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4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
I've searched and I really didn't find any discussions that directly answer these questions. If you know of a posting or white paper that addresses these questions, can you please post a link to it, otherwise, what are your thoughts, and why?
I've read through several white papers, but none seem to address these specific questions. If gearing was appropriately matched, what are the advantages and disadvantages of the various diameters of wheels? Does the width of the wheel really matter that much? EDIT: This is as much for general consumption as it is for my education. |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
As a general thing, obstacle traversing is better with a larger wheel (larger wheel, larger obstacle). However, larger wheels can easily be more weight, and a smaller wheel can be made to climb as effectively as a large one. Pick your poison; I'm not quite sure whether there's enough difference between a 6" and 8" or between a 4" and a 6" to make it worthwhile. You only get about an extra inch of vertical climbing ability. 4" to 8", probably enough to make it worthwhile.
On width, ideal physics says no difference, while reality says wider is better. I'll let the idealists and the realists argue that one out, preferably by testing. Gearing matched: Given that the gearing is matched to give the same robot speed, a smaller wheel will tend to need a smaller reduction (less weight) to go as fast as a larger wheel. (Smaller reduction = higher rotational speed, for those that might be confused.) |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
Cost, tread life, ability to go over obstacles, ground clearance, room for sprockets/chains, and robot stability (you can have a longer wheelbase with smaller wheels), are a few of the considerations that I can think of.
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Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
OK, so smaller wheels have a distinct advantage for lowering the CG of the robot and maybe reducing the weight a bit, but also reduce ground clearance if it is needed. Larger wheels allow you to traverse a larger step change in the driving surface, but not much advantage on a ramp change.
Good stuff. What else? |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
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As to wheel size there are lots of pros and cons to each. Weight, speed, efficiency to name a few. It's really personal preference, do you need the weight? do you want low/high ground clearence?, ect. As to whitepapers I think one team (234?) is working on testing various sized wheels for differences in preformance. However, I wouldn't expect it to be out any time soon. |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
Bryan, wider wheel does not give higher normal force because it is a wider wheel. Normal force is the same--object mass/# of object points of contact.
However, tires are rubber. Rubber, when warmed to a certain point, gets "stickier". In that case, more surface area contact at a contact point is better. |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
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Anyway, there are a lot of reasons to like smaller wheels. The wheels themselves weigh less, and less of a reduction is needed to achieve the same output properties as a larger wheel. The primary drawback is that smaller wheels require more effort to climb obstacles with - a smaller wheel inherently has lower potential ground clearance than a larger wheel. With proper design this can be worked around - many teams climbed the bump this year with 4" wheels and the bump was a rather aggressive obstacle. |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
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Remember: Ideal physics tend to take place on a surface with uniform friction (possibly no friction) and in a vacuum unless otherwise specified. There are very few places that have both. Because that sort of place is rare, especially when Murphy is around (or at a robotics competition), reality tends to win over physics by emphasizing those slight differences. |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
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"u = constant" is an engineering approximation... which may or may not be a good approximation depending on material properties. |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
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http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ht=tread+width http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ht=tread+width I also distinctly recall Andy Baker making some comments on this. Where they did some tests and found that a wider tread DOES have more grip on carpet. Suffice to say this debate has been going on for as long as most of us have been around these boards. I also want to point out an earlier thread on this http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=84980 (If I screwed up some of these links and made them point to the same place someone let me know, I'm sort of out of it today) |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
Wider tread provides absolutely no benefit. When the surfaces are hard, uniform, and flat (Lunacy)
A wider tread does increase the amount of gripping ability when you are talking about carpet though. Think of carpet wheels kinda like Velcro, when you drive a carpet wheel over carpet, some amount of interweaving occurs, resulting in some amount of grip based on contact area. Whether or not the amount of increased grip is usable is still up in the air, but I am betting that it would increase grip a small amount. |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
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Think of it like Velcro. What's harder to pull straight off, one hook grabbing on to one loop, or one inch of hooks on one inch of loops. Quote:
Sorry if this repeats any of the information on the linked threads, it's just nice to have all the important information in one place. EDIT: big1boom got to it first :( |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
Do any of you have measured data of how this phenomena applies to an FRC application? Anyone?
Do any of you whom are convinced about this fact with long explanations know how much surface area comes into play? Numbers and rates, not "a little" or "a lot". |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
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Wider wheels (or tank treads) = larger contact patch. Larger contact patch = more grip than smaller contact patch. More grip = more traction for the same surface. Therefore, more drivetrain contact patch = more traction, under carpet conditions. |
Re: 4" vs. 6" vs. 8" wheels. Advantages?
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My wager is the effect is larger than people would think. |
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