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#1
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pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
Last edited by Chak : 05-08-2016 at 15:39. |
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#2
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
I really like this gearbox profile. Do you usually cut this out on a water jet and drill the holes separate? If it is 100% water jet cut, how do you account for the stream taper when pressing bearings and whatnot into the side plates?
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
Once could always have the holes cut small and drill/ream them after the fact.
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
Does the middle CIM have a CIMcoder on it?
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
This is what we do with our water-jetted plates.
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
I believe he cuts his gearboxes with his team's tormach cnc mill.
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
Wouldn't it be easier to just support the tip of the output shaft instead of having two bearings on it inside the gearbox?
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
Quote:
Quote:
. If it came down to it though I would probably use a CNC mill because of all the tapped holes and countersinks in this gearbox.Yep . I did modify the housing a bit just to make this gearbox work, but thanks sharing the base CAD file! It was conveniently in native Solidworks format too so I could directly modify the features. ![]() Yes, but that cantilevers the gear. And cantilevered gears, like the one on 1296's 2016 gearbox or the one in vexpro's ballshifter gearboxes, tend to shred gear teeth, which to my understanding is because of deflection. This can be solved by steel gears, but I thought that not cantilevering the gear was a more elegant solution. Either solution will probably work, so I picked the one I liked better and was more fun to CAD. I don't know for sure, but I feel like not cantilevering the gear is better over the long run of the gearbox. |
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
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#12
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Re: pic: low profile 3 CIM gearbox
You have a cycle in your gear mesh that will not be guaranteed to have full contact all around. There is even the possibility that teeth won't line up and the gearbox will bind, but with your tooth counts, the symmetry of the shaft placements, and enough backlash this is unlikely. However, I'm not sure what sort of effect an incomplete mesh can have on wear. Likely you are just transferring all the torque through one line to the output. You are certainly not going to balance it through both gears driving the output gear unless you have much much much finer control over the backlash.
In that vein, then, the pinion on the middle CIM does not have much engagement with the cluster gears. It seems this is due to space constraints, but whatever you can do to get full face width contact will help. I really like the footprint. I'd suggest freeing the output shaft from the gearbox, but keeping the bearing that holds the backside of the shaft in the floating plate. This way the shaft can be integral to the drive rails (chain in tube, wheels and all), and the gearbox bolts on, piloting on with the bearing, with no need to ever remove the output shaft. The drive base should roll around real nice with the gearbox removed, instead of awkwardly missing that middle wheel and leaving chains dangling (or alternatively pulling the shaft out of the gearbox and leaving the gear and shaft collar loose). And gearbox removal and replacement is a breeze. Edit: one last thing, you could swap the floating plate with the middle CIM screws, this way the floating plate is more inline with the forces applied to the output shaft by the driving gears. Gives those standoffs more gear clearance too. Last edited by Aren Siekmeier : 09-08-2016 at 17:29. |
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