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#46
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Re: #25 Chain
We use, and love, Chain Saver as a chain and open-gear lubricant.
http://www.amazon.com/DuPont-Teflon-.../dp/B00KMMFE8Y Can be found in may places, powered by the magical beast of Teflon. Spray it on, run things around a little by hand, then a few minutes later it's dried out and ready to go. |
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#47
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Re: #25 Chain
[quote=JamesCH95;1550502powered by the magical beast of Teflon[/QUOTE]
... and Moly B. Denum |
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#48
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Re: #25 Chain
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#49
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Re: #25 Chain
Back on the Chain vs. Live Axle. For a lot of teams, the majority I think, Live Axle is just not going to result in a more reliable drive train. Yes, there are some advantages, I just wouldn't want to be driving people to make a poor decision for their team based on something that might be right for another team but a disaster for them.
Dr. Joe J. P.S. I love chain for drive systems. JJ |
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#50
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Re: #25 Chain
When I saw the first four words of that sentence I had an immediate flashback to a time long long ago...
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#51
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Re: #25 Chain
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#52
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Re: #25 Chain
Quote:
What specifically do you see is the downside of a Live Axle system? Last edited by cbale2000 : 03-03-2016 at 04:30. |
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#53
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Re: #25 Chain
Quote:
The gear train to get the torque from one axle to the next is another point of failure. Many multidrive live axle systems need a bunch of gears betwixt & between the live axles. More gears, more axles, more gear to gear interfaces, more center distances to get wrong (or have to manage at a minimum). Typically gears have smaller working radii where the force is transferred from axle to axle than chain (not always but often). This in turn means higher forces for a given torque, which isn't unmanageable (obvs) but can be tricky. Back to failure live axle failures, the most memorable one for me was when in the Soccer Game where we had to go over the bumps (well you didn't HAVE to but we did). The team I was with then had an 8 wheel beast with an AndyMark shifter direct driving one of the axles on each side and chain in between as some have suggested. We were in a good place with a win in our first match of the Quarter Finals at the Long Island Regional. During that match we went over the bump a little more energetically than we had up to that point in the tournament (think Dukes of Breakaway). We won the match and thought everything was fine - in fact we were thinking we had some great footage for our highlight reel at the end of the season. As it turned out, match 2 didn't go so well because we just couldn't get going in high gear. Between matches we checked everything out, couldn't find a problem. We put the robot back out there for our 3rd match only to get the same result: High Gear was useless. It wasn't until we got back to the school that we realized that we had it so hard we had skewed our frame a bit which skewed the gearbox a bit which was enough to make the current go up in high gear to the point that our breakers kept tripping on that side. Loosening some screws, giving the robot a kick or two, and tightening those screws again had us running like a champ again (of course if we were going to compete again we would have had to solve that problem but it was our last tourney that season). So, was that a live axle problem? I kinda think so but others may disagree. Dr. Joe J. |
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#54
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Re: #25 Chain
Quote:
Quote:
I would personally say that using live axle gear-drives is NOT the best thing for most teams to do without careful research, planning, design, and precision machining. Using live axles on chain drives, however, is a very easy thing for just about any team to do (in fact the KoP chassis ships in this configuration, but with belts instead of chain) and, in my opinion improves the overall durability of the drive system. Quote:
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#55
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Re: #25 Chain
So suppose that a team did use #25 and suppose they HAD TO have half links, what are the strongest half links on the market?
Also can you replace #25 chain with #25H chain with out changing sprockets? Last edited by Munchskull : 06-03-2016 at 02:59. |
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#56
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Re: #25 Chain
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Last edited by Chak : 06-03-2016 at 03:09. |
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#57
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Re: #25 Chain
Quote:
![]() ARE MUCH BETTER THAN THIS TYPE: ![]() Just don't even think about using the cotter pin type. Please. Dr. Joe J. |
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#58
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Re: #25 Chain
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Sincerely, Lessons Learned In Week 0.5, inclusive of pre-bag time. |
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#59
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Re: #25 Chain
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Can you please expound on "why". Where is the failure point with the cotter pin type. |
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#60
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Re: #25 Chain
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Okay, maybe not spectacularly--it just kinda dumps out the end of the tube. But at least on double-sprocket applications (like the 221 sprockets we're using), the cotter pins are more likely to hit something and fail. It's worse if you don't think about it and don't put the pins facing out each way, but the other style just avoids this problem entirely and makes things that much more idiot-resistant. (I didn't say idiot-proof, because you know what happens then--just idiot-resistant.) |
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