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#1
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How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
For multi-stage telescoping lift designs where the actuation motor actively drives the stages up and down, how are the actuation cables typically kept tensioned? I have searched throughout the forums and white papers, and have not seen much on specifically how the cables kept tensioned.
For instance, with a continuous-style telescoping lift design, the up-feed cable and down-feed cable should ideally feed in and out at the same rate, but since they wrap around drive pulleys, their effective feed rates will differ from each other as the lift extends/retracts since their pulley-wrap radius differs depending on how much cable is on each drive pulley (assuming the cable wraps onto itself). Thus, in that case, an active tensioner would be needed to take up the slack. A possible exception could be if the cables spiraled around the drive pulleys in a single layer (so the wrap radius remains constant), but in that case, is something done to ensure the single-layer spiral wrapping? A similar cable-tensioning issue could potentially exist with cascade-style telescoping lift designs, too. Are there schemes in place to ensure the cables always remained tensioned without an active tensioner? For this thread, I am only referring to designs where one motor (or a group of coupled motors) drive all of the stages, not designs where each stage has its own motor. I would appreciate your insight. Thanks! |
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#2
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
Running that sort of system... I don't think 330 used anything more than a turnbuckle while running wire rope through their lifts. (Up to 10' long lifts, for anybody keeping track at home.) Generally, though, we were able to keep the wraps flat, just by having enough space. I don't think we did anything else special. (Turnbuckle, if used, was a between-match tensioning if things were getting loose.)
Remember that the cable is often only about 1/4" thick, or maybe less, counting the coating, so if you have two wraps, the effective diameter only increased by 1/2" or so; most likely, the other direction decreased by that much. You'd notice a variation in speed, maybe, but more likely than not tension won't be affected very much. Maybe use a small extension spring, but that's about it. |
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#3
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
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Regarding your comment about the diameter changing with wrapping cable on itself: Even a wrap diameter increase of 0.5" is approximately an additional 1.5" of circumference, meaning with one drive pulley revolution, one cable will have fed in or out 1.5" further (assumes the up-feed and down-feed drive pulleys are driven off of the same shaft), which seems significant. Thoughts? |
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#4
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
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http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/17610; Zoom in on the 330 machine, down low in front, and you'll see the winding drum. http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/17599 is another of the same machine; similar location. http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/12345; You might be able to make out the winch behind the green light. There's another picture, from 2002, but it has a similar problem: The drum is obscured behind the robot frame, which happened to include the guide rails for what we were lifting. I can't recall us ever having an issue with slack cables, though, without some other major mechanical problems. (You'll also notice that 2004 is the last time 330 used a lift of that type in competition--2010 used a leadscrew, IIRC--but it had more to do with us finding single-joint arms to be at least as effective as single- or multi-stage lifts for easier design than with any problems with the lifts.) Quote:
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#5
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
In both our cascade-rigged telescopic lift in 2011, and our continuous-rigged telescopic lift this year (2013), we maintained tension and accommodated small variations in overall length by terminating the cable with a strong extension spring. The spring takes up variations in the rigging length as the apparatus extends and retracts, and is placed on the non-loaded side (or "down" side) of the rigging. A small loop of slack cable is also placed around and parallel to the spring as a shock cord, to create a maximum limit to how much the spring can stretch. This protects the spring in cases where the mechanism gets caught or snags, and the down direction sees a high load.
Last edited by jspatz1 : 17-09-2013 at 01:02. |
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#6
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
We would put a wire tie around the lift string and hold it tensioned (to the side) with surgical tubing. That gave a shock relief to the assembly when it ran into a mechanical stop as well.
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#7
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
968 used a bungee cord between the carriage and the down wire rope.
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#8
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
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For example, when lowering the lift, the up-feed cable's feed rate will start out being relatively fast since its drive pulley is fully wrapped, and then slow down as the cable unwraps. The down-feed cable's feed rate will start out being relatively slow, and then speed up as the cable wraps. The result will be initial cable slack. When the lift passes through its mid-portion of its stroke, the wraps on both drive pulleys will be relatively equivalent, so the feed rates will be relatively equivalent (thus, the slack will still be present, but not increasing or decreasing). As the lift approaches being fully lowered, the down-feed cable's feed rate will now be faster than the up-feed cable's feed rate since the down-feed cable's drive pulley has more wraps. The result is that the system will take the slack back up. However, during the stroke, the system will have slack (for the reasons mentioned above). Thus, unless you have a system that keeps the cable wraps flat, it seems a tensioner would be needed to keep the cable tight, right? |
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#9
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
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Also, how many layers of cable wraps are typically on your full drive pulley, and with what diameter cable? Even a few layers of 1/4" cable could result in several inches of cable slack. |
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#10
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
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http://media.team254.com/2012/08/slipstream.jpg With cascade there is usually not a problem. From what I've sent eh more popular solution with cascaded elevators is chain, belts, or rack/pinion, which either isn't prone to losing tension or can easily be tensioned using a method other than a spring. |
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#11
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
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We size the diameter and width of the winch drum to require only one layer of cable wrap. With the proper alignment the cable can be made to wind uniformly in one layer. The spring tension helps with this. Note on the photo of 254 the drum is wide enough to easily allow one layer. This keeps the rigging length constant with only small variations, such as for parellelism. We have used 1/16 to 1/8" wire cable. It is surprisingly strong, more supple than larger cable, and adequate if the apparatus is properly counterbalanced. Few FRC mechanisms really need 1/4 cable IMHO. That's dang strong. Last edited by jspatz1 : 17-09-2013 at 19:03. |
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#12
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Re: How are the actuation cables in multi-stage telescoping lifts tensioned?
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