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How to Power a Rotating Turret
Our moon rocks will go straight up via conveyer and be shot using spinning wheels. Our method for aiming will be using a turntable to spin a mounted plate to deflect the moonrocks to the trailer. We have considered direct drive, gears, and belts. What method of power is a good way to spin the turret?
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
Get a big sprocket like one of these:
http://www.ifirobotics.com/sprockets.shtml You might have to cut out the center depending on your design but they might be what you're looking for. |
Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
Sprocket on a turntable is what I've designed before and also probably the easiest. Try the 96 tooth sprocket from ifi.
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
We attached a 25 chain on the outer rim of an aluminum plate mounted to the lazy susan.
Then, we attached a FP motor (with the accompanying plastic gearbox) with a custom hub/sprocket attachment to directly drive and spin the fixed chain. The speed and "smoothness" of running it is to our liking. :D No jitters of course. Will take some pics and post once we get our encoder on for camera control purposes. |
Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
One way we came up with, was to rivet some gates belting (ribbed side out) to the outside of the turntable (This basically turns it into a a giant gear).
Then loop a second belt around it and a gear that goes to the drive motor. |
Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
We purchased a larger turntable than the KoP one from McMaster Carr. We attached bolts in a circle around the border of it. We then put a timing belt around the bolts which we're turning with a window motor.
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
Is your turret going more than 360 degrees in rotation?
We figured on my team for simplicity sake and since we will never have to shoot behind us into our own trailer, we only will be rotating our turret 270 degrees. Because of this, we're using belting, and we're just permanently attatching the belt to a part of the turret, and spinning it with a motor. Since the fastened part of the belting will never come away from the round turret, we'll be good. Just a suggestion if you dont want 360 degrees. |
Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
Make sure that if you're using a straight motor that you have limit switches around the back, I doubt you're going to wanna be shooting in to your basket, or spinning loops in circuitry for that matter.
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
We're using a V belt. Other ideas we consider include a toothed belt, attatched at the ends to the turret, and a chain, same thing. The plan is for less than 270 degrees rotation, so there really is no need to put a big sprocket on the turret.
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
We took one of the AndyMark globe motor hubs, attached it to a little nylon pulley we had left over from last year that was about the same diameter (1.5" maybe?) and screwed some scrap wedgetop tread to it. Then we just touch the tread to the outside of a 13" lazy Susan we got and turn it on. Works like a charm, and it's very simple. Not to mention, if something gets jammed and the turntable won't move (like that would ever happen, right?) it provides a failsafe so that the tread will just start slipping instead of snapping/cutting/otherwise breaking whatever was in the way.
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
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As to the OP's question, I've used a couple different mechanisms, including a 60 tooth #35 pitch aluminum split sprocket (used in go-karts) and the Gates Powergrip GT-2 timing belts and pulleys (like those supplied in the kit). |
Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
It's probably going to be less than 360 but we could use 360 to shoot into our own trailer if the strategy is necessary...
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
We took a lesson from old record player turntables (ask an older mentor :yikes: ). The platter was often driven by just a rubber roller in contact with the platter inside edge. We are using a non KOP turntable that has an edge about 0.5 inches high. Turn a Keyang motor gear's upper portion (not the lower portion) to .625 OD. McMaster Carr sells drive rollers with a compatible ID for about $20. Slip the drive roller onto the Keyang, mount near turntable so frictional contact made to inside or outside. Works great. Our rotation rate about 10 seconds for 360 degrees. Denso's would probably yield about 7 seconds per 360 degrees on our design. Design will slip if rotation is limited for some reason and not break. There are ways to tell where you are rotationally without limit switches and encoders....:D Design is safe even if exposed.
Stop by our pit at Hartford and the team would be happy to show it off. Good luck! |
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