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I am making a butterfly drivetrain, and was wondering if anybody could give me advice on how to make it better. I'm not quite done, which is obvious, but the main issue I am having is how to actuate the rocking mechanisms that shift the robot from traction to omni wheels
14-10-2014 09:34
Ty TremblayThough a 4 speed robot would be cool to see, my first suggestion would be to eliminate your transmission and get your speed and torque changes by a difference in the diameter of your wheels. If you have a small traction wheel and a large omni wheel, you'll get pushing power when in traction mode and speed when in omni mode. This will reduce complexity and give you more room to mount your pneumatic pistons for actuating the modules by making the modules smaller.
14-10-2014 09:49
JesseKI'm curious whether he intends to do a 4-speed or not. The major tactical advantage of keeping a 1:1 ratio between the omni & traction wheels is to be able to change from one to the other at full speed. There is also another (huge, IMO) build advantage to this setup which should help answer the actuation question, and it is outlined on slide 3 of this paper:
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/2968
I think I need more detail on how the drive train will be run before commenting further. For example, do you plan to use 1 serpentine belt or two belts per side?
14-10-2014 10:58
Ty Tremblay|
I'm curious whether he intends to do a 4-speed or not. The major tactical advantage of keeping a 1:1 ratio between the omni & traction wheels is to be able to change from one to the other at full speed. There is also another (huge, IMO) build advantage to this setup which should help answer the actuation question, and it is outlined on slide 3 of this paper:
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/2968 |
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I think I need more detail on how the drive train will be run before commenting further. For example, do you plan to use 1 serpentine belt or two belts per side?
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14-10-2014 11:34
JesseK|
To put it simply, what advantage would low-gear omni mode give you? What advantage would high-gear 4-wheel traction give you?
From my experience, a major goal when developing a drivetrain should be to reduce the mental load on the driver. Having 4 possible drivetrain states for the driver to keep track of sounds like too much. |
14-10-2014 16:18
mlantryaside from some of the points people have had you are gonna want to put some kind of support between the ballshifters because just having those angle bracket supporting the shifter won't be enough on their own to be supported well
15-10-2014 01:20
Dunngeon
15-10-2014 01:25
Electronica1|
What's the justification behind using belts/chain to connect the two sides? One of the major benefits of a Butterfly setup is the increased mobility of the 4 Omni wheels when driven independently.
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Another question, with the traction wheels on the outside, its possible that with a scrub-steer setup and 4wd; That the robot won't be able to turn smoothly since the wheelbase is so long. It would essentially jitter (bounce) over the ground as the side wheels move in opposite directions. Not saying it would happen to this robot, since I don't know it's final weight; but my recommendation would be to place the omni's on the outside and the traction on the interior. It's what nearly every other implementation of Butterfly uses. See this butterfly implementation
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15-10-2014 01:56
Dunngeon|
From what I understand, a lot of teams with butterfly link the wheels on each side together so that they don't loose power during a pushing match due to a wheel loosing contact with the ground.
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15-10-2014 08:57
runneals
We found that the pneumatic pistons worked really well (and were pretty small) to switch between omni and traction mode (plus gave the effect of low rider
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If you have any questions, feel free to ask me or the team and they can probably field your questions about it.
15-10-2014 09:26
Gregor
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Another question, with the traction wheels on the outside, its possible that with a scrub-steer setup and 4wd; That the robot won't be able to turn smoothly since the wheelbase is so long. It would essentially jitter (bounce) over the ground as the side wheels move in opposite directions. Not saying it would happen to this robot, since I don't know it's final weight; but my recommendation would be to place the omni's on the outside and the traction on the interior. It's what nearly every other implementation of Butterfly uses. See this butterfly implementation
Good Luck from your Cross-Town Rivals, see you at BB |
15-10-2014 22:11
75vs1885I am having trouble seeing how the Omni wheels get their power. Also, I didnt see a shaft for the omni wheels....
21-10-2014 09:07
LexlukenerYou could flip the orientation of the ball-shifter and puting on a double 25 chain sprocket inside the 1x2 and route chains to either module.
26-10-2014 23:39
Munchskull|
I am having trouble seeing how the Omni wheels get their power. Also, I didnt see a shaft for the omni wheels....
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26-10-2014 23:44
R.C.
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In Butterfly drive Omni wheels go unpowered, the use of them if is for drifting around.
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27-10-2014 00:14
MunchskullMy mistake. I seem to reamber team 118's robot having passive omni wheels on their Buttyfly drive. The designer of thus drive train is on my team so I can ask him about the unpowered omni's.
27-10-2014 00:22
Electronica1|
I am having trouble seeing how the Omni wheels get their power. Also, I didnt see a shaft for the omni wheels....
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27-10-2014 10:16
MunchskullThat is correct. His focus shifted from this which, was a personal project, to designing a grasshoper drive with our team.
27-10-2014 10:40
Dunngeon|
My mistake. I seem to reamber team 118's robot having passive omni wheels on their Buttyfly drive. The designer of thus drive train is on my team so I can ask him about the unpowered omni's.
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27-10-2014 13:34
Munchskull|
Robonauts did have Omni-wheels on their drive last year, but it wasn't anything close to butterfly. They used the omni's in conjunction with their WCD 8wd to perform J-turns and mad drifts.
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27-10-2014 15:41
JesseK|
Actually Robonaut's drive was a subset of Butterfly called Texas Coast, the unpowered wheels are what makes it Texas Coast.
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27-10-2014 18:36
Dunngeon|
While we're grumbling about what someone else called their bot, we may as well aim for accuracy -
Did the Robonauts call it grasshopper drive, or a subset grasshopper drive? Where's the proof either way? I don't recall them calling it anything other than 'drop down omnis'. Then again there is no formal definition of grasshopper, butterfly or other insect-based drive. IMO, they're all just derivatives of the Armadillo Drive and none of them ever give it credit. To me, "Texas Coast" isn't a subset of Armadillo Drive since they serve 2 different purposes and are designed quite differently. Am I crazy? Was there one before 2010? My memory is getting bad these days... /sarcasm |
and they tried to rename butterfly.