YateHaugan1
Aerospace
- Oct 29, 2015
- 13
hi folks,
I've been trying to spec a motor for a seat project I'm working on.
It needs to move a 100kg person up and down at 45 degrees by about 400mm. The actuation would be via a toothed rack cut into one of the motion guides, so I've estimated i'd need a pinion with about 300 Nm torque. The motor itself needs to be quite slim, and as light as possible.
So far, the best option I've found is a 480 watt 4-pole item from Maxon:
This motor runs nominal load at 4350 rpm, so I'd need two stages of worm gear reduction (built into design of motor unit). However this wouldn't give me enough torque - not including losses, at a 263:1 reduction it would give 254 Nm, and with two worm gears, I'm looking at 30% or more in mechanical losses, is that correct?
So my question is, could I run more current through it to get more torque, and also, is there an alternative motor out there that anyone can think of? The Maxon motor is very expensive (around $500 I think) but it's very light (800g) and has a very small diameter, which is ideal. I get the impression that its more designed for automation though, and I don't really need that level of precision.
My alternatives at the moment seem to be adding some kind of spring balance to the mechanism, which would add a load of complexity, or more heavy-duty motors, which are more like 2500g, which is way too heavy.
thanks in advance - as you can probably tell, electronics are not my forte.
I've been trying to spec a motor for a seat project I'm working on.
It needs to move a 100kg person up and down at 45 degrees by about 400mm. The actuation would be via a toothed rack cut into one of the motion guides, so I've estimated i'd need a pinion with about 300 Nm torque. The motor itself needs to be quite slim, and as light as possible.
So far, the best option I've found is a 480 watt 4-pole item from Maxon:
This motor runs nominal load at 4350 rpm, so I'd need two stages of worm gear reduction (built into design of motor unit). However this wouldn't give me enough torque - not including losses, at a 263:1 reduction it would give 254 Nm, and with two worm gears, I'm looking at 30% or more in mechanical losses, is that correct?
So my question is, could I run more current through it to get more torque, and also, is there an alternative motor out there that anyone can think of? The Maxon motor is very expensive (around $500 I think) but it's very light (800g) and has a very small diameter, which is ideal. I get the impression that its more designed for automation though, and I don't really need that level of precision.
My alternatives at the moment seem to be adding some kind of spring balance to the mechanism, which would add a load of complexity, or more heavy-duty motors, which are more like 2500g, which is way too heavy.
thanks in advance - as you can probably tell, electronics are not my forte.