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Well here is another example of one of my crazy wheel ideas and my AutoCAD laziness. Its actually a simple design and hopefully ill get a chance to test it. The idea is that you can make mecanum wheels with minimum tooling by attaching the wheels to a segmented tread. The tread has to be thick and you need to do two sets of tread on each side to keep the omni directional motion. In retrospect you would want to use T brackets instead of L brackets.
05-10-2005 23:19
mechanicalbrain
I was wondering when this would pop up. OK the idea is basically to bolt mecanum wheels to tread instead of making a wheel (some people only have wood shops
). I'm pretty sure that if you have two sets of tread on each side you can get the necessary sideways motion. My only concern is the side stress on the tread. I don't think rubber will work. It is going to need to be plated tread which Ive been searching for. If anyone with knowledge on either tread or mecanum wheels could help me it would be very welcomed. 
05-10-2005 23:25
BrianBSLInteresting idea, but I can tell you that the octagonal hub that 190's wheels bolted to was one of the easier parts of making the wheel. Just take a 3" square piece of aluminum and mill off the corners until you have 8 equal sides. You say only with a wood shop, but I don't know how you are going to make a roller support with only a wood shop. Casting the rollers and making the supports was the most difficult part.
I don't know how well non curved rollers would work either.
05-10-2005 23:37
mechanicalbrain
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Originally Posted by BrianBSL
Interesting idea, but I can tell you that the octagonal hub that 190's wheels bolted to was one of the easier parts of making the wheel. Just take a 3" square piece of aluminum and mill off the corners until you have 8 equal sides. You say only with a wood shop, but I don't know how you are going to make a roller support with only a wood shop. Casting the rollers and making the supports was the most difficult part.
I don't know how well non curved rollers would work either. |
05-10-2005 23:42
phrontist
wouldn't those metal plates need to be bent? How would you keep it on the wheel? Wouldn't any force stretch the strip of fabric?
05-10-2005 23:43
BrianBSL|
Originally Posted by mechanicalbrain
Well i can make them curved but as you can tell from this picture that this is hardy a schematic. Actually i was thinking of taking a material (not sure what exactly but ive got a top five list) and using a belt sander. Ive actually seen teams make wheels just by sanding raw material! So yeah im hoping i can do this with a minimum on complexity.
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05-10-2005 23:52
mechanicalbrain
We can bend plates of metal. Also I'm not looking at rubber, I'm looking at plastic or thin metal tread. Even if it doesn't terribly simplify the process I think a tread has certain other benefits when it comes to stability and climbing stairs.
06-10-2005 00:15
BrianBSL|
Originally Posted by mechanicalbrain
We can bend plates of metal. Also I'm not looking at rubber, I'm looking at plastic or thin metal tread. Even if it doesn't terribly simplify the process I think a tread has certain other benefits when it comes to stability and climbing stairs.
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06-10-2005 00:20
sanddragWell, I am becoming an ME so I'll take a shot at this one. We don't have a manual brake but I've bent 1/8" aluminum (and steel for that matter) quite nicely and fairly easily with a good mini-sledge and a vice. I think 1/8" would absolutely be sufficient for this, and you could probably get away with .090"
06-10-2005 00:21
mechanicalbrain
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Originally Posted by BrianBSL
I'm no ME, but I doubt you can bend the size metal that you need to make those plates out of (and not have them bend) with a regular manual break. I'd guess theres some pretty big loads, as you are supporting a roller that is supporting a significant amount of the robot's weight on it.
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06-10-2005 00:36
ahecht
Again, 190's wheels were slightly different than your treads, but our original aluminum supports bent with normal use (I don't remember the thickness, but they were at least 1/8") and we had to upgrade to steel.
Oh, and be careful bending metal on a vice. If you form a sharp corner, you will be losing a significant amount of strength.
06-10-2005 00:44
mechanicalbrain
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Originally Posted by ahecht
Again, 190's wheels were slightly different than your treads, but our original aluminum supports bent with normal use (I don't remember the thickness, but they were at least 1/8") and we had to upgrade to steel.
Oh, and be careful bending metal on a vice. If you form a sharp corner, you will be losing a significant amount of strength. |
06-10-2005 20:56
EricH
I have three questions.
One, how are you going to keep from bouncing? You're driving along, and the roller edges hit the carpet coming around a 90 degree or so turn. Either you bounce, or you shatter the roller. Or maybe you shatter something else...
Two, how are you going to keep the rollers on? I mean, you can't just stick an axle through and say "stay" and have them stay on the axle. You need something hard on the outside, but how do you do that and not have to replace the whole tread?
Three, how much weight will this have? If it's too heavy, you might consider just wrapping the whole thing around a wheel for less weight.
06-10-2005 21:06
mechanicalbrain
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Originally Posted by EricH
I have three questions.
One, how are you going to keep from bouncing? You're driving along, and the roller edges hit the carpet coming around a 90 degree or so turn. Either you bounce, or you shatter the roller. Or maybe you shatter something else... Two, how are you going to keep the rollers on? I mean, you can't just stick an axle through and say "stay" and have them stay on the axle. You need something hard on the outside, but how do you do that and not have to replace the whole tread? Three, how much weight will this have? If it's too heavy, you might consider just wrapping the whole thing around a wheel for less weight. |
Agian this is me using AutoCAD agian after two years. No i intend a central shaft or even two triangle mounting plates on either side with a central core.
06-10-2005 21:28
EricH
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Originally Posted by mechanicalbrain
I dont think this would bounce more then a tread
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06-10-2005 21:37
mechanicalbrain
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Originally Posted by EricH
When you consider that normal treads don't really bounce, but mecanum wheels might in a spin, and you'd get full mecanum effect... but we'll see once you get a set built and tested. You've got 3 months...after which point they need to be in testing or you won't be able to convince your team to do it this year.
Oh, and for mounting the rollers, you may want to twist the supports so the tread will actually move over tread-suppporting rollers without tearing something. And for roller axles, just make sure you can get the rollers off when you want to but not when you don't want to. |