reductions on the CIM assembly are 3:1, 4:1, 12:1. The CIM puts out .79Nm at 40A (which was the amp limit last year) so after the 12:1 gear reduction, the whole assembly puts out about 9.5Nm (assuming I did math right of course!).

Thanks Ryan. I was responding to Max's suggestion that retaining all three reduction stages (not what Joe P recommends) might lead to a gearbox failure. Personally, I think that the XRP can probably handle twice its rated torque-- but thats just a gut feeling.

Although I am aware that the CIM outputs only .79Nm at 40A, it must be remembered that our 40A breakers can actually sustain upwards of 80A for short durations. Using the 40A number, even with all three stages we remain well under rated torque for the transmission. In my calculation I used the stall current to be conservative. I am curious what the real maximum momentary load from a CIM motor is, once you factor in our breakers and our non-ideal voltage source.


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