![]() |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Quote:
|
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Quote:
This is a qoute from the snap idle page I referenced earlier. While we did not have such a large difference between our sprockets in use your application may still work due to the snap idle's slight movement. It wouldn't hurt to give it a try. If you do let us know. |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Quote:
But I strongly disagree with the need to have them injection molded in order to turn a profit. The elegance of this particular design is that, as I have mentioned, it can be mass produced in a woodwork shop. The table saw is great for cutting long straight lines and long deep grooves. If you look at the jigs used for creating finger joints that might give you an idea how to make repeated, evenly spaced cuts. Do the cuts on one side of a sheet of HDPE, flip it over, turn it 90 degrees and do the cuts in the opposite direction, then slice it and cut to length to turn out the final product. This will require a bit of R&D... talking to someone with some fine woodworking experience would be a big help. I would also suggest prototyping the production process using a less expensive material, such as MDF, until the jigs are worked out and acceptable tolerances are achieved. For an investment of probably less than $200, plus hours and hours of work, it is quite possible to have hundreds of these produced and ready to go very quickly. I don't think anyone is going to become a millionaire off of this, but the beauty of it is that done properly any financial losses... even if sales are terrible... will be offset by the educational value of going through the entrepreneurial process. Go for it! Jason |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Umm, so let me get this straight if you used this as a chain tension device than how long would it last due to the chain grinding against it. Also chain has that special pattern to it with that wouldn't it get locked up on the edges of this device? might want some sort of bearingS to prevent friction but that is just me.
|
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Quote:
|
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
I would have to see some test data before i make any real judgment on things since the world is full surprises.
|
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
what is the purpose of the holes on the front and back?
|
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Quote:
Look at the white tensioner on the lift mechanism, it is suspended by springs and zip ties. The sprockets lifting the arm were of different sizes (a 60 tooth and a 15 tooth), so the tensioner had a tendency of diving down to the smaller sprocket. |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Quote:
Delrin (and UHMW) are both engineering plastics that have very low friction, and both work great for chain tensioners of various kinds. I prefer Delrin where possible since it machines very nicely (you can mill it really fast too), but it does cost quite a bit. But if you want proof of plastic chain tensioners, here's a photo from Team 228's 2007 robot. ![]() The white plastic circles are either Delrin (back one) or UHMW (front one). You can also see a third Delrin one on the drivetrain through one of the chassis rail lightening holes in the back. These are really simple ones: plastic rod with an off-center hole. As you rotate it around, it varies the radius; and by cranking down the bolt, it will hold its position. The Delrin ones held up the entire year (about five competitions and a lot of other random driving) with barely any noticeable surface scratches. The UHMW ones had small (about 1/16") grooves in them from the chain. (There was no particular reason why certain ones were Delrin and others UHMW; they just happened to be whichever our machinist mentor grabbed from the stockpile when making them.) |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
![]() Saw this on 1902's '06 bot and chuckled after remembering this thread... apparently they work :) |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
I can see why you would want two different sized grooves for the chain to accommodate both #25 and #35 chain, but do you need the different sized grooves for the zip ties, too?
I ask only because it would seem to save a few manufacturing steps to put only a single groove in for each zip tie. In a similar vein, would it, perhaps, be easier to drill the holes ALL the way through the tensioner? That way you would only need to do two drilling operations rather than four. You may have a different production path in mind than I envision (as I've mentioned, I see this being an ideal shape to cut on a table saw). For instance with a CNC router, putting in extra grooves would require little in the way of additional manufacturing time. But if you are going to be kicking these out by the hundred using some manual production method, you probably want to include optimizing the production path as part of your design process. Just a few thoughts that occurred to me without having "seen inside your head" to know why you made these design choices... perhaps I have overlooked something perfectly obvious to you. If so, my apologies. Jason |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Quote:
Another thing to consider: If you were to make 2 different models for two different sizes of chain, it would simplify your design immensely. I doubt many teams will be switching their tensioners between different sizes of chain very often. Just because there is demand for more than one chain size, doesn't mean you need to incorporate all sizes into one product Honestly, I liked your original design better. I think the most recent one you posted looks too complicated and time-consuming to machine. |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Guys, the reason for one tensioner is that we used the #25 Tensioner for both 25 and 35 chain and it worked perfectly. There will be no machining, i am probably going to have a mold for this made. I will probably end up changing the final design after all the comments and after more test runs of this tensioner.
Thanks Cd |
Re: pic: Floating Zip Tie Chain Tensioner
Quote:
I hope that the sales volume is sufficient to cover the up-front cost of the tooling. Jason |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 00:46. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi