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#1
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Re: Which motor is better?
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#2
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Re: Which motor is better?
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#3
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Re: Which motor is better?
Personally, I never got too familiar with the drill motors, so I can't really choose one or the other. But, the CIM's are heavy (more than I remember on the drills) and didn't give us much of any torque till we ran them through our AM's. Once we had our drive train set up they gave us plenty of torque and never generated a heat problem.
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#4
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Re: Which motor is better?
There are pros and cons of some motors... here are some I can think of right now:
Drill: Pro -Small and light, roughly 1 pound -Slightly more power than the CIM Con: -Evil, hard to find metric gear... -Burns out a lot -Very high rpm, so its anoying to make a reduction -Anoying to mount, seeing as it has no screw holes -Suck very large amounts of current when at stall CIM: Pro -Easy to mount, with standard screws -Keyed output, so you can put your own gears on it -Lower rpm, so reductions are less anoying -Almost as much power -Never overheats (I've only done it once, so its rare) Con: -Big, and almost 3 pounds each FP motor: Pro -Even smaller than the drill -Good power for its size -Standard pinion, so its easy to mate -Standard screw mount, easy to mount Con: -Overheats and melts -Very high rpm -Sucks current at stall I have personally always liked the CIMs better for drive train, but they are sometimes more useful elsewhere. Heck, if we got 8 CIMs I would use them all. But.. seeing as how we dont, you gotta go with the FP motor for drivetrain sometimes, or the drill when we still had it. If you use the drill or FP motor for anything.. especially drive train, always buy a bunch of extras. When I used the drill for swivel drive, it burned out roughly every competition. We just bought 10 of them and kept replacing them. ~Veselin Kolev |
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#5
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Re: Which motor is better?
sorry if this is already posted but we have a question and didnt have time to go through all 500 posts
We were just wondering if we were still allowed to use the old bosch motors and the dewalt motors thanks |
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#6
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Re: Which motor is better?
are the CIMs still enclosed?
the drill motors and FP motors have internal blowers for cooling, and openings to let the air through. |
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#7
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Re: Which motor is better?
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#8
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Re: Which motor is better?
Not quite. The Large MiniBike CIM actually has one more small hole opposite the output shaft, on the plate holding the back of the armature.
The big one is definitely not, but is the small CIM water resistant? If you take the motor apart, you'll notice that there are rubber gaskets between the different case parts. The only real hole that isn't gasketed is to the output shaft hole. |
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#9
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Re: Which motor is better?
There are many things that go into this, but in my opinion, based on power conciderations alone, the CIM motors are the only real choice for the drive train (with the possible addition of the FP if it is not the only motor used).
There are only 2 questions then: 1 motor per side or 2? And Which CIM motor? If you go with 1 only, the extra power of the 330W motor and smaller size & lighter weight is too attractive too pass up. If you go with 1 motor, I recommend that you strongly consider shifting. The question of multiple motors per side is tricker. There are various combinations: CIM 340W + CIM 340W = 680W CIM 340W + CIM 270W = 610W CIM 340W + FP 170W = 510W CIM 270W + FP 170W = 440W I think any of them can work but to be honest, I would stay away from the FP in a drive train because they tolerate heat and abuse less well than the CIMs. It is sort of a toss up for me between the top two above, though I am leaning toward the 680W version. I used to be firmly in the "1 Motor + Shifter" camp, but I have since become a believer in the merits of 2 motors per side for 2 reasons: it makes your robot peppier in terms of acceleration and it gives you two (2) 40Amp breakers to feed your drive motors. As to shifters, with the advent of the Andymark.biz shifter and the NBD whitepaper on how to adapt a CIM to a 3 speed XRP Dewalt Drill Transmission, shifters are easier than ever to implement, even for a team with limited resources. So... ...here is the bottom line advice, this year's Stylish Robot will have 2 CIM 340W motors per side + shifters. You read it here first... Joe J. Last edited by Joe Johnson : 18-01-2006 at 20:09. |
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#10
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Re: Which motor is better?
Just a side note, The torque at stall on the mini bike motor is almost twice that of the small cim. If you want to keep it simple and not shift you might consider that. And if you want it all Check out the Andy mark conversion kit to run one small cim and the large cim out of the kit transmissions.
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#11
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Re: Which motor is better?
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Stall torque and free speed are accidents of birth. You can always trade more of one for less of the other (by gear ratios). The Peak Power (=Tstall*Wfree/4) is your immutible figure of merit for a motor size. For example, I can put an extra 1.66:1 gear ratio on the smaller CIM and get 1.66X the stall torque which will match the FP CIM's stall torque. BUT, this reduced smaller CIM will be running 25% faster than the FP CIM loaded to the same torque. I like the FP CIMs, they are nice motors that will probably run nice and cool even when abused (as they surely will be), but they have 25% less power than the smaller CIMs. Joe J. |
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#12
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Re: Which motor is better?
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