Quote:
Originally Posted by Nate Laverdure
Confusing to talk about increasing a ratio (e.g. 10:1) because it's unclear which quantity (1 or 10) you're increasing. Better to ask "How can decreasing a drivetrain's gear reduction increase its top speed?"
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I guess I think about it as increasing or decreasing the equivalent fraction (10/1 in the case of your example). Maybe I'm wrong...
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1502
When the gear ratio is too big for the wheel and motor combination. We experienced it this year. We put on a sprocket that was to small by accident and it would barely move. We doubled the diameter of the sprocket on the wheel and we were golden.
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Right, I was pointing out that both are valid questions.
According to the
Wikipedia definition at least, gear ratio is the ratio of the input speed to the output speed, so putting a larger sprocket on the wheel (or conversely, a smaller sprocket on the driving axle) would increase the gear ratio, creating a greater speed reduction. This reduces the theoretical unloaded freespeed, but, as I believe you're saying, can increase the top speed in torque-starved conditions.
Some other questions:
- Why is it important to keep electrical wires as short as possible? (Signal wiring and power wiring can have different answers, though there is overlap)
- What would be some advantages/disadvantages of using a smaller amount of a stronger but heavier material vs a larger amount of a weaker but lighter material (e.g. steel vs aluminum)
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