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#1
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Chain vs. Belts?!?
Hey everyone. I'm from team 240 T.E.M.P.E.S.T.
The past 2 years we have used chain everywhere. There was one thing that happened, we had to fix the chain a lot more than we liked too. I know this could be due to poor alignment, etc. but next year we plan on using belts. What are your thoughts on Chains? Belts? Thanks, Drew |
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#2
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
This is a topic that is discussed quite often.
There is a good white paper written by team 234 which evaluates the power transmission methods: https://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/2216 |
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#3
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
Quote:
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#4
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
Its worth mentioning that if the issue was alignment whether you are using chains, belts or interlocking plastic monkeys the issue wont be solved.
If you are using #25 chain and there are alignment issues switching to #35 could help but really the best thing to do is fix the alignment. If your issue has to do with master links I would buy a dark soul chain remover. iirc belts actually are more sensitive to being out of alignment so switching to belts is only going to make things worse. Last edited by Sperkowsky : 08-07-2016 at 22:42. |
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#5
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
After seeing what 5172 did with poly cord this year, im excited to use it more in the future. Belts don't stretch which is nice, but you have to design around belt size more so than you do with chain. Personally I'm sick of chain, but that's because it cost me a ton of time during Ri3D. It's more difficult to align a chain than it is a belt in my experience.
You can't go wrong either way if you do it correctly. I would suggest looking into poly cord belts as an option. |
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#6
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
For the uninformed, what did 5172 do with polycord?
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#7
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
It is important to consider the advantages of both based on specific applications.
Pros of Chain:
If you want additional information, post here or look for Travis or Austin Schuh. I learned most of this information by reading posts from those two and they are very experienced with using both belts and chains on their robots. |
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#8
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
They used it everywhere! Most of the mechanisms on their robot were powered by polycord. It was cool to look at, and obviously functional.
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#9
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
A quick skim of the 20 pages of search results for chain vs belt gave me these:
https://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/s...=Chain+vs+belt https://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/s...=Chain+vs+belt https://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/s...=Chain+vs+belt |
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#10
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
My FTC team is looking at it as complete replacement for gears and chain.
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#11
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
I wouldn't trust it in high torque situations such as drivetrains, as I haven't worked with it yet. If anybody can speak to polycord's power transfer ability before slipping that'd be awesome. I can't wait to test the stuff in many different applications.
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#12
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
Quote:
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#13
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
Whatever you choose, make sure you have good alignment. We had a regional last year where we broke about nine belts because of poor/weird alignment. We also had to disassemble the third stage of our gearboxes for at least six of those belts, so we basically got so sick of replacing belts that we went with #25 chain this year. But again, alignment.
Also, be sure you can tension your chain because it will stretch. |
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#14
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
I like belts for everything other than drivetrain. Why drivetrain? Because for a given strength, chain is more compact than belts, and with the 4-cim loads in the drivetrain compactness is a high priority for me. That's a point that's often overlooked in the belts vs. chain debate.
It's also possible to run chain in tube in a 2x1 easily and reliably, whereas doing the same with belt is a lot harder. Belts run quieter than chains, so for anything else- from shooters to intake to arms- I prefer them. In the specific case of arms, the belt will likely slip before the gears start shearing teeth (in theory), so I get a bit of a safety factor there. |
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#15
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Re: Chain vs. Belts?!?
We tried using it this year for driving our intake. Our intake was designed to pinch the ball between the wheels and a churro and we could not spin the ball out. The polycord would just slip. We were attempting to use it more like a traditional belt, which was probably our mistake, and only had 2 cords. However, in 2015 we used it for a conveyor belt and it worked fine. I think the main dlfference is we had a lot more cords (4 or 5) and it was a lower torque application.
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