MadModder

Gallery, Projects and General => How do I?? => Topic started by: AdeV on June 21, 2017, 07:42:20 PM

Title: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 21, 2017, 07:42:20 PM
I'm trying to find a DC gear motor (worm drive) capable of lifting up to 100kg via an Xcm pulley (size dependent on RPM). So 981newtons. Assume I need a range of about 75cms, and I'd like to be able to traverse the range in about 20 seconds.

So, if I had a 1cm diameter pulley, I need to find a motor capable of pulling 5Nm at around 75rpm. The closest match appears to be this wee fella: http://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/dc-geared-motors/7736771/  However, the datasheet claims a "nominal" torque of only 3Nm, but a "starting" torque of 25Nm (at 34 amps :bugeye:)  I'm thinking this will probably do what I want it to do, but I'd just like confirmation from someone more knowledgeable than me: If I were to need 5Nm continuously for up to 30 seconds, would I be asking too much of this motor?

The application (you may have guessed already, if you saw my office thread) is a self-build rise-and-fall workbench... I'm going for 100kg as the likely maximum load, I'm thinking of having pretty much the entire 3m length of bench move up & down. To make sure everything's in sync, it'll all be driven from one motor, using thin wire rope and pulleys. Er, hopefully. I think I may have just spotted a flaw in my plans...
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: tom osselton on June 21, 2017, 11:31:57 PM
Hell of a price! Try a car window motor from the junkyard its probably the same thing!
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: awemawson on June 22, 2017, 02:20:53 AM
Ade,

There is a chap on the MIG welding forum who not infrequently sells second hand electric actuators, a bit like a hydraulic cylinder but contains a screw and nut and electric motor. I think they come from scrapped hospital beds and bath lifts. Perhaps you can find something similar as they sound ideal for your job and are cheap and compact.
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: DMIOM on June 22, 2017, 03:44:10 AM
Ade,

Just a couple of thoughts:

1 cm seems an awfully small pulley- if it is conventionally-rigged the wire will only have just over 1.5 cm in contact with the pulley, so you’d need to create something like the drum-end on a mooring winch with multiple turns.

How are you guiding the bench so it is constrained in X and Y – will that add frictional losses?

If it must be 'push' from underneath alone, then maybe add a set of gas-springs to reduce the load?

Is there any chance you can rig this as a suspension? – could make things easier and you could add a counterweight to null-out the static weight of the bench? And you could then even automate it with an aquarium pump or similar! – empty tank atop your counterweight, reservoir tank nearby, elevate = pump water into counterweight tank, lower = run water back into reservoir?

Dave
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: awemawson on June 22, 2017, 06:04:46 AM
This sort of thing:

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/linear-actuator-heavy-duty-screw-jack-24-inch-travel-/182630112771?hash=item2a859a5e03:g:HskAAOSw1WJZM9bx

Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: PK on June 22, 2017, 06:20:55 AM
This sort of thing:

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/linear-actuator-heavy-duty-screw-jack-24-inch-travel-/182630112771?hash=item2a859a5e03:g:HskAAOSw1WJZM9bx
Seconded, these are neat and can produce prodigious force.  The ebay ones tend to wear quite quickly in  gate opening applications (YMMV) but for raising a bench every now and then they should last forever.  You need two DPDT relays to drive them and they often have limit switches built in.
PK
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 22, 2017, 03:56:38 PM
Thanks for the ideas!

Tom - that's probably not a bad idea... and will be way cheaper than the motor I found. I've actually got one kicking around somewhere out of an old Ford. The only thing I'd be concerned about is whether they've got the strength in them.

Linear actuators - very interesting indeed! They'd make the mechanism much simpler, that's for sure. The only downside is, I reckon I'd need 3 or 4 of them, one per leg, and getting them perfectly synchronised might be tricky? Don't want the bench going up wonky, all my stuff might roll off!

Dave - I was being a bit disingenuous about the pulley... it would actually effectively be a winch drum, around 1cm diameter, with one end of the rope attached to it. There would be one "drum" per leg. Each wire rope will then be routed via pulleys (of any old size) to the legs. The bit I realised last night that I'd got wrong... the rope will have to go down to the bottom of the inner leg, then come back up between the legs and be fixed somewhere near the top of the outer leg. Otherwise it'd be like trying to lift yourself off the ground using your bootlaces!  :scratch: Gravity will allow the bench to descend (speed controlled by the motor/worm drive), and if I put a pulley inside the bottom of the inner leg, the rope can be guided into a machined slot (see what I did there?  :lol:) to the attachment point on the outer leg. I can make the legs quite fat, so fitting a small pulley in should be no problem. Other than stretch in the rope, which might be an issue early on, and which I will have to be able to adjust out, it should mean each leg moves by the exact same amount - in theory at least...

Constraining the bench left/right - a while back I bought some linear bearings (another aborted project, I can't even remember what the project was now!) I can use them, screwed to the wall, with the bearings attached to the bench, to hold everything square, and there'll be as near as makes no odds, no friction. If the vertical load on the bearing seems excessive, I can put a leg or two at the back of the bench as well, although it's going to start getting a bit messy with all those ropes under there...

I guess I could use linear actuators, and a computerised level sensor... which tweaked the voltage to each motor to keep everything square, that could be a fun project...  :proj:
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: awemawson on June 22, 2017, 04:08:20 PM
Fat legs each with a hydraulic cylinder inside, where the floor end tube surrounds the table top tube sliding one in the other. Commoned up to a small hydraulic pump. Power steering pump would probably do. No complex mechanics to jam and heavy loads should be no issue.
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 22, 2017, 04:55:30 PM
Like the idea Andrew - a couple of issues though; the rams are chuffing expensive (for the stroke I want, you're looking at pushing on for £100 per ram, and I need 3 or 4); unless they're identical, tuning them might be tricky? Plus then I need control valves etc.

Even so, definitely worth a look... and it would make for a neater under-bench installation...
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: awemawson on June 22, 2017, 05:01:02 PM
Perfectly feasible to make your own hydraulic cylinders - all the bits can be bought - precision tube and rod, pistons, seals etc
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: David Jupp on June 23, 2017, 07:55:36 AM
If using wire rope, perhaps consider some kind of safety device in case of rope failure (maybe similar to that in 4 post car lifts). 

A hydraulic arrangement tends to 'fail slowly' but might still warrant some additional measures.

Linear actuators might need a brake to ensure they 'stay put' on power failure.
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: vtsteam on June 23, 2017, 08:35:16 AM
Fascinating fun! Any use for a counterweight on a pulley to ease the load some on whatever method you choose?
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: appletree on June 23, 2017, 08:52:18 AM
If its a single acting ram only the rod needs to be smooth/acurate, with a suitable seal in the bore of the gland. The tone just acts as a guide the force is X psi times the cross sectional area of the shaft.

Phil
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: RussellT on June 23, 2017, 09:00:41 AM
For simplicity I'd go for a wire at each corner.  It'd be easy to adjust the length with a rigging screw or eyebolt.  You could also incorporate counterweights to take the static load.  I'd then connect all 4 wires to your chosen actuator so they were always moving together.  If you want greater travel than your actuator gives then you could use a pulley to double the travel if the actuator is powerful enough.

I think I've seen drawings for similar devices for hoisting model railways up to the ceiling.

Russell
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: PK on June 23, 2017, 09:09:38 AM
Since no one has mentioned it... Wire or chain on each leg, going to a plate which is pulled or pushed by a linear actuator ? You could use a winch too with 4 drums on the same shaft.  Both options self synchronise...
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: vtsteam on June 23, 2017, 09:22:22 AM
Any hammer pounding or vise wrenching going to be happening on this bench, or is it strictly for electronics/soldering, etc?

Cable suspension only supports down loads. Seems like a locking telescoping leg mechanism (rachet, pin in hole, etc.) would be helpful as separate from the actual lift mechanism, unless it's a jack screw lift.
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: appletree on June 23, 2017, 10:52:26 AM
Would a variation on the scissor action bike lift suffice?

Phil
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 23, 2017, 02:38:47 PM
OK, I think I'm going to rule out hydraulics. It's an interesting idea, but I don't like the idea of having all that oil kicking around in an office space, it's going to be dirty enough as it is, and I can guarantee I'll add a few leaks along the way. I may build a rise/fall bench for the workshop one day that uses hydraulics.

Counterweights - yes, I could build in counterweights I guess, but I don't really want things hanging down under the bench where my knees will go if I'm sat at it, besides, I don't think I'll need them. I'm hoping that speccing 100kg for the weight of the bench is total overkill... so the 5Nm motor should be more than capable (and if I do buy the expensive one, and it IS capable of providing up to 25Nm for brief periods, then it'll well lift the bench even if I lie down on it!

So, I have another thought, which is basically a variation on the linear actuator: Rather than having individual actuators, have a long ACME screw in each leg driven by a sprocket at the top. Then run a chain all the way around, driven by a single motor. That way, all the legs would rise/fall at the same rate (provided the chain stayed on!). Going around corners would be easy with additional sprockets. I can probably get away with using bicycle chain & gear sprockets which should be cheap as chips on eBay. Plus I can adjust the gearing (on the fly if I put a Shimano gearset on the motor  :lol:) This would also be self-locking, and the legs wouldn't need to be ginormous. The only "interesting" part would be the screws; but I have a lathe.... so I could make my own  :thumbup: Furthermore, if I didn't fancy running a chain all the way around the underside of the bench, I can always run a long driven shaft & simply take drive off it next to each leg. That would require bevel gears to turn the drive 90 degrees (I would want the sprockets horizontal, not vertical), it would also mean shorter chains = less sag between each leg, but it does make it a bit more complicated.

Re: the wire rope & safety (i.e. if it snapped) - each leg would have it's own rope/drum, albeit driven off a common shaft. So if one snapped, it's not ideal, but the bench should stay up on the remaining legs. However, as it would be effectively suspended on the wire ropes, it's possible there will be some "bounce". There will be no hammering or pounding (other than in frustration!) going on, it's purely for electronics & computer stuff.

Phil - that's also a very interesting idea, a bit like the "go go gadget shoes" as seen here:
A threaded shaft could be used to drive them up & down.... the only thing that puts me off is, the mechanism would have to be left on show, and I suspect it might be susceptible to getting kicked/rammed with a chair, etc. This would be the same with round legs, but they could take a knock or two as they're purely support, not mechanism. Plus, to make 3 or 4 of them move the exact same amount, they'd have to be made to pretty exacting tolerances, something I'm not all that good at...

Anyway, lots of food for thought, please keep the ideas coming, I'm getting quite excited at the thought of building this thing!
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: vtsteam on June 23, 2017, 03:42:07 PM
So, I have another thought, which is basically a variation on the linear actuator: Rather than having individual actuators, have a long ACME screw in each leg driven by a sprocket at the top.

You could reduce the length of the screw to just longer than the adjustment range needed, with the rest of the leg being solid. Or maybe a pipe with a cap welded on. You could then use a standard bit of threaded rod. We can get that as Acme or just ordinary all thread.

If thick enough the ordinary stuff would work. 3/4" by 10 tpi is available in hardware stores here in 3' lengths. Metric must be available similarly.

Weld some long nuts to a plate for a pipe cap and you have the mechanism.
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: awemawson on June 23, 2017, 06:31:40 PM
Or you could be less of a Wuzz and settle for a wind up/down stool like the rest of us  :lol:
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: Charles on June 23, 2017, 06:45:49 PM
Surely the ideal design would be driven by a single actuator, no problems with maintaining even movement, no complex interlink mechanism?

A scissor lift style is out because you can't get your knees under it, but what about a cantilever design as found on a forklift?

An 'L' shape frame on the floor, with the upright part at the back, uprights consisting of two rails spaced, say, 500mm apart, a plate with 2 pairs of bearings sliding on the rails, with a linear actuator in the middle. Bench top cantilevered out from the plate.
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: chipenter on June 24, 2017, 02:06:56 AM
Four 1meter lengths of 20mm studding with timing pullys , as in a mill knee .
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 24, 2017, 11:39:15 AM
Aha! One of the advantages of being a hoarder, is every now and then you stumble across something you forgot you had, which could prove useful....

In this case, a decent sized gear motor!

(https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4255/35374856451_114cced796_c.jpg) (https://flic.kr/p/VTXoo8)

This is one of a pair of wheelchair motors I was given some years ago by John Bogstandard, so it'll be good to finally put them to some use (or one of them at least). I don't know how powerful they are, but they turn at about 60rpm @ 12v, which seems to be right around where I want the speed.I can always bump up the voltage ifI want to run them faster, for the length of time the motor will be running, I can't see it being a problem. There appears to be an encoder on the end as well, although why I am not sure, and there's no connectors to it. The two extra pins in the plug are not connected to anything.

I can remove the bracket and the clutch lever (I will simply leave it permanently engaged), and will weld up a bracket to hold it to the underside of the bench.

Apologies to any Americans out there, the rest of this post will be in French. To translate back to the mother tongue, simply divide by 25.4...

So, I've worked out that ideally I want about 600mm of travel, from around 700mm to 1300mm. I could possibly get away with less (which would also make any leadscrews cheaper), so I may settle for 500mm & start at 720mm (standard desk height) and only go to 1220.


Charles - one leg with cantilevers sounds pretty easy, and certainly a lot less "dieselpunk" than having a load of chains thrashing around under the bench... I do wonder though if it will be stable enough. I am currently anticipating having almost 3000mm x 600mm of bench  (kitchen worktop) rising & falling. There's a 90 degree corner, but I'll probably fix that at desk height. Maybe fit a kitchenette there in case I can persuade the wife to come by & do some cooking  :lol:  :wack:). Also, I quite like the dieselpunk thought... I could put a camera at floor level to watch the mechanism at work :D

So, I guess another question would be.... what size threaded rod? I can pick up 16mm ACME threaded in 1m lengths for a surprisingly low price on eBay, 20mm costs a bit more but I'm wondering if the extra thickness would provide additional stability. Having said that, I do intend to use close-sliding-fit tubing, the outer leg will be fixed to the floor & the inner leg is what it actually sits on, the overlap should prevent too much side-to-side wobble, especially combined with the linear bearings. But would 16mm possibly bend under,say, a 200kg load (weight of bench+contents+me leaning heavily on it)? I think if I do Charles' idea of one linear actuator,I'll go out to a 30mm screw, that should be plenty surely?
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 24, 2017, 11:44:35 AM
PS: The other advantage of using leadscrews over ropes, is setting the initial leg height is dead easy: Just rotate the inner leg until it's firmly in contact with the ground. I'll probably turn up a small end plate which screws to the ground to prevent it from turning when the bench is raised/lowered, which will be screwed in once the height is set.
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: DMIOM on June 24, 2017, 12:53:11 PM
Sussed it out - I can guess what you're up to!   :ddb:

"Bed" rising on leadscrews = Z axis, then all you'll add later is a lightweight X/Y gantry above to carry as many printheads as you want => mega-3D-printer!

 :proj:

Dave
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: chipenter on June 24, 2017, 12:59:31 PM
It's probably an electric brake on the end of the motors , I have a pair very similar .

Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 24, 2017, 01:55:26 PM
mega-3D-printer!

...or maybe a ceiling-mounted plasma cutter....!  :lol:

Hi Jeff - could be... although I think it's a worm drive gearbox, looking at the shape of it (good excuse to open her up!), would a worm drive need a brake?

Edit to add: Yep, you're spot on, it's an electromagnetic brake, just like the one on the top of my CNC mill... That should reduce the required current somewhat!
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: Noitoen on June 26, 2017, 04:37:55 PM
I don't think it's a worm drive. It does not work well as wheelchair motor. To acheive the 90° setup they usually use bevel gears.
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 26, 2017, 07:26:14 PM
Right then... tomorrow I will take the lid off and have a look!

I've been doing some calculations... with a 4mm TP screw (or an 8TPI Acme, if I can get imperial anywhere), I need around 576rpm to achieve my desired 600mm rise/fall within about 20 seconds. If I can get the wheelchair motor to turn at 64rpm (around 18-20V should do it), I can use off-the-shelf bicycle sprockets to gear up to exactly that RPM. So the only question then is, is one motor powerful enough to turn all those gears & cogs & idlers, to overcome the friction of 4 leadscrews, and still lift a sensible weight?

I calculate I will need: A large main drive sprocket (will have to make the bushing to fit it to the motor), driving a small cog, which is rigidly attached to another large cog, which in turn supplies drive to small cogs on each leg (so 2 chain rings, and a minimum of 6 small sprockets. To reduce the individual chain lengths, I had wondered about adding an additional large/small pair (so each driver pair drove 2 legs), so that's 3 chain rings & 7 sprockets. Each driver (except for the one on the motor) will need to run in bearings, the top of each leadscrew will also need bearings, so at a rough guess that's 8 bearings so far. Then the chain will require tensioners; 3 options here: Fixed plastic "slide" tensioners ala a car cam chain (which introduces possible wear issues), but these would be very simple to make & fit; plastic guide wheels (more bearings), or additional sprockets (more bearings AND sprockets)... Then there's the chain, of course. Plenty of it, certainly more than on your average bike...

Everything's actually pretty cheap, except for the chain rings (around £12 each) and the lead screw/nuts (but I could potentially make these from bar, which would be cheap). Actually, the lead scews can be had for less than a tenner, but the nuts are ferociously expensive, even from China, so maybe I'll buy the German leadscrews & just make the nuts myself. Of course, one option to save a few pennies is to buy a job lot of broken bicycles, and rob the sprockets off them... but then I end up with a pile of dead bicycles to dispose of into the bargain. Plus, who knows how much wear & rust will be on these things?

Still.... I'm tempted... not ready yet to abandon the idea to a central hydraulic hand-operated jack & latching legs... but I do have a deeper appreciation of why these things cost so much.

Oh - I looked into 2nd hand rise/fall desks - they're certainly available on the 'bay, but the cheapest I saw was £200, and no indication of maximum load. I'd love to find a broken one so I can see what they use for a mechanism...
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: awemawson on June 27, 2017, 02:21:47 AM
Perfect excuse for you to get a CNC plasma table. You could cut your sprockets exactly as you want them  :clap:
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 27, 2017, 12:52:38 PM
Ha - indeed... but the project to make or buy/fettle a plasma CNC table is currently beyond my meagre means :( Not to mention the space in my workshop is currently rather chaotically taken up with Too Much Stuff...

Hmm... maybe if I knew someone who had a CNC plasma table, and rather enjoyed using it............ anyone?  :lol:

Actually - seriously for a minute, if I bought you the sheet of metal, hows about it?
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: awemawson on June 27, 2017, 01:01:42 PM
I'm sure that we could work something out  :thumbup:
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: Pete W. on June 27, 2017, 02:14:09 PM
Ade,

I reckon you'd better take a shovel and a pair of wellies with you!!   :lol:   :lol:   :lol:   :lol:   :lol:   :lol:   
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 27, 2017, 03:45:02 PM
Haha! Unfortunately, I'm allergic to hard physical labour, it makes me break out in a nasty sweat, causes muscle aches and general weakness  :lol:
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: awemawson on June 27, 2017, 04:13:42 PM
Wimp  :lol:
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: hanermo on June 28, 2017, 12:50:48 PM
These are my thoughts / experiences for 2€..

ANYTHING threaded rod in common/normal use is crap.. wears out, binds, rusts, leaks..
anything whiny or with noise, you built, will annoy You forever..
at the loads, I would aim for about 20-30 mm D threaded rod ... AND with acme/trapezoidal, if only using one rod, and no linear guides.
Friction is HUGE with small threaded rod under load.

It is not the load rating ... its the cantilever effect causing the binding.
(If you were lifting a rigid bit from the center, then the effect is vastly reduced, perhaps 20-fold.)

Cheap small air-cylinder counterweights are available for around 5-10 € each.
They can maybe reduce torsion/cantilever effects 20x or more, for not much money.

Perhaps .. fix one or more cylinders next to legs, try it, if it is good, add more as needed, then bolt them inside the vertical legs for looks, not to bother, protection, "neat".

Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: vtsteam on June 28, 2017, 04:19:46 PM
ANYTHING threaded rod in common/normal use is crap..

Hmm, I guess that would include my Gingery lathe built 15 years ago, its milling attachment, the CNC hot wire foam cutter I built 5 years ago, and an automated filter sampler I built for a Cary 5000 spectrophotometer for a high tech optical firm that I worked for 12 years ago.  :dremel:
Title: Re: Electric motor question
Post by: AdeV on June 30, 2017, 10:12:59 AM
I don't think it's a worm drive. It does not work well as wheelchair motor. To acheive the 90° setup they usually use bevel gears.

OK, so I finally got around to looking inside the gearbox last night. It's still not 100% certain, because the thing was so full of black grease that I couldn't easily find the input shaft, without washing the grease out... however, the fact that there's a large gear with "throated" teeth suggests strongly to me that it is worm drive. The large worm-driven gear is attached to the same shaft as a small spur gear, which is then transmitted to a larger cog which is on the output shaft. The gear can be slid along the output shaft to disconnect it from the drive spur, a spring pushes it back into mesh when required.

I didn't power up with the lid off, as I didn't fancy getting sprayed with grease!