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#1
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pic: Swerve Render
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#2
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
I really like your take on the bevel-beside wheel. It looks like it saves a lot of weight and space while eliminating some of the weaknesses in my design by putting the bearing around the turning gear and the spur gears below the turning gear. Overall this looks pretty robust.
It looks like you're missing a way to hold the CIM pinion on the shaft short of welding it on there, which I believe you can only do with a steel 11t pinion. Did you have another plan in mind? Which gear did you need to make custom from aluminum? Or did you just mean modifying the turning gear? What bearing are you using for the module rotation? |
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#3
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
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#4
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
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Those Silverthin bearings are pricey (albeit highly convenient)! I know teams that used them way back in the past have gotten sponsored. |
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#5
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
Can you shed some light on the wheel itself? Also, any chance for the full CAD?
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#6
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
Retention Compound (also made by Loctite) should work well. It can fill much larger gaps than threadlock.
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#7
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
Correct, we lathed the pinion in half and welded in addition to cutting the cim shaft down, only down side is that you can't remove the pinion.
Last edited by Harrison.Smith : 21-11-2016 at 00:22. |
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#8
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
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Here is a link to the CAD. If you need STEP files let me know, and I can put that up too. I like this idea, but I'm not sure how removable it would be. |
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#9
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
Is there a STEP format file in the folder? I can't seem to find one.
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#10
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
Huh. That's interesting. So if/when the tread wears out, do you plan on just switching out the entire module or just the wheel?
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#11
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
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Yes. Or we could swap out the lower caster part, which ever is easiest. (I'm guessing just swapping out the wheel will be fastest because it only requires one bolt.) Then the old wheel can get new tread, so it can be used again later. |
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#12
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
Are you concerned about thrust loads generated from the bevel gears at all? I can't tell what bearings you're using on your drive shaft. Especially with the draft shaft being a nut/bolt combo, it seems like those thrust loads could slowly loosen the nut and creating play in the drive shaft.
Last edited by Lil' Lavery : 21-11-2016 at 14:03. |
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#13
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
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If you mean the vertical drive shaft, I am not worried about thrust loads because it is supported by 0.375" ID 0.875" OD flanged bearing, and I think it will be more than strong enough. If you mean the wheel shaft, I am not worried about thrust loads from the bevel gears, because I am much more worried about the thrust loads from driving forces on the wheel. Also none of the shafts are a nut/bolt combo. the vertical shaft is a solid aluminum live axle, the wheel shaft is a hollow steel dead axle with a bolt through the middle of it. |
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#14
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
Heat and some force should get it off without too much issue. CIMs are relatively cheap and reliable anyway.
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#15
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Re: pic: Swerve Render
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Otherwise, Loctite or something would probably hold on. I wonder if you could even put a snap ring groove into the output shaft of the motor? |
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