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#1
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Ratchet Switch under load
Our team is trying to use a ratchet to release stretched surgical tubing (like I imagine a lot of teams are doing). We pull back our shooter using a winch and then shift into neutral so our motor shaft is no longer connected to the winch shaft. As the winch tries to unwind the ratchet holds it in place (ratchet acts as a hard stop).
The problem that we have however, is that nothing we have tried has been able to flip the ratchet's directional switch while it is under load. I have seen a couple other teams using this idea and so I am a bit confused as how they released the surgical tubing. So to you other teams we are successfully releasing surgical tubing, how are you doing it under load? |
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#2
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
Some teams are putting the ratchet on the motor side of the clutch, instead of on the load side. |
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#3
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
In our setup (and if I am correct, most of the other team's winch setups), the direction of the ratchet never changes. The ratchet only stops the gearbox from backdriving when it is under load. What releases the dog gear is a pneumatic cylinder- in our case, we have a hefty cylinder of somewhere in the 1.5 inch diameter range, on a lever around 14 inches long to multiply the force. This is way overkill, but it works flawlessly, and we can engage and release the gearbox by hand if we need to.
If my description was hard to understand, check out the Andymark robot in 3 days team's videos on how they did their winch system. We aren't using the same shooter design as they are, but our retraction and release systems are quite similar. |
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#4
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
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Last edited by Ether : 08-02-2014 at 16:38. |
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#5
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
Exactly. Make sure your ratchet is on the motor side of the shifting block, not the output shaft side.
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#6
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
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http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...d.php?t=125123 Hope all the comments here help you out. |
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#7
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
Ah, I see where I misunderstanding the other designs now, it is as Ether said.
We were trying to be clever and remove the need for shifting into a neutral gear back attaching the ratchet to the motor shaft and using a worm drive in our winch. That way the ratchet would wind up the winch and the worm drive would give us our hard stop. Then to fire we only have to switch the ratchet's clutch and it would easily unwind. Unless we can find a ratchet that is very easy to actuate under load though . . . then it looks like we will need a transmission. Unfortunately all the Vex and AM transmissions are out of stock right now! Hopefully we can find something similar soon. |
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#8
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
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#9
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
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It is incredibly simply. The only problem is finding a ratchet that can switch under load. |
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#10
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
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#11
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
Make one, or have one made for you. We plasma cut a ratchet out of 1/4" mild steel. The ratchet works extremely well and can switch while under load. We obviously expect the ratchet to wear down rather quickly because of the material and switching under load. We plan on having a few replacements made out of a more durable material by our primary sponsor.
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#12
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
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#14
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
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To be honest, I can't think of a single ratchet that will switch easily under load. What I might do in your case would be a small 3-gear setup, where one gear is on the motor shaft (through the ratchet, though if you've still got the worm gear that won't be needed), one gear is on the winch shaft, and one gear is on an arm that drops in to connect the other two--a pneumatically-powered arm, if possible. Pull the arm out to unlock the gearbox. I've seen something like that work in LEGO before... You'd want to have the stroke to put the gear back in be slow, possibly at really low pressure, with the motor turning slowly, though. |
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#15
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Re: Ratchet Switch under load
Our head coach is the schools welding teacher so we have access to his welding lab. We happen to have 2 students who are great welders so they manged to cut the winch out. Good luck solving your winch problem!
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