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#1
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Gearing a Rotating Arm
Our current robot design includes a dual-flywheel shooter on an angle-adjustable arm which we are currently trying to figure out how to rotate. For reference, the arm can be approximated by a mass of 3.5kg at .3m from the pivot. Our question is what would be a good way of gearing the arm such that it is responsive. To make another approximation, let's say "responsive" means traveling from horizontal (0 degree) to 45 degrees in .5 seconds, which should really be taken as a guideline over a restriction for the design.
The current model involves a versaplanetary (motor and stages undecided) followed by a sprocket stage which is necessary for the placement of the gearbox but can be made a reduction anywhere from 1:1 to around 4:1. Is a versaplanetary a good choice for this situation? If so, where to go from there and if not, what other options have teams used? Last edited by kitare102 : 01-21-2016 at 12:52 AM. |
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#2
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
JVN calculator is my go-to for rotary stuff. Just plug in your ratios and it spits out speed.
For your application, I get a speed of 0.27 seconds to go 90* if I used 2 miniCIMs on 100:1 versaplanetaries (no extra reduction). |
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#3
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
Just a heads up, that speed sounds like it could be quite fast if you are looking to control the arm accurately, and you might want to play around with it a bit. I don't know the specifics of your mechanism, but you could probably mess with the chain reduction part of it to get it to a quick controllable speed in any case, and that would probably only require the minimal maintenance of changing sprockets. This is by no means a must-do, but it might be something you'd want to keep in mind.
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#4
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
No arms please
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#5
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
Out of curiousity why would you suggest against that? Our team is looking on doing something similar
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#6
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
Two teams wanting to work with severed arms? Wow... Where are you sourcing these spare body parts?
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#7
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
If you can swing that heavy an arm that fast, why not just remove the dual-flywheel shooter and its motors and throw the boulder a bit faster?
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#8
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
To answer a few questions and raise some more...
The arm is relatively short, and only rotates about one axis. The ball is contained by the arm as it moves, so the ball falling out isn't a concern. Now, according to the chart here: http://content.vexrobotics.com/vexpr...e-20151221.pdf (page 25, miniCIM simple load ratings) a miniCIM is not recommended for a versaplanetary at a reduction of 100:1. How should I interpret this? Thanks for the help so far, everyone. Last edited by kitare102 : 01-21-2016 at 04:31 PM. |
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#9
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
Quote:
I think the teams in question are dicussing a very different kind of arm though. If I'm picturing it correctly, it's just a pivoting intake/shooter on a lever arm. A very simple concept as there is just 1 range of motion to worry about. Last edited by Ginger Power : 01-21-2016 at 08:21 AM. |
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#10
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
Back in 2011 when we had a long arm, we used gas springs on moment arms to balance the weight of the arm. If you do it right, the arm will stay at any position you put it without having to stall the motor to hold it there. A sprocket or gear bolted directly to the arm, driven by a miniCIM in a 100:1 planetary with a decent secondary gear/sprocket reduction should get the job done.
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#11
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
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#12
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
Woah woah woah! You guys were the masters of arms last year!
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#13
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
Quote:
The RS550 and RS775's rely on fan cooling. If the stall current is high enough, the windings will start smoking pretty quickly, possibly causing permanent damage to the motor. |
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#14
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
We made a wooden cam last year to raise an arm, I think the rate and load would be similar to what you're trying to do. The students come up with some neat ideas!
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#15
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Re: Gearing a Rotating Arm
We plan on running a small arm on a cim geared by a versa planetary 100:1. The arm should be done this week and will definitely be tested next week. We may tone the gearing down and if it seems like a situation of durability we may substitute our P80 in. But, It looks like it will be fine. One thing I will see is do not directly drive the axle with the motor. Use chains, belts, or gears. We plan on using gears.
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