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#1
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
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Water jetting is nice because you can have a frame cut out and ready to be assembled in about 30min-1.5h depending on the complexity of the design (if you have direct access to the machine that is...)It's also easier to jet spare parts, and is lighter then tube (If designed correctly). Some of the cons however, is that it is fickle when bending it (you might get a perfect 90 deg bend or not). It needs a lot of bracing to make the frame stable and rigid. (for my team) when we got our frame bent, it bowed the metal in a arc making a 1/8 gap in the middle of the part when laid on a flat surface.( This was most likely the bending machine's fault as well as the settings on the machine). Quote:
Chain normally (in my experience) is a flipping nightmare, chains stretch, masterlinks brake, sprockets strip, etc,etc. Here is a document found on vex's website "Belt vs. Chain Drive Evaluation" by FIRST Robotics Competition Team 234(credits to 234!) Hope this has help in some way ![]() |
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#2
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
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#3
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
The bolded part. Many people don't get to the part where they actually know how to use chain correctly. Same thing applies to belts. This applies to many things in competitive robotics, but is particularly pronounced in drive trains due to their overall "mission-critical" importance. A single bad experience for a given method or technique can scare someone off of that for a long time, even if it was an easily correctable user error.
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#4
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
I didn't want to get sucked into another chain vs. belt debate, but:
-Belts are lighter than chains. But, Vexpro pulleys are not lighter than sprockets. A 15mm belt drivetrain weighs as much as a #25 chain drivetrain, generally speaking. -Belts are quieter than chains, and more efficient. However, 234's paper only covers #25 chain and not #25, and used an 8020 chassis to do it, so the exact amount imo is unknown. -When put together with a Dark Soul tool (for #25), chain is extremely strong. Plus, masterlinks are at least $1 per chain run. -Chain can be assembled on the sprockets, while belt needs pulley removal to go on if you're not tensioning. -Belts will slip before breaking gears (on arms and stuff, anyway) depending on tension, whereas chain will kill everything before it dies in a spectacular fashion (ask me how I know). That's all I think I know right now. I like belts everywhere but the drivetrain, personally, but they require forethought. |
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#5
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
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#6
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
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Seriously though, 118 ran (and might still, I can't recall what they did this year) chain-in-tube C-C for years.Chain technically doesn't stretch, but it does wear, albeit slowly. For us, chain wear was far less of a problem than bearing blocks getting closer together due to hole clearances. Last year we ran on one tension of chain for the whole season without any problems. I would say chain is the easier of the two due to the sheer amount of forgiveness it has (and it's ability to replace 20 pitch gears, but that's for another time). There also seems to be a rare recurring problem of belt picking up field tape, although I have no idea why. |
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#7
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
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#8
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
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I would be open to a belt-in-tube frame, because I definitely see the upsides from running belts in the AM14U series, but the packaging just wasn't going to happen in this year's robot. |
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#9
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
You can make any design work with about any construction method... thought it may not be the best. So again, back to the resources.
Consider turnaround time. Tube construction? You can easily make new or modified tubes in house ifneedbe. Sheetmetal construction? If it's complicated geometry, especially trussed, you've either gotta have the equipment in house or wait for your jet/laser sponsor. Now, to those nitty gritty things... though sheet metal can be made to good standards, it's much, much, much easier to make decently accurate parts in stock than sheetmetal when you lack a jet. Luckily FRC isn't demanding of high tolerances... usually. |
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#10
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
First of all, I recommend using 1x2 x .125 aluminum tube for your chassis. We use this every single year (With the exception of last year). It allows for simple connection of gearboxes. One issue may be getting the chassis square. Our team machines 90degree gusset plates and I dont know if you guys have access to a mill.
As far as Chain vs Belt: Belt Is the way to go My team is only starting to work with belt. The problem with chain is it stretches. Make sure you have the ability to tension your chain. One year, we couldnt tension a .25 chain and it kept snapping whenever we had quick changes in direction. Again, I dont know if anything I said applies to belts. If your team has gotten belts down, Dont go back to chain. They are heavy -Best of luck |
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#11
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
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Our chassis was not only square when we built it, but survived a regional of Aerial Assault with no noticeable issues, excluding only our manipulator which reached outside the frame perimeter to pick up balls (and which was NOT so well supported on the corners). Last edited by GeeTwo : 07-06-2016 at 23:27. |
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#12
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Re: Sheet Metal vs Tube Drivetrain
So many firm statements in here without much evidence or reasoning behind it...
When it comes to winning matches and making reasonably reliable robots, for 99.9% of teams both methods are fine. We've run both in drive, and have been happy with both. More recently we've run chain because if you already have the sprockets and chain, there is no lead time for any arbitrary length run (whereas belts are length specific obviously). |
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