View Single Post
  #7   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 31-12-2006, 02:20
Cody Carey's Avatar
Cody Carey Cody Carey is offline
,':-)
AKA: C. Carey
FRC #0306 (CRT)
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Rookie Year: 2004
Location: Corry, PA
Posts: 1,137
Cody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond reputeCody Carey has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to Cody Carey Send a message via Yahoo to Cody Carey
Re: pic: DeWalt Gearbox with two CIMs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Greg Needel View Post

From my experience in drive train design I will always advise that people go with a central gearbox and power transmitted through chain or another means. This is due to your overall friction force (another discussion) but basically if you spread out the load to all of your wheels each wheel can take the total torque produced in the situation where another set is off the ground (assuming the mass is over the wheels touching the ground) that is where the normal force/ weight of the robot plays in (yet another discussion)
I'm confused... I don't quite see where this paragraph fits in with proving that there will never be more torque if you put the motors through separate gearboxes. Maybe it's just me only having a highschool physics background, but are some of the words taken a bit out of context? maybe a diagram would help me? I understand the terminology, this paragraph just confuses me.


But then again, maybe it is because it is 2:30 in the morning.
__________________
Reply With Quote