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#1
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which motor for arm?
i need some help....i didn't know in which motor use for the arm ??
we try 2 keyang motors but when the arm goes up it fall down |
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#2
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Re: which motor for arm?
Two Keyang motors should be able to hold up an arm since they have worm gearing. How much would you say your arm weighs and can it be lightened?
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#3
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Re: which motor for arm?
was the worm gearing included in the kit box...?
if yes how does it look? and how am i supposed to use it? |
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#4
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Re: which motor for arm?
The Worm gear is built into the Keyang motors and make them hard but not impossible to back drive. We gear down even more (with gears or chain and sprockets) to slow the motor and add torque.
Last edited by AcesPease : 31-01-2007 at 06:52. Reason: clarification |
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#5
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Re: which motor for arm?
It would be helpful to know the length of the arm you are working with and the mass of the arm. It would also help to know the mass of the end effector, or whatever you have at the end of the arm.
Then calculate: Arm torque=(mass of arm * .5 * length of arm) + (mass of end effector * length of arm)+ (mass of ringer * length of arm) For a safe operating margin you probably want to roughly double this value... The Keyang motors output about 10 Nm of torque (7.5 foot pounds) at stall. Two of them working together should deliver 20Nm of torque. If you gear that down about 5:1, you will have 100Nm of torque to drive your arm... that is about 75 foot pounds. The arm will take (very) roughly five seconds to complete one full 360 degree rotation... if you only need 90 degrees of rotation, that will only take one second... which is a bit fast. You may want to gear the motors down closer to 8:1 or 10:1. Since the motors have worm drive built in to them (notice how the window motors are different from the planetary geared globe and banebots gear motors) they should resist a fair degree of backdrive, and be able to hold you arm in position quite nicely. Do, however, make sure that you leave some safety margin in there... as your robot drives and bumps around the floor the sudden impact forces on the motors could be quite high and could end up damaging the gearhead on the motors. Use pulleys, sprockets or some other mechanism between your motor and your arm to manage the torque. Hope that helps, Jason |
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#6
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Re: which motor for arm?
I would definitely use the FP motors with the white gearboxes. We've used them in the past on every one of our robots.
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#7
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Re: which motor for arm?
thank you we will try to use in your advices
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#8
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Re: which motor for arm?
Two principles to keep in mind are to make the weight at the end of your arm as light as possible, and to balance the weight of the arm with a spring of some kind. This will allow you to use the motors' power only to move the arm and lift the weight of the playing piece (this year the inflatable rings).
Examples: If the arm only rotates 90 degrees you could use a gas strut (similar to what holds up the rear hatch of hatchback cars) or compression spring to balance some of the weight. In the USA gas struts are available in auto parts stores. You could also use surgical rubber tubing that passes around a narrow, large diameter pulley at the arm axle and is attached to the chassis below. To keep the arm parked in a specific location, From a control standpoint - you could mount a potentiometer or encoder on the arm axle and use a "PID control loop" software to have the software drive the motor to keep the arm positioned as the last potentiometer or encoder location when you took your hands off the joystick or 'on' button. |
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