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-   -   Question About 4-Wheel Drive (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=38734)

Pat McCarthy 25-06-2005 17:00

Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
1 Attachment(s)
I'm doing some robot designing in my free time over the summer, and I came to a question.

I'm making a 4-wheel drive chassis using the Kit transmission. To do this you can do it with two sprockets on the output of the gearbox, as seen in the attached picture.

Now to make a very reliable drivetrain with this, I think the wheel's sprocket should be aligned with its corresponding sprocket on the output shaft of the gearbox. Doing this would need me to stagger the wheels one way or the other.

The question is:
Which way is most beneficial to stagger them?
Front wheels inward and rear wheels outward or visa versa?
Does it even make a difference?

sanddrag 25-06-2005 17:08

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Why not just put the sprocket on the other side of the wheel and keep the wheels pretty close to being inline? So you have two wheels with the sprocket outside and two with the sprocket inside.

Karthik 25-06-2005 17:31

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by sanddrag
Why not just put the sprocket on the other side of the wheel and keep the wheels pretty close to being inline? So you have two wheels with the sprocket outside and two with the sprocket inside.

Not the kit-transmission, but this photo illustrates Sanddrag's point pretty well.

http://www.firstrobotics.uwaterloo.c...etrains111.jpg

Cory 25-06-2005 17:50

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
You don't want your wheels to not be inline. Go with what Sanddrag said, or get two separate sprockets so that you can slide them on the output shaft to align them with the wheels, instead of being stuck with the double sprocket you've pictured.

Madison 25-06-2005 17:58

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
What's shown in that illustration is not a 'double-sprocket', but two 21 tooth sprockets placed back to back. This arrangement was suggested for the 2005 Kitbot as an easy way of implementing four-wheel drive, but results in the wheels at one end being offset from those at the other. The picture Karthik linked to is effectively the same thing. The offset will vary with the length through bore of each sprocket.

The difficulty in customizing the spacing of chain on the provided transmissions comes simply from the limited length of the custom-made output shaft. The arrangement shown in the first illustration will probably do the best at getting the wheels as close to flush with one another as is possible without facing off some of one sprocket.

I don't think you'll see much benefit in placing one set of wheels closer together over an another, as we probably spend equal amounts of time going in each direction throughout the course of a match.

billbo911 25-06-2005 19:18

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by sanddrag
Why not just put the sprocket on the other side of the wheel and keep the wheels pretty close to being inline? So you have two wheels with the sprocket outside and two with the sprocket inside.

That is exactly how 1147 did their drive train this year. Attached is a shot I just took of it to illustrate that the wheels are in alignment and the drive chains are straight.

Cory 25-06-2005 20:02

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by M. Krass
What's shown in that illustration is not a 'double-sprocket', but two 21 tooth sprockets placed back to back.

Oops. That's what you get for looking at it without opening it :rolleyes:

you could also use spacers between the wheel and sprocket to get them in line, if removing material off the hub isn't an option.

JVN 25-06-2005 20:19

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by billbo911
That is exactly how 1147 did their drive train this year. Attached is a shot I just took of it to illustrate that the wheels are in alignment and the drive chains are straight.

Wow! You mean the sprocket spacing on the output shaft is such that when a drive is configured like yours... the wheels are already in-line???

You'd think it was designed that way... ;)

billbo911 25-06-2005 20:40

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JVN
Wow! You mean the sprocket spacing on the output shaft is such that when a drive is configured like yours... the wheels are already in-line???

You'd think it was designed that way... ;)

Funny how things turn out when they are designed well, and then used as designed! :D

Gdeaver 25-06-2005 22:04

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Don't forget to implement some type of chain adjustment or tensioning in your design. This year for time and simplicity we didn't do this and had one of the longer chains stretch allot. There was never time between matches to deal with it. We where lucky it didn't get bad enough to derail. Next year we will deal with it. A commercial chain tensioner isn't cheap. However it's not too hard to make your own.

Meyerman 25-06-2005 22:59

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
we made a longer output shaft thingy for out kit tranny if u can u should try that out and have fun!

Pat McCarthy 26-06-2005 10:04

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Thanks for all the input guys! I'm taking from this that inline is the best way to do things. However, this again poses a slight problem to me.

I should have mentioned that I won't be using those narrow wheels from the kit too. :p I'm going to be using something closer to 8" diameter, 2" wide pneumatic wheels. That is why I was having a rough time working with the two 21 tooth sprockets on the output shaft of the kit tranny. Their spacing doesn't quite allow for such a simple solution.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cory
you could also use spacers between the wheel and sprocket to get them in line, if removing material off the hub isn't an option.

I suppose that the best way to solve this problem may be a simple use of spacing on the wheel shafts, leaving the sprockets at different positions on the shafts, but the wheels inline. I'll probably use keyed wheel shafts to make things a little easier.

Quatitos 26-06-2005 11:15

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Pat McCarthy
Thanks for all the input guys! I'm taking from this that inline is the best way to do things. However, this again poses a slight problem to me.

I should have mentioned that I won't be using those narrow wheels from the kit too. :p I'm going to be using something closer to 8" diameter, 2" wide pneumatic wheels. That is why I was having a rough time working with the two 21 tooth sprockets on the output shaft of the kit tranny. Their spacing doesn't quite allow for such a simple solution.



I suppose that the best way to solve this problem may be a simple use of spacing on the wheel shafts, leaving the sprockets at different positions on the shafts, but the wheels inline. I'll probably use keyed wheel shafts to make things a little easier.

You could always just use one sprocket on the output shaft of the transmission and then send that directly to one of your wheels. On this wheel you would place another sprocket on the opposite side of the wheel from the chain coming from the tranny. If you ran a chain between the two wheels like that they would end up being inline. The only bad thing is you use more chain this way.

Now if your comfortable with using smaller chain, which I know some people would yell at you never to use smaller chain in the drivetrain, but we succesfully use the set up I just described on our robot this year without a single problem.

Pat McCarthy 26-06-2005 11:30

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
My current design only left 6 inches in between the gearboxes. Whoops.
If I use only one CIM in each Kit tranny, would a set up as pictured in the attachment cause any problems?

I'm limited in the dimensions of the chassis to very close to what it currently is.
22" wide, 24" long. So I can't make it wide enough to fit two CIMs in each tranny.

billbo911 26-06-2005 11:56

Re: Question About 4-Wheel Drive
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Pat McCarthy
My current design only left 6 inches in between the gearboxes. Whoops.
If I use only one CIM in each Kit tranny, would a set up as pictured in the attachment cause any problems?

In the picture of our bot, even though you can't see it, there is only one CIM per side. We were going to run two per side, then we did some rough calculations and decided 2 HP to run the bot was overkill. Running one per side was just fine. We never drained a battery in competition and had plenty of speed and power.


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