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| Love is in the air compressor. |
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#16
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
Thanks, I found a way that I like.
See attachments |
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#17
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
In your latest renderings, it looks like the pulleys on the two middle wheels on each side will have two belts on them. Will there be any problems with the edges of the two belts rubbing against each other and causing wear of some sort?
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#18
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
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Last edited by Chris is me : 21-11-2014 at 10:19. |
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#19
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
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Looking at the rated torques, I think it extremely unlikely that we'll ratchet or break a belt with our setup (especially given that the torque ratings Gates gives are for extended use, and are somewhat lower than the effective maximum torque for the short service times they see in an FRC robot). 449 used 9mm belts on 36t pulleys without incident last year. |
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#20
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
Quote:
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#21
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
A few more data points on pulley sizes, etc...
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets...7UU/edit#gid=0 Quote:
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#22
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
I am more concerned with the radial motion of the belt towards the pulley when the belt is coming onto the pulley and the radial motion of the belt away from the pulley as it is leaving the pulley. I am interested to know if the total run time in an FRC robot application will cause significant wear.
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#23
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
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Last edited by Chris is me : 21-11-2014 at 13:32. |
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#24
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
192 hasn't had a problem with this on the 5mm pitch drive belts that share a pulley. However on the prototypes of the 2013 gearbox the higher tension 3mm pitch belts would drift more and rub. This was made worse by their arrangement where they crossed over each other. We saw the sides of the belts wearing down so we added a flange on the final version to prevent the rubbing. Should be noted no damage was done to the tensile members and only to the rubber backing.
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#25
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
Well, obviously we didn't make the decision in a vacuum, but it was the primary reason we considered 9mm in the first place.
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#26
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
why can't you make your off sets longer or move frame rail in
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#27
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
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At this point, I blame those failures on a bad run of VP belts rather than the inherent disadvantages of belts or non center to center designs. However, the whole experience tempered my enthusiasm for belts. One of the things that most people fail to realize with belts is that you have to do your whole assembly with them in place, unlike chain, which you can slip around and masterlink after everything's assembled. For WCDs, this means you have to take apart your gearboxes if a belt breaks. Having done both belt and chain WCDs in the past, I would probably advise on using #25 chain. The weight savings of belts are tiny, noise shouldn't be a major issue and for most teams the efficiency gains of belts could be more easily gotten in other places. On the other hand, teams can definitely be successful with belts even their first time around as long as they spec their components conservatively and have spares. |
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#28
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
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(I know you are probably aware of this by now, but I just wanted to say this publicly for the reference of others reading this thread.) |
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#29
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
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We have found that proper tension is crucial. If the belts are under-tensioned, they will ratchet. If they are over-tensioned, they will break. The line seems to be finer than we'd like. We run lots of un-tensioned belts, but will never run an un-tensioned drive belt. The reward just isn't there. That being said, we are going to run 15mm wide next year for that extra peace of mind. We can see the pulleys starting to wear. |
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#30
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Re: Belt Drive Design Problem
Curious -- has anyone in this thread experimented with belt pitches other than 5mm? A quick look at the gates datasheet suggests that a 22t (minimum size) 8mm pitch sprocket with a 12mm wide belt will have slightly more carrying capacity than a 15mm wide 5mm pitch belt with a similar sprocket diameter, and significantly more than the equivalent 9mm wide belt. I'm always trying to squeeze some extra width out of drive designs, but have heard just enough 9mm belt horror stories to discourage me from pursuing them.
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