![]() |
Articulating tubes on roller claws
I know that I've seen teams articulate tubes to a desired angle, but they used 2 separate motors. Does anyone know of any way to accomplish the same thing but using only one motor?
Thanks! |
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
Quote:
|
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
An idea that we played with, but never really got working, was to have the top and bottom roller both connected to the same motor, using pulleys, but having the top roller geared somewhat faster. This makes it so you can suck the tube in, then continue to suck in and it will rotate up. Put a backstop so the tube can only rotate so far, and all you have to do is suck in till the tube hits the stop.
|
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
Quote:
You're probably definitely going to need 2 motors to articulate a tube. |
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
Quote:
What I'm thinking is something like a dog shifter, with a "forward" mode, a "reverse" mode with a second gear to reverse the belt, and a "neutral" mode (in between forward and reverse) for slower articulation. Alternatively, you could just have the "neutral" mode. Now, if you want to count any servos used as motors, then yeah, that is 2 motors. |
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
Well let's look at this. You want to be able to achieve 4 states:
------R | <- (Pull Tube In) -----R ------F | (Push Tube Out) -> -----F ------F | (Rotate tube counter clockwise) -----R ------R | (Rotate tube Clockwise) -----F With a motor and a standard gearbox you have only two possible states Forward and Reverse. Similarly you have pneumatics with two states In and Out. In order to get 4 states using those devices you need at least two of them (2x2 = 4), many people on this thread have suggested novel ways of utilizing a servo or pneumatic in combination with a motor, however none are simpler than just using two motors. The ONLY way you could do what you want using just one motor and nothing else would be to increase the number of possible states the motor can have. This could be done by creating a centrifugally shifting version of the gearbox that EricH recommended, for example. Such a gearbox would allow intake and output at high speeds and change its output to allow rotation at low speed. This is probably the WORST solution suggested to date as it is crazy complicated, but it is the only way to achieve what you want with just one motor. tl;dr Use two motors! - Alex |
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
Quote:
Quote:
This was a good lesson we took from last year; if you minimize the degrees of freedom of a manipulator you can make a system that is in theory simpler than one that uses more actuators, but the final result typically ends up being more complicated than simply using multiple motors. Still, that won't stop us from trying... manipulators that utilize minimal actuators have a nice appeal. |
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
The lightest simplest design is to use 2 motors in this case. Adding a linkage or switching system adds complexity and failure points. This is a case of bad engineering practice. Remember just because you can make something doesn't mean you should. Complex mechanisms like that have been the downfall of more FRC robots than anything else over the years.
|
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
If you want to arbitrarily orient the tube, then two motors is the simplest option.
But I would argue that there is not a lot of value in being able to arbitrarily rotate the tube, in and of itself. Typically, there is one orientation you want those tubes to be in when you go to score. So being able to rotate the tube is only useful in that you can bring any tube you pick up or are carrying to that orientation. If getting the tube you picked up into your desired scoring orientation is your goal, there are several one-motor ways to make it happen. You can design your roller claw such that the geometry forces tubes to be sucked in to the correct orientation. |
Re: Articulating tubes on roller claws
340's roller claw this year oriented tubes pretty consistently from what I saw at Chesapeake. They used one motor (I think) and a series of rollers to suck tubes in while also turning them to vertical. Here's a picture for reference: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/36576
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:46. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi