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#1
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CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
There has been some talk of CVTs on CD lately. So how many of you teams are actually designing them for your drive train for the 2006 season?
We are actually working on it, we have a 'prototype', if you will, but it's not working as we would like, but we're still working on it. ![]() Last edited by Jeff K. : 07-30-2005 at 01:01 AM. Reason: Reword |
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#2
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
you should talk to with santosh and me weve thrown ideas back and forth for a couple months. i know he has some cool ideas. i however have some other things (hush hush top secret stuff) im working on.
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#3
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
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#4
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
Never had any plans for a CVT. Too difficult to get working well because it is all friction based. And friction has a much greater potential for slipping than a postive engagement setup like gears. I design for reliability and robustness(notice I did not say simplicity) and to me a CVT just is not it. However, if people do it, and it works, I'd be more than glad to see it.
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#5
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
After the thread where about half of the people are against even basic shifting or anything other than the FIRST drive train, I doubt there will be many going for a CVT
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#6
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
We currently do not have a design in the works, but we did prototype one over the summer of 2002.
Our CVT was very basic and consisted of a big round aluminum disc mounted to the side of Skyway's bead lock wheels(http://www.skywaywheels.com/products_002.htm), an aluminum frame, drill motors/transmissions, and the best part gum rubber. We mounted the two wheels and discs to the center of the frame, mounted high traction wheels (gum rubber) to the output of the drill transmissions, and then mounted the drill transmission to a moveable assembly that would allow us to move them farther towards the center of the axis of the wheel for more speed or father away for less speed. The problem was we did not have enough traction to keep the wheels from spinning on the aluminum discs. This simple cvt prototype/idea was a basically taken from the little CVT's in push lawn mowers. I don't have a picture of it, I don't even know if we took any of it... so I have included a Paint drawing of what it looked like. For those of you who know us by our gum rubber wheels (2003) robot and our gum rubber omni wheels (2005) this little project is where found out all about different kinds of rubber and what worked the best, thus GUM RUBBER! |
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#7
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
I'm thinking a rubber coated disk and a knurled aluminum wheel would be better than a smooth aluminum disk and a rubber wheel.
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#8
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
Using belts is definately a good idea. You can put tons of tension through a v-belt and get brilliant traction on pulleys. So.. just figure out how to get a pulley that changes size. Not so hard anymore, eh? I'm sure the brilliant young minds of FIRST can figure out how to do it.
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#9
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
Wouldn't that aluminum wheel + rubber wheel have a fairly large amount of friction losses? I mean, unless the rubber wheel has a very small contact point, then it's going to slip along pretty much all of its surface cause the aluminum disk will be travelling faster at the outer edge vs the inner edge. As I understand it, that's why other roller designs use hard rubber designed to contact at a point.
And in answer to the thread, 57 doesn't look to be using a CVT in the foreseeable future. |
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#10
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
The most important thing with CVTs (Ive been researching them allot). One weight is a big issue and you need to carefully choose material. Two durability is going to be a problem. Constant grinding causes the CVT to wear down which is part of the reason they aren't in cars (the other is reason one and the last reason). The third thing to keep in mind is friction. It doesn't matter if you can get a great torque ratio if every time you try to push against something the gears are slipping! What you need is a durable, lightweight material, that has great friction which brings us to the last thing to consider, cost. If you want a nice drive train its going to cost you! I don't doubt that some of you might differ in opinion but this is just my opinion based on my research. I however very much recommend pursuing this venture and figure out the best way to use them. These are very worth while to make and if you want i have some links of good materials and sites that will help you develop one. I'm very interested in teams that build them and i would love to here an ideas you have.
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#11
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
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As for slipping, that depends on how much torque you're putting through the friction plates/wheels/belts/pullies/etc... Since torque and speed are proportional, one could just gear the area where the cvt can potentially slip to a high rpm, where there's relatively low torque. And as for materials -- material selection varies with your restrictions, you don't have to have deep pockets to make a really good FIRST competition drivetrain, it's all in the design and how you implement that specific design. |
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#12
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
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EDIT: NoodleKnight beat me to it. Last edited by sanddrag : 07-31-2005 at 01:40 AM. |
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#13
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
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#14
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
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However, there are quite a few CVT cars on the market now in the US, including the Ford 500, Focus, and Freestyle (say that 5 times fast!), the Audi A4 and A6, Nissan Murano, MINI Cooper, the Saturn VUE, the Honda Insight and Civic, and the Chrysler Sebring and PT Cruiser. In fact, Nissan has said that they want to sell 1 million vehicles equipped with continuously variable transmissions annually by 2007. Incidently, I came across a really cool LEGO CVT. I don't know how well it works, but I guess anything's possible. |
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#15
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Re: CVT, which teams are planning on using them for next year?
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