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#1
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using gas springs? needed?
in the past i've used gas springs to help dampen arm movements, and in some cases provide significant lifting force to help an arm lift hefty weights.
last year some of the great arm robots i saw weren't using any springs, i.e. kingman/cheesy poofs, and hotbot. what is the professional opinion out there about this. is dampening needed? can a robust software solution make this mechanical solution obsolete? would a braking method like that used by Wildstang be enough? can the victors in brake mode supply some type of dampening? the reason i'm so interested is that my last two arms worked well but the gas springs seemed to be more of a hassle than anything. now that i have access to some decent programming students and mentors i was hoping to phase them out all together. HotBot had a huge arm last year....no shocks or springs in sight! any opinions are welcome. thanks. |
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#2
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Re: using gas springs? needed?
Sort of along the same lines, I have always wondered why lots of good teams do not use some sort of spring counterbalance on their arm. I can't seem to find a reason not to use springs to put your arm at "neutral buoyancy" so your drive motors have to do less work and you can lift more.
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#3
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Re: using gas springs? needed?
anyone have a good reason for or against them?
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