Showing posts with label drivetrain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drivetrain. Show all posts

Friday, February 19, 2010

Pokey Broke

Pokey's broken. The heat of firefighting competition a couple years ago--accidentally bashing into walls at full speed in particular--left Pokey's otherwise excellent Tamiya Double Gearbox in sad, noisy shape. A quick exploratory surgery revealed that both plastic 8-tooth (8T) pinion gears are cracked. Rats.

Pokey in pieces; broken, purple pinion gear

Pinion gear crack is on left, runs parallel to shaft

Fortunately, Tamiya has an inexpensive replacement set of plastic and metal pinion gears, TAM15289,  Mini 4WD 8T Metal and Plastic Pinion Gear Set.  Cool.  The set I ordered arrived a few days ago and after installation, Pokey's geartrain is restored to full, smooth, silent health. Next up, equipping the plucky little robot with bluetooth remote control and telemetry capability. Articles to follow.

Incidentally, there are other pinion gear alternatives. You'd need a 48 pitch, 8T pinion gear for 2mm shaft. I don't know how to measure pressure angle or pitch diameter, so I guess you'd have to experiment such as with gears from this web store or maybe this one.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Squeaky: Platter Drive

Squeaky: < prev | next >

One of the key features of a record cleaning machine is the ability to spin the record without manual intervention. I'm getting really sick of cleaning records by manually spinning them on my turntable while I scrub.

Some folks on AudioKarma.org had suggested use of a bread machine, presumably because it uses a fairly high torque motor and some kind of gear reduction.

Upon dissecting the $2 bread maker I got from Goodwill, I found a metal plate onto which a motor and drive mechanism are mounted. As shown in the pic to the right, the motor drives the stirring mechanism on the opposite side of the plate via a tooth belt.

The white cog wheel is attached to a stainless steel drive shaft riding in a bronze bearing by way of a 6mm nut. The drive mechanism is attached to the drive shaft and engages the stirring gizmo in the bread bucket to stir and knead the bread, similar to how the blades of a blender are coupled to the blender motor.

But how to drive a turntable platter? The two I had on hand spin on greased bearings attached to a mounting plate to affix them to a horizontal surface (see pic to the left).

They are both from belt drive turntables. Should I try to use a turntable belt? These are usually low tension belts and will slip with the slightest drag on the platter. I needed a higher torque, higher traction solution.

I want to keep this simple, cheap, and practical with minimum fabrication involved; I don't have a machine shop and I don't want to spend a fortune on this project. Those constraints eliminate a lot of design options. Direct drive would've required fabrication of some type and possibly re-engineering the drivetrain making this an unnecessarily hard problem to solve.

Why not drive the platter rim with a rubber idler wheel attached directly to the 6mm threaded end of the drive shaft? A trip to the hardware store and $18 later I had a pile of options. What ended up working best was a rubber hole plug mounted to a shaft extension. You can see the black idler wheel in the top pic.

To extend the shaft, I used a 5/16" x 1.5" aluminum spacer, basically a hollow aluminum tube, which I threaded with my new 6mm x 1.0mm tap. (Aluminum being a softer metal is easier to tap especially with an incorrectly sized hole).

I disassembled a 1-3/4" hole plug (a rubber puck sandwiched between two plates, compressed by a nut and bolt to squish out and fill a hole). The hole plug rubber piece slid over the aluminum spacer shaft, and with washers on top and bottom and a 6mm cap end bolt on top to cinch it down, et voila, rubber idler wheel.

As a bonus, the gear reduction afforded by this small wheel driving the large platter means the record will spin at a goldilocks speed: not too fast, not too slow, but just right.

Next step is mounting the drivetrain and platter on a chassis. I want the idler wheel to apply user-adjustable pressure to the platter. It adds complexity to the design but it makes up for imprecise mounting, lack of trueness of the drive shaft and more importantly, accomodates wear of the rubber wheel.

Eventually, the motor is to be computer controlled. Before that is possible, I'll need to break out my copy of DC Power Supplies: A Technician's Guide and build a dual voltage supply for the electronics and motor of the robot. I've never built an wall-powered DC supply before... fortunately I can reverse engineer the bread maker supply to help.

Squeaky: < prev | next >

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Edward Wheels

Edward Isaac Bot was to be a 2-3' multi-functional, useful, household robot. Good thing Paul and I weren't being ridiculously ambitious and were instead starting with a small, simple project. <- Sarcasm.

Here's some (simple) thoughts about wheel placement & size, and a later sketch of EIB overall shape. Basically, contemplating more forward wheel placement for stability, larger wheel size for more easily driving over small household obstacles. (Since this was written I got a Jeep and took up four-wheeling. Perhaps I can draw from some of my experiences in that realm).

The note about speed assumes a set of motors I'd already purchased, otherwise you could select wheel size & gearing for appropriate maximum speed.