View Single Post
  #2   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2016, 19:45
GeeTwo's Avatar
GeeTwo GeeTwo is offline
Technical Director
AKA: Gus Michel II
FRC #3946 (Tiger Robotics)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jan 2014
Rookie Year: 2013
Location: Slidell, LA
Posts: 3,564
GeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond reputeGeeTwo has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Are there any alternatives to an electric actuator?

If you don't need to stop in mid-stroke, pneumatic cylinders are a good way to go for this sort of thing. One of the nice things about pneumatics is that most of the weight can be placed in the "main chassis" of your device, and the parts on the periphery are reasonably light-weight and simple. The really good thing is that you don't have to worry about "burning up motors" - pneumatic devices deliver a nice, steady force and don't consume any power or suffer any additional stress holding that force at the end of the stroke.

Edit: Also, IIRC, there are a number of non-cylinder actuators based on pneumatics and/or vacuum which are really light-weight and adaptable to plenty of "biomimicry" applications. They aren't legal in FRC, so I didn't look too deeply into them, but they may be worth it for you.
__________________

If you can't find time to do it right, how are you going to find time to do it over?
If you don't pass it on, it never happened.
Robots are great, but inspiration is the reason we're here.
Friends don't let friends use master links.
Reply With Quote