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A custom shifter-shaft PTO shifter. Uses a 3-position cylinder from Bimba. Low speed is 13.5:1, high is 5.88:1 and PTO is 22t sprocket at 5:1. This results in speeds of 16.5fps and 7.2fps with a 4.2" wheel. Weighs 2.16lbs without cims.
The low speed is a tad high, but I can't get it lower without making a lot of other gears much larger. At the moment it is enough to get away with, and we can use an 11t pinion to bring it down to 6.6fps with a 4.2" wheel.
This uses a custom 1/2" diameter ballshifter shaft and 3/16" balls. However, by shifting on the upper shaft and using a steel shifter shaft, I'm confident that it would make it through a season.
The amount of lathe work this requires is inordinate; two moderately complex parts, one very complex part, and three basic parts (plus 4 spacers).
I will update the GrabCAD partner space with this model soon here: https://workbench.grabcad.com/workbench/projects/gcBvYbFAI7TQYHiKMOq7jiSQVQxuTYPyTAXwhy5IZUFIGK#/space/gcvLTQUiZ-c9-szjJsPH3WvpxdeKOB9B1Z2b-tQWAq3gUh
09-11-2015 01:31
KohKohPuffsReally liking this design
Because this is a 3-position piston, does that mean that when the PTO is engaged, the robot won't be able to move around?
Also, what is the PTO capable of doing? I'm not sure if a 5:1 ratio might be enough to, say lift the robot's weight off the ground.
Finally, where can I find the ballshifter PTO? For the dog PTO I did, I had to rip the hub off of a .step file from a wcp gearbox.
09-11-2015 01:38
asid61Yes, the robot can't move when the PTO is engaged (like it should).
The PTO is going to a 22t sprocket. I would most likely route it to a 40+t sprocket to lift anything (like the robot) or route it to another sprocket and gearbox next to the mechanism. Given that you would be using 4 cims to lift things, a 12:1 gear reduction should be enough for a linear climber.
I had to design the shifter shaft myself. The idea is that the shifting is on the upper shaft, so whenever a gear is engaged the other gears are not. This also enables me to use only two shafts.
The Vex ballshifter shaft requires at least a 34t gear and uses a 3/4" shaft, plus only has two positions. Using a 3-position 1/2" steel shifter shaft enables the use of a tiny 20t ballshifter gear, and reduces the size of the gearbox considerably.
09-11-2015 07:39
Chris is meFrom the title at first I thought this was an ABS gearbox and I was concerned. Looks good though! Generic comment about supporting your CIMs marginally better goes here.
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Because this is a 3-position piston, does that mean that when the PTO is engaged, the robot won't be able to move around?
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| Also, what is the PTO capable of doing? I'm not sure if a 5:1 ratio might be enough to, say lift the robot's weight off the ground. |
09-11-2015 15:01
JesseKThis latest round of gearboxes seems to be missing a very critical (IMO) component for the implied WCD setup they're for: the outer bearing block for the direct-drive wheel. Would adding that bearing block (such as the WCP one) cause issues? It simply requires adding two extra threaded holes around the existing output bearing hole.
09-11-2015 15:17
Nathan StreeterI've never designed a PTO gearbox, but this one inspired me to think about it more... as I was thinking about it more, I couldn't come up with how a gearbox with a single shifter shaft / output shaft could be used to get a PTO... After having thought about it a bit more, it seems to me that it requires having 2 shifter shafts OR having the shifting shaft not be the output shaft.
09-11-2015 16:30
Joey MiliaI had a look at your ball shifting shaft and the shaft itself looks fine. I found it interesting that you made the shaft wall 1/8 thick so the balls can't fully engage, that might be a problem with wear depending on gear material and tolerances but it could very well be totally fine.
What I am very concerned about is bearing load. Its seems you're using R1212 bearings and according to lily bearings (http://www.lily-bearing.com/ballbear...12-bearing.htm) they only have a dynamic load rating of 111 newtons and static rating even lower. These numbers may be very conservative (or just wrong) but I would recommend doing some math and researching the ratings of the actual bearings you'd use to see if they'd work. If not, look into bushings or bigger/different bearings.
09-11-2015 17:17
asid61|
From the title at first I thought this was an ABS gearbox and I was concerned. Looks good though! Generic comment about supporting your CIMs marginally better goes here.
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This latest round of gearboxes seems to be missing a very critical (IMO) component for the implied WCD setup they're for: the outer bearing block for the direct-drive wheel. Would adding that bearing block (such as the WCP one) cause issues? It simply requires adding two extra threaded holes around the existing output bearing hole.
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I had a look at your ball shifting shaft and the shaft itself looks fine. I found it interesting that you made the shaft wall 1/8 thick so the balls can't fully engage, that might be a problem with wear depending on gear material and tolerances but it could very well be totally fine.
What I am very concerned about is bearing load. Its seems you're using R1212 bearings and according to lily bearings (http://www.lily-bearing.com/ballbear...12-bearing.htm) they only have a dynamic load rating of 111 newtons and static rating even lower. These numbers may be very conservative (or just wrong) but I would recommend doing some math and researching the ratings of the actual bearings you'd use to see if they'd work. If not, look into bushings or bigger/different bearings. |
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I've never designed a PTO gearbox, but this one inspired me to think about it more... as I was thinking about it more, I couldn't come up with how a gearbox with a single shifter shaft / output shaft could be used to get a PTO... After having thought about it a bit more, it seems to me that it requires having 2 shifter shafts OR having the shifting shaft not be the output shaft.
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09-11-2015 23:37
tickspe15|
From the title at first I thought this was an ABS gearbox and I was concerned. Looks good though! Generic comment about supporting your CIMs marginally better goes here.
If a PTO left the drivetrain engaged, you would have no choice but to be driving your mechanism and the drivetrain at the same time. This is generally undesirable. Imagine trying to hang on a bar you are forced to drive away from, for example. The tradeoff of a PTO is that you can't use your drivetrain while it's engaged (plus the design hurdles). Nothing about a PTO requires the entire gear reduction to take place in the same gearbox as the drivetrain. Rarely is this the case. |
09-11-2015 23:38
asid61|
Most teams that run PTO's do not disengage the drivetrain when the PTO is engaged. You can get around disengaging the drive by either lifting the wheels off the ground before engaging the PTO(see 254 or 118 2013), or using the drivetrain to assist the action being performed by the PTO(see 254 or 1114 in 2010)
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09-11-2015 23:42
tickspe15
10-11-2015 07:12
Chris is me|
Most teams that run PTO's do not disengage the drivetrain when the PTO is engaged. You can get around disengaging the drive by either lifting the wheels off the ground before engaging the PTO(see 254 or 118*in reveal video* 2013), or using the drivetrain to assist the action being performed by the PTO(see 254 or 1114 in 2010)
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10-11-2015 13:35
Travis Covington|
In the case of both 254's and 1114's 2010 robots, the PTO did disengage the wheels. With 254 this is evident when you watch the robot extend its arm - it has to stop driving to unfold the hanging arm. I don't know where you're getting this information from. There are serious risks to trying to align something when the PTO is moving you away from your target. You almost never want your wheels engaged while your PTO is doing something else.
In 2013, if 254's PTO didn't disengage its wheels, that's just because the wheels had already left the ground at that point, so the feature wasn't necessary. This is unique to the 2013 hanging task. |
10-11-2015 13:46
asid61|
This is correct. In 2010 we disengaged and in 2013 we did not. In 2013 the drive wheels were already off the ground so we had no need for the three position cylinder. When we were hanging, the drive wheels were also spinning back and forth. No big deal.
Be careful with the three position cylinders though. They do not behave exactly the same as two 2-position cylinders stacked back to back. See this post here for details: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...75#post1276175 |
10-11-2015 13:50
Travis Covington|
Thank you, that's very helpful. So the holding force in the middle position is quite low then.
In that case, I might just switch to two stacked cylinders. |