Quote:
Originally Posted by marccenter
Dear CD,
I was wondering if any teams that have progressed further into their build so far have determined that the elevator CIM motors overheat due to stalling?
I am assuming you are using a gearmotor attached to a CIM with a gear reduction ratio in the order of 50 to perhaps 90:1.
When the CIM elevator motor stops moving to hold a tote at a given height it is effectively stalled (motor speed nearly zero) and maximum current is drawn.
Have you found that your CIM elevator mount overheats in a two minute match? Were you holding one, two, three, or four totes?
Have you found it necessary to add an active braking mechanism to aid in the problem?
|
Why use such a big reduction? Unless you are using a pulley that is about a foot in diameter, that will most likely be too much reduction, and too slow.
If an average pulley/sprocket is about 2.5 inches in diameter, a 70:1 reduction off of a CIM will have a free speed of 0.87 ft/s, and a stall force of 1200 lbs. If you had to stall a CIM to hold up 60 lbs at that reduction, you would be using 5% of your stall torque. A CIM could do that basically forever without problems.
__________________
All statements made are my own and not the feelings of any of my affiliated teams.
Teams 1510 and 2898 - Student 2010-2012
Team 4488 - Mentor 2013-2016
Co-developer of
RobotDotNet, a .NET port of the WPILib.