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Design of a timing belt actuator

Discussion in 'Motor actuators and drivers' started by jyrki.j.koivisto, May 29, 2011.

  1. jyrki.j.koivisto

    jyrki.j.koivisto New Member

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    I did some calculations and assuming the 400mm up and down movement it resulted that the left and right axis points should of course be 800mm apart, in that way the 30 degrees would be when other axis is all the way down and the other all the way up. I'm not sure if that is the same on the real Force Dynamics sim.

    I also calculated that there has to be ~25mm from the axis to the frame so the swivel point won't bind to the frame (I need to checkit though)

    Back bearing should be then 400mm (half of that from left/right as the point of rotation is halfway) This means that the front bearing holes should go 345mm from back of the frame. For a margin of error and for other reasons the axis bearing shaft will protrude 55mm from the frame to the axis point.

    Final dimensions of the frame will then be 690mm in width and some 400mm in length. I've not yeat checked how the seat will alter these calculations (it could bind to the axises)
  2. BartS

    BartS Member

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    Go Jyrki, keep up the work pace, good luck dude.
  3. jyrki.j.koivisto

    jyrki.j.koivisto New Member

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    Not much progress on this sim yeat, but I've made those two front bearing holes and I've also made one aluminum bearing holder that will go inside the frame (I will need 6 of them in total) Not sure if that is the way I'll do it, I could also fit a 52mm ID tube inside...

    I'm also considering to buy a TIG welder as I like the weld it produces, at the moment I only have an old Kemppi Eka stick welder. Another possibily is to get the frame tubing cut by a laser. Here where I live there's a facility that could do it http://www.hiltop.fi/putkilaser.php I'll have to ask them for the cost and make this one ready so I know where all the holes go... No CAD software has been hurt during the desing phase... :D

    I'm also thinking to use bend tubing to hold the seat in the frame, two tubes would go from back of the frame to the seat mounting and one from each front arm.
  4. mrbeginner

    mrbeginner Active Member Gold Contributor

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    Hello!

    If you thinking of buy tig Check this out
    http://www.ebay.de/itm/50A-PLASMA-CUTTE ... 077wt_1163

    It has tig + plasma + arc welding in same product. I have bought it for plasma cutting and is awesome.
    Check in youtube with keyword ct-520

    Good luck to you project!

    Peter
  5. paiva27

    paiva27 New Member

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    hello,
    jyrki.j.koivisto, how is your project?
    what materials you used, motor, frequency inverter. specification.

    Thank you!
  6. paiva27

    paiva27 New Member

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    Hi Jyrki,

    which card you suggest for the project 4dof?
    and how is your project?

    thank you

    Rafael
  7. jyrki.j.koivisto

    jyrki.j.koivisto New Member

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    You would need a at least 2 computers if not doing the motion controlling in a microcontroller.

    Controller doing the motion calculations don't need much calculation power if the power stages handle the motor calculations (=VFD). I can not give you an answer for your question as I plan on doing the motion calculations on a microcontroller (my motion controller gets data via LAN/WLAN or USB, I have not decided yeat)

    Firts look carefully in all the VFD manuals and take a note how they can be connected to some external controller (some CNC sites could be of help)
    Most if not all accept analog voltages and digital inputs, then just parameterize the VFD for what you want the input to control (speed, torque...)
    Some VFD's can be connected to somesort of bus (profibus, modbus, rs485, rs422 and what not (bus has a broad definition here...) ) that would be much better solution as no analog signals would need to be created (can be tricky and when done badly it doesn't work as expected)

    Getting the data out of x-sim is the easy part, I'm planning on building the sim frame first (hard part) If I ever get the frame build then there are plenty of options for how data is converted in to motion.
  8. paiva27

    paiva27 New Member

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  9. Turn

    Turn New Member

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    Hey jyrki -

    Did you make any more progress on your interesting ball-screw actuator build? Curious on how far along you've gotten.
  10. jyrki.j.koivisto

    jyrki.j.koivisto New Member

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    Sorry for not replying any sooner. My prject is in hold at the moment, I have no hurry with this thing... :)
  11. jyrki.j.koivisto

    jyrki.j.koivisto New Member

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    I found some interest again in this little project and started thinking how to control the actuators and decided to go the wireless route.

    Here's what I'm thinking: UBW32 board with usb host and in the port a Buffalo WiFi dongle. I started to port rt2x00 linux driver for it.

    [img600px]http://www.netikka.net/aros-stuff/UBW32_WLAN/images/12120019.jpg[/img600px]
    [img600px]http://www.netikka.net/aros-stuff/UBW32_WLAN/images/12120020.jpg[/img600px]
    [img600px]http://www.netikka.net/aros-stuff/UBW32_WLAN/images/12120022.jpg[/img600px]
  12. patritti

    patritti simracer

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    My Motion Simulator:
    3DOF, SCN6
  13. bsft

    bsft

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    The actuator ideas are coming along well. I am still building mine with the help of a friend, so once they are done I will demo them.
    As for the other ideas, someone may have to shell out the cash to develop one.
    I spent $600 on my 2 units based off plans.
  14. bsft

    bsft

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    That looks ok, but may be slow, unless they are just running them on a slider on screen for motion.
    The K8055 is slow and not really designed for racing sim use, maybe flight yes. 50ms response time I think, slow.
    The supported boards in favour is the Arduino , with a LOT of code development happening. Keep an eye out on the threads.
    Of course there is the JRK, but that is restricted to 14v and max 40 amps.