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#1
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How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
So I have seen some shooters from overdrive that work by winding a cord around an axle to draw back a spring or tubing. Then they lock in place via many different methods (locking pin, winch, ect.)
My question comes about the release. When you release the mecanism, does it unwind the motor? Or, is there some sort of clutch mechanism that lets it slip so that you don't lose force from winding the motor? If so, what is it? Thanks in advance. |
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#2
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
As in most FRC designs, a plethora of mechanisms are used by teams. In most successful cases, the motor is not moved during a release. My team used a dog gear system to disengage from the gearbox in 08, similar to the AndyMark shifters. I would recommend taking a look at some drawings on AndyMark.biz and figuring them out.
I have also seen gate hinges and... a hood latch... used to release cables with varying success (usually good if you don't dip 'em in paint ) |
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#3
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
There is a clutch mechanism that does release the winch without "rewinding" the motor. A good thread to see for this is this one http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...threadid=80278. If the super shifter/ dog gear isn't your thing check out this page on mcmaster http://www.mcmaster.com/#6283k24/=5fr67j for some inspiration.
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#4
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
At the $350 price for the super shifters, they are pretty out of our league.
I am opting towards the rachet type things however, could someone show me an example of how to disengage the pawl? I'm not really sure how I could setup a rachet and pawl so that it wouldn't want to unwind the motor as my cable unwinds. Care to elaborate? I was trying to think of a realworld machine that uses something like this, but I have come up with nothing. |
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#5
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
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Heres a simple paint drawing to help illustrate (literally) my idea ![]() Last edited by Thermal : 19-01-2010 at 01:32. |
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#6
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
For the 2008 offseason we modified our robot to have a launcher mechanism based on 1114's wildly successful Simbot SS. We loaded it with a dog gear transmission (a modified AndyMark Gen 2 shifter, i believe) with one of the sets of gears removed. I forget how we stopped the spring pressure from backwinding the whole rig. I think we had a pneumatic ram that locked it in place.
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#7
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
I have been thinking all morning on this.
I still can't figure this out: I can pull the cable back with a winch and it won't back drive. But when I release the winch the motor will want to spin with the springs. What I think I need to find is some sort of clutch between the cable and the winch. Any suggestions? |
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#8
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
We ran our Overdrive shooter with just one motor and no other actuation. Able to reload in approx 1.5 seconds, if I recall correctly (with a whole lot more stress on it than this year requires).
Here's a pic of it engaged and ready to fire: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/31538 Here's a pic of it unloaded: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/31539 Extremely efficient and simple, just have to grasp the concept. Feel free to ask any other questions. |
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#9
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
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Thanks alot, It is likely we will use something like this. |
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#10
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
While a non-backdrivable transmission will do the trick, it can be done without. If you consider how the linkages work, when the main sprocket is at the "ready to fire" position, there is very little force driving the sprocket either forward or backward. If you use a position sensor that can stop the sprocket at this "ready" location, the sprocket won't move until you say "fire!" and push it just past this point.
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#11
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
Yes it does, we acquired this trait in the form of a Dewalt XRP gearbox with a FP driving it (which also gave us a vital speed reduction).
Other options include worms gears, or a one way ratchet system (one of the easier ways, think box end ratchet wrench and a hex on the shaft) I say it requires it for general safety, we always had the "ready to fire" position far enough away from tripped to prevent accidental firing from sharp contacts or such. Last edited by Aren_Hill : 19-01-2010 at 12:19. |
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#12
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
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In 2008 we made a "catapult" of sorts to shoot the ball. Here is a picture from the arizona regional of a ball in mid air off of one of our shots(http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/30965). From our estimates we were winching back around 300lbs of spring force. Our initial solution was one of the andymark dog gears that everyone here has mentioned thus far. We ran into a problem however when the winch was fully cranked back. There was so much tension in the springs that the dog gear would not disengage. We were using a 1.5" bore, 1" stroke, pneumatic piston to disengage. We went back to the drawing board and decided to use a ball lock clutch. If you do some searches here on CD for ball lock transmissions you will see that team 222 has quite a bit of experience with them. Essentially how they work is you have a hollow shaft which a gear sits on. The gear has slits cut into it so if you looked at it from the side you would see something like a + sign. The hollow shaft has spots for 4 ball bearings to sit in, so that when they are placed in the shaft, the gear spins freely around the ball bearings. You then actuate a rod inside of the hollow shaft so when the rod pushes through the shaft, it forces the ball bearings into the slots cut in the gear. This was a very effective system for us, and will be something we use again if we ever have to winch something back and then unload it quickly. -Brando PS- obviously if you have any questions feel free to ask |
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#13
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
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We haven't built it yet, so don't expect it to work...but it looks like something we can make without too much trouble. |
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#14
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
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Thanks! |
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#15
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Re: How do those winch-loaded shooters work?
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