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#16
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
Sounds like a neat way to make it! We thought about using a different motor/transmission, but decided we wanted the turret to move 180 degrees in about a second, so we used a Banebots RS-545 motor with a 64:1 planetary transmission, and we have a belt pulley ratio of about 8:1
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#17
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
We're just using a KoP window motor connected to a piece of plywood with the shaft bolted to a piece of 80/20 mounted on the lazy susan mount mountedto the plywood, the cannon (made of flue pipe) will attach to the top of the 80/20.
Horray for low budgetness! |
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#18
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
3 years ago our team did the exact same thing you are doing now to shoot the 8" Nerf balls. We manufactured our own polycarbonate turntable and it worked fairly well.
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#19
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
A window motor is perfect for this application as it has excess torque but also enough speed to get the job done. The Fisher price motor is also a good choice.
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#20
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
Cut a big circle out of plywood and pin chain along the circumference, then drive with a sprocket pinion like a gear.
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#21
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
*doesn't read thread*
What I've seen used in various devices (namely cheap RC Car Remotes, Pistol Grip Style) is mounting contacts on the turntable. You have prongs that dip down from the rotating assembly onto a turntable with copper/silver/whatever tracs, one for positive/negative/whatever, so that it retains constant contact. It's like take a Brushed Electric Motor and making it 2-D... You may not have huge current flow, but with silver 'brushes' and something highly conductive for the tracks, along with "Comm Drops*" for use inbetween, you should be able to achieve good numbers for power transfer. Can't be that bad. *They are used in Brushed RC Cars. Little drops that you drop between the Com(uter) and the brushes. It helps improve output of the motor and keep it running cooler until it burns off. I could see where it is useful if applied as described above... |
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#22
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
Brushes probably are not needed for a rotating turret, unless you want to make it turn 360 degrees. We decided against that.
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#23
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
You should at least have read the original question. The problem is not one of providing power through a rotating connection. The problem is merely how to rotate the turntable.
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#24
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Re: How to Power a Rotating Turret
We are using a rubber wheel in contact with the outer ring of our bearing to provide rotation. As long as the surfaces are sufficiently grippy and tension is applied, you will get smooth, quiet rotation.
Since slipping is still possible using this method, a sensor mounted on a separate contact wheel is being used for positioning. |
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