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#16
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Re: Swerve drives
![]() ![]() Heres a couple images of our inventor creation. Its still missing the gears, chain, axles, and belts but this is the basic design. This is only a rough and dirty concept. Below the piece of wood is the lazy suzan bearing. about 1/2 inch above the wood is a sprocket for the turning |
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#17
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Re: Swerve drives
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We haven't done extensive testing, but the process seams promising. PS. How do you interface with the output pins on the 6127's? We just solder PWM cables to them. |
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#18
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Re: Swerve drives
I'm not sure if this is true or not, but I've been told that a good thing to use for swerve drives are ten-turn potentiometers. The benefit being that you can easily plug it into the following
Code:
angle=(potentiometer_voltage-inherent_zero)*voltage_to_degrees |
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#19
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Re: Swerve drives
Swerve is something I've wanted to build in the offseason for a while. I understand the mechanical and control concept of it and I know how it's driven and mostly how the modules need to be constructed.
The point that I have a really hard time understanding is how the pivot is set up. Does it just ride metal on metal? Or is there some sort of bearings, rollers, or slip pads/blocks? How do you contain the rotating module (the yoke) up and down and side-to-side while still being able to disassemble it? No one seems to have any good cross section views of the modules in an assembled state. |
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#20
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Re: Swerve drives
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What do you mean by contain the rotating module? We have a retaining ring at the top of the pivot shaft that keeps it from falling out the bottom. The sides of our yoke have 3 bolts that have threads on the top of the yoke to connect. On ours at least it takes about 2 hours to get every thing to go together, to take it apart it can take up to 6 after a little use(with the help of a hammer). Our pivot shaft is thermal press fit in to the top of the yoke. We can not get it out even if we wanted to. |
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#21
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Re: Swerve drives
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#22
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Re: Swerve drives
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You have to keep up with turns and unwind if you get close to the limit on a 10 turn pot. |
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#23
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Re: Swerve drives
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#24
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Re: Swerve drives
Any tips for preventing the tiny wire on the connectors breaking?
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#25
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Re: Swerve drives
We connected ours by simply removing one wire (and 1/4 of the connector itself) from one of the 4 wire connectors that we had acquired for our OEM encoders (because we bought the 3 pin analogue versions). We've never had any problems with this setup, but we probably would have been better off with one designed for this task. We also cut the top off of a Mountain Dew bottle and used it to shield the sensor because it was located a bit precariously
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