Go to Post "If two kids from every school who would otherwise have been uninterested in technology watched this special tonight and was inspired to learn more, then the world just changed because of it." - Barry Bonzack [more]
Home
Go Back   Chief Delphi > FIRST > General Forum
CD-Media   CD-Spy  
portal register members calendar search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read FAQ rules

 
Reply
Thread Tools Rating: Thread Rating: 2 votes, 5.00 average. Display Modes
  #1   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 16:25
Cash4587's Avatar
Cash4587 Cash4587 is offline
Mentor
AKA: Cooper Cash
FRC #4587 (Jersey Voltage)
Team Role: Coach
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Rookie Year: 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 303
Cash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud of
1114 Inspired Chasis

I have been working on this chassis a few weeks now and I think I have finally gotten it to where I am ready to show you guys. I tried to base this chassis completely off of 1114's 2013 chassis. All my work was done by research of pictures and videos . I have not actually seen the chassis in person so keep that in mind. Well the only thing I haven't really figured out how to implement into this design is the chain tensioners. They basically are a bolt with a nylon tube around it inside a slot pushing down on the chain. Everything is kept simple just like on 1114's actual chassis. Well, without further adieu enjoy!
P.S. I also I have a sorta remake of their climbing arm in the works. I am trying to model it but it is not as easy to do as the chassis.
Attached Thumbnails
Click image for larger version

Name:	1114 Inspired.PNG
Views:	1326
Size:	237.1 KB
ID:	14959  
Reply With Quote
  #2   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 17:17
Akash Rastogi Akash Rastogi is offline
Jim Zondag is my Spirit Animal
FRC #2170 (Titanium Tomahawks)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Rookie Year: 2006
Location: Manchester, Connecticut
Posts: 7,003
Akash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond reputeAkash Rastogi has a reputation beyond repute
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cash4587 View Post
I have been working on this chassis a few weeks now and I think I have finally gotten it to where I am ready to show you guys. I tried to base this chassis completely off of 1114's 2013 chassis. All my work was done by research of pictures and videos . I have not actually seen the chassis in person so keep that in mind. Well the only thing I haven't really figured out how to implement into this design is the chain tensioners. They basically are a bolt with a nylon tube around it inside a slot pushing down on the chain. Everything is kept simple just like on 1114's actual chassis. Well, without further adieu enjoy!
P.S. I also I have a sorta remake of their climbing arm in the works. I am trying to model it but it is not as easy to do as the chassis.
Just remember, if you need more pictures or information for reference, never hesitate to PM Karthik or another team member for help. On several occasions they've provided CAD files and screenshots of CAD as well.
__________________
My posts and opinions do not necessarily reflect those of my affiliated team.
['16-'xx]: Mentor FRC 2170 | ['11-'13]: Co-Founder/Mentor FRC 3929 | ['06-'10]: Student FRC 11 - MORT | ['08-'12]: Founder - EWCP (OG)

Last edited by Akash Rastogi : 09-06-2013 at 20:23.
Reply With Quote
  #3   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 18:27
apalrd's Avatar
apalrd apalrd is offline
More Torque!
AKA: Andrew Palardy (Most people call me Palardy)
VRC #3333
Team Role: College Student
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: Auburn Hills, MI
Posts: 1,347
apalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond repute
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

From what I can see, that is the least rigid sheet metal chassis I have ever seen.

The front is open without any stiffener across, and the back had a nice flanged back plate but you cut the flange out.

Something has to bridge the two sides and provide stiffness, or the chassis dynamic performance will be quite bad.
__________________
Kettering University - Computer Engineering
Kettering Motorsports
Williams International - Commercial Engines - Controls and Accessories
FRC 33 - The Killer Bees - 2009-2012 Student, 2013-2014 Advisor
VEX IQ 3333 - The Bumble Bees - 2014+ Mentor

"Sometimes, the elegant implementation is a function. Not a method. Not a class. Not a framework. Just a function." ~ John Carmack
Reply With Quote
  #4   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 18:29
Cash4587's Avatar
Cash4587 Cash4587 is offline
Mentor
AKA: Cooper Cash
FRC #4587 (Jersey Voltage)
Team Role: Coach
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Rookie Year: 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 303
Cash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud of
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Quote:
Originally Posted by apalrd View Post
From what I can see, that is the least rigid sheet metal chassis I have ever seen.

The front is open without any stiffener across, and the back had a nice flanged back plate but you cut the flange out.

Something has to bridge the two sides and provide stiffness, or the chassis dynamic performance will be quite bad.
I'm sorry? Did I forget to mention it is unfinished?
Reply With Quote
  #5   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 18:59
apalrd's Avatar
apalrd apalrd is offline
More Torque!
AKA: Andrew Palardy (Most people call me Palardy)
VRC #3333
Team Role: College Student
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: Auburn Hills, MI
Posts: 1,347
apalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond repute
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

You posted an image of a chassis design on Chief Delphi. The Chief Delphi community has seen many chassis designs, and helps many designers such as yourself improve their designs and methods.

It's generally frowned upon to copy a design without understanding the engineering behind it. You can understand the engineering behind it by designing, building, and testing a chassis and learning what is right and wrong, and improving it for the next design iteration. Frequently, by doing this, you will learn why they did something a specific way by not doing it on your own design and wishing you had, or finding that the solution works fine in testing and accepting it as good enough. It's perfectly fine (and highly encouraged) to use another teams design as a starting point when designing something new, but to gain anything you have to make it your own. Short of actually building and testing a physical chassis, you can ask experts and teammates for advice during the design process to iterate to a final design, before possibly building and testing the final product. Chief Delphi includes many long-term FRC members who have designed many drivetrains, and some engineers who have learned the common design pitfalls and are willing to help you.

As someone who has built and tested many sheet metal and other types of drivetrains, your design needs more torsional stiffness. This is most easily provided by adding cross bracing.
__________________
Kettering University - Computer Engineering
Kettering Motorsports
Williams International - Commercial Engines - Controls and Accessories
FRC 33 - The Killer Bees - 2009-2012 Student, 2013-2014 Advisor
VEX IQ 3333 - The Bumble Bees - 2014+ Mentor

"Sometimes, the elegant implementation is a function. Not a method. Not a class. Not a framework. Just a function." ~ John Carmack
Reply With Quote
  #6   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 20:02
ablatner ablatner is offline
Registered User
AKA: Andrew Blatner
FRC #0100 (The Wildhats)
Team Role: Leadership
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: Redwood City
Posts: 116
ablatner is on a distinguished road
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cash4587 View Post
I'm sorry? Did I forget to mention it is unfinished?
You did forget, and if you post a design or CAD on Chief Delphi that is "ready to show", expect critique whether it's finished or not.
__________________
2009-2013: Student, Team 100
2013-????: ?
Reply With Quote
  #7   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 22:49
Cash4587's Avatar
Cash4587 Cash4587 is offline
Mentor
AKA: Cooper Cash
FRC #4587 (Jersey Voltage)
Team Role: Coach
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Rookie Year: 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 303
Cash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud of
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Thanks for all the support guys! (no pun intended) I appreciate the help, I updated it so it should withstand anything now. Built like a tank #win #sostrong #support #yolo #chassis #aluminum ##
Attached Thumbnails
Click image for larger version

Name:	LOLOLOL.PNG
Views:	590
Size:	282.1 KB
ID:	14960  
Reply With Quote
  #8   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 23:18
tickspe15's Avatar
tickspe15 tickspe15 is offline
Purdue University
AKA: Spencer Tickman
FRC #1747 (Harrison Boiler Robotics)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: Issaquah, Washington
Posts: 252
tickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant futuretickspe15 has a brilliant future
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

is that a solid metal block. If so you may run into some weight problems.
Reply With Quote
  #9   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 23:33
cj3958's Avatar
cj3958 cj3958 is offline
Registered User
FRC #5234 (Marauderbots)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jan 2012
Rookie Year: 2007
Location: East Lansing, MI
Posts: 34
cj3958 will become famous soon enough
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Let me preface this with the fact that I think that it is coming along great.... But(thus letting you know that everything else will be critical of your work)

Have you put any thought into how you would build this chassis if that was going to be an offseason project or something? To me, it seems pointless to design a robot that is impossible for YOUR team to build. Not just a hall of fame team, or a world champion team, but your team. What you have right now looks like it is un-manufacturable to me, but maybe it is just the way that I am looking at it.

If I were you, I would try and figure out what it is that you are trying to learn from this experience, is it just to learn the concept of CAD? Or is it to get practice for the build season? Or Is it to learn how the world champion and hall of fame teams build robots and why they do certain things to their robot?

Once you establish what it is that you might try to learn from the experience, it will guide you as to how you would proceed from here. I did a similar thing last fall. I was eventually just told by our lead mentor to stop doing that and make a robot that we could build, (given only a spec, and a general construction technique) and because I gained more of the experience of how to make a robot that my team could build it helped A LOT more in the build season.
__________________
Current Lead Mechanical Mentor for 5234 the marauder-bots http://www.marauderbots.com/
Previously a student for one year on team 246 - Overclocked and 3 years on 3958 - Schodinger's Cat
Reply With Quote
  #10   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 09-06-2013, 23:47
Cash4587's Avatar
Cash4587 Cash4587 is offline
Mentor
AKA: Cooper Cash
FRC #4587 (Jersey Voltage)
Team Role: Coach
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Rookie Year: 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 303
Cash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud ofCash4587 has much to be proud of
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Quote:
Originally Posted by cj3958 View Post
Let me preface this with the fact that I think that it is coming along great.... But(thus letting you know that everything else will be critical of your work)

Have you put any thought into how you would build this chassis if that was going to be an offseason project or something? To me, it seems pointless to design a robot that is impossible for YOUR team to build. Not just a hall of fame team, or a world champion team, but your team. What you have right now looks like it is un-manufacturable to me, but maybe it is just the way that I am looking at it.

If I were you, I would try and figure out what it is that you are trying to learn from this experience, is it just to learn the concept of CAD? Or is it to get practice for the build season? Or Is it to learn how the world champion and hall of fame teams build robots and why they do certain things to their robot?

Once you establish what it is that you might try to learn from the experience, it will guide you as to how you would proceed from here. I did a similar thing last fall. I was eventually just told by our lead mentor to stop doing that and make a robot that we could build, (given only a spec, and a general construction technique) and because I gained more of the experience of how to make a robot that my team could build it helped A LOT more in the build season.
Oh no this is something that I am doing for practice and also for a chassis for a team potential standard go to chassis, (Minus the cut in the front) I built this all using the sheet metal tool so idk how it would be not build-able? care to explain how it wouldn't?
Reply With Quote
  #11   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 10-06-2013, 00:39
J_Miles's Avatar
J_Miles J_Miles is offline
FiM Referee
AKA: Jared Miles
no team (EngiNERDs)
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Posts: 128
J_Miles is a splendid one to beholdJ_Miles is a splendid one to beholdJ_Miles is a splendid one to beholdJ_Miles is a splendid one to beholdJ_Miles is a splendid one to beholdJ_Miles is a splendid one to beholdJ_Miles is a splendid one to behold
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cash4587 View Post
I built this all using the sheet metal tool so idk how it would be not build-able? care to explain how it wouldn't?
Just because you can make it in CAD doesn't mean it can be manufactured (or that it would be sensible/economical to do. (i.e. Would building this chassis require an insane amount of wasted metal?))
__________________

Reply With Quote
  #12   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 10-06-2013, 01:22
lemiant's Avatar
lemiant lemiant is offline
the Dreamer
AKA: Alex
FRC #4334 (Alberta Tech Alliance)
Team Role: Leadership
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Calgary, AB, Canada
Posts: 562
lemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond reputelemiant has a reputation beyond repute
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

You would need some good sheet metal breaks to be able produce all the bends on the side plates with them being so close together.
__________________
FRC Team 4334
2012 - Archimedes Champions, IRI Champions
2013 - Western Canadian Regional Winner, Galileo Quarter-Finalilst

Reply With Quote
  #13   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 10-06-2013, 01:31
EricH's Avatar
EricH EricH is offline
New year, new team
FRC #1197 (Torbots)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: SoCal
Posts: 19,801
EricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond repute
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Quote:
Originally Posted by J_Miles View Post
Just because you can make it in CAD doesn't mean it can be manufactured (or that it would be sensible/economical to do. (i.e. Would building this chassis require an insane amount of wasted metal?))
Exactly. I have seen parts in CAD that would be impossible to build without one particular piece of equipment.

Here is what I'm seeing that is probably a waste of material, and what I'd do about it:

--Those two solid (endcapped?) cross-beams. You don't need the ends on there; go ahead and remove them (they'll be a REAL pain, even with sheet metal). Better yet, replace them with a bellypan and some much lighter angled upper crossmembers. If you do need only upper crossmembers, then make them as small and light as you can get away with--and probably not a full tube, unless that were to make some other aspect of the design easier.

--It looks like you have a solid sheet area below the rear cross-beam; that could probably be removed. Ditto for part of the front that looks quite similar.

--No light-weighting. Yes, this is sheet metal--but you can still remove quite a bit of material on the sides of the robot. Triangles are your friend.

Essentially, what I'm seeing is that you could use some studying in the direction of how to effectively use sheet metal. I don't have a lot of experience myself, but the one thing that I keep hearing is "flanges" are what give sheet metal its strength--you've got flanges, all right, but you also have a lot of material that probably isn't contributing a whole lot to the structural integrity of the drivebase.
__________________
Past teams:
2003-2007: FRC0330 BeachBots
2008: FRC1135 Shmoebotics
2012: FRC4046 Schroedinger's Dragons

"Rockets are tricky..."--Elon Musk

Reply With Quote
  #14   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 10-06-2013, 01:55
Adrian Clark Adrian Clark is offline
Registered User
FRC #1678 (Citrus Circuits)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Apr 2012
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: United States
Posts: 79
Adrian Clark is a jewel in the roughAdrian Clark is a jewel in the roughAdrian Clark is a jewel in the roughAdrian Clark is a jewel in the rough
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Is there a purpose to front gap other than copying it from 1114's chassis? If you took out the front gap and made it like you did in the back minus the cutout in the flange you'd have a pretty solid frame.

Side note: because of your cim cutouts in the bellypan and the flanges on your frame it will be impossible to either install or remove the gearboxes once the frame is assembled. I suggest elongating the slot for the cim to allow space for the gearbox to slide out from under the flange. Details like this are often missed in cad, make sure you put some thought in how this thing will be built and assembled.

edit: EricH is right, triangles are your friend, quoted for truth.

Last edited by Adrian Clark : 10-06-2013 at 01:58.
Reply With Quote
  #15   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 10-06-2013, 13:15
apalrd's Avatar
apalrd apalrd is offline
More Torque!
AKA: Andrew Palardy (Most people call me Palardy)
VRC #3333
Team Role: College Student
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: Auburn Hills, MI
Posts: 1,347
apalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond reputeapalrd has a reputation beyond repute
Re: 1114 Inspired Chasis

Let's analyze this from the beginning:

1. Material selection - Alloy and thickness
-I will assume aluminum. Most sheet metal designs in FRC use either a 5052 alloy or 6061 alloy. 5052 is softer than 6061, which makes 6061 harder to bend. This is both good and bad - Many sheet metal shops will only work with 5052 because it is easier to bend. If you use a thin 6061 alloy, it will bend just fine. We use 6061 T6, and bend it on a manual finger brake.
-Common thicknesses are 0.050", 0.063", 0.090", and 0.125". Some designs rely on the materials for strength, but good sheet metal designs rely on the profile of the sections (e.g. making C-channels or triangle beams out of formed sheet pieces) rather than the absolute material strength. We use 0.050" for our chassis and 0.090" for our gearboxes, with a mix of 0.050, 0.063, 0.090, and 0.125 for mechanisms. In 6061, 0.090" is hard to bend, but we do bend the gearbox plates. I've seen most 5052 teams use 0.090 for chassis components, but I have no experience with 5052 in that application.

2. Important forces/loads:
-Most chassis designs I've seen in FRC can handle the standard loads from gravity (weight of robot) and straight line acceleration, although point loads from mechanism attachment can bend thin sheet - it's better to spread out mechanism loads over a larger surface, using rows of rivets. It's also possible to use mechanisms for stiffness, which I'll get to later.
-Good dynamic performance of drop-center drivetrains requires good torsional stiffness. This is the rotation of one driveline relative to the other, and turning forces can pick raise and lower wheels such that the exact wheels you DON'T want to be touching the ground during a turn will be touching the ground, which is bad for dynamic performance.
-Any component which is stressed, or carrying loads which you are considering for chassis performance, should be modeled, anything which is not stressed should be modeled only for packaging at this stage. In some designs, the gearbox is stressed (carrying chassis loads). We (33 2013) use our gearboxes to span the chassis outer and chassis inner, as well as bridge the chassis inner rear and front panels (they are not continuous panels, the outers are). A bellypan as used by west coast drives is often thick plate (0.125" or 0.250") and used for material strength rather than as a section as sheet metal designs primarily use. It will help with racking of the two sides, but not will do nothing in torsion at the thicknesses used for sheet metal.
-Mechanisms can be used to increase stiffness of the chassis, especially if they span the width of the chassis.

3. Sections
-The strength of sheet metal designs primarily comes from the sections. A flange can turn a flat sheet into a L or C channel, greatly increasing it's strength. A box is hard, as it is almost impossible to bend unless it's more than one piece.
-The two chassis rails are almost always C channels. Cross members can be single C channels, but a full box or triangle section is very strong. Our 2012 chassis had two triangle sections crossing the chassis, one of which was also a ball ramp, and was very stiff.

4. Folding sheet metal
-Sheet metal is usually folded on a brake. With a manual finger brake, it's possible to remove fingers to bend tight corners (e.g. your chassis outer panel). Flanges which are bent several times (e.g. a flange off a flange) are usually hard to bend, there are a few exceptions such as the chassis rear in your design, which has two ~45degree bends and should be easy to bend.
-For some pieces which are small, you can bend them by hand with furnace pliers. We made quite a few ~4" square pieces with 4 flanges (one per side), two flanges had rivets and the other two for strength, to bridge chassis inner and chassis outer panels. These were easy to bend on the finger brake. We also once made a piece which connected to itself, this was tricky but we could bend it mostly by hand with furnace pliers. In general, designs which connect back to themselves should be split into two or more panels.

5. Joints
-A lot of stiffness can be lost in joints. Most sheet metal is joined with rows of rivets. There are many options for rivet size (1/8", 5/32", 3/16", 1/4"), spacing (1/2", 3/4", 1", 1.5"...) and material (steel or aluminum). We have used both 3/16" steel and 1/4" aluminum rivets in chassis designs and currently use 1/4" aluminum, but most hand riveters only go up to 3/16". I recommend pneumatic riveters, they're lots of fun.
-If possible, jointing two pieces on two planes is preferred. For example, joining the chassis outer to front panel via the top and front faces is much better than top only, or side face. This is especially important for mid-chassis cross members, as it's easiest to only attach them via the top or side, but both are required for stiffness.
-There are many cases where an axle needs to be supported by sheet metal. For a light-load application like a conveyor roller, you can just make a hole in the sheet metal and insert a bearing or bushing. For drivetrain axles, it's recommended to stiffen the area around the hole with another plate riveted to the chassis. This can also help align the axle and constrain it, depending on design. If you make it slightly beefier to hold the entire axle load, you can also slot the holes and use bolts instead of rivets, allowing tensioning.

6. Generic drivetrain concerns
-Wheel size
-Wheel tread/type
-Gear ratio
-Power input
-Using required drivetrain axles/components to stiffen the chassis
We often use the drive axles to provide stiffness between the chassis inner and chassis outer. Chain tensioners are also a good candidate for this. If designed right, a gearbox in the chassis can also provide a lot of stiffness between the two rails.

7. Manufacturing
Panels are 2d parts and can be cut on a 2d machine, such as but not limited to:
-CNC plasma cutter (not preferred for aluminum, but it does work)
-Waterjet cutter (good tolerance, moderate edge finish)
-Panel laser (excellent, very very expensive tool)
-Turret punch - Limited to specific contours which it has tools for, unless it's integrated with a laser or other cutter. If you use one, it is best to optimize the lightening patterns to what tools it has - e.g. if it has a 2" round punch, it's much faster to use 2" round lightening holes than triangles.
-By hand on bandsaw and drill press, this is sometimes impractical for large parts
Panels are then bend into 3d shapes using a brake. This is either automated or done by hand.
-There are many shapes which can be made in CAD which cannot be formed on a brake. Think about the bend order and how you would bend it for complex parts.

There's no substitute for design experience. No chassis design is perfect, there are many tradeoffs. You really need to build and break it to understand what is wrong with it, but you can catch a lot of possible issues in CAD.
__________________
Kettering University - Computer Engineering
Kettering Motorsports
Williams International - Commercial Engines - Controls and Accessories
FRC 33 - The Killer Bees - 2009-2012 Student, 2013-2014 Advisor
VEX IQ 3333 - The Bumble Bees - 2014+ Mentor

"Sometimes, the elegant implementation is a function. Not a method. Not a class. Not a framework. Just a function." ~ John Carmack
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 00:04.

The Chief Delphi Forums are sponsored by Innovation First International, Inc.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi