Life is a bowl of problems
Mechanical
- Jul 4, 2018
- 19
I'm am designing a belt conveyor that transports thin polybags from where they are cut free from a roll to a packing table. I believe the transport of these practically weightless bags are not significant enough to include in any initial calculation. So the pretension and running tensions for the belts are only required to transport the belt itself at the design speed without slipping at the drive shaft (pulley).
The .042 thick by 4.875" wide by 144" long cotton belts weigh only .131 lbs/sq ft.
The conveyor's top speed is 465 FPM.
The driving shaft is 1.563" in diameter.
The wrap on the driving shaft is about 150 degrees (2.62 Rad) and coefficient of friction is .3.
The only friction comes from the idler rollers that support and tension the belt.
I've attempted to solve for high side belt tension using (T1-wv^2/g)/(T2-wv^/g)=e^(F*alpha) solving for T1 assuming T2 =0 represents the point of slippage. I'm not so sure that that's a correct interpretation.
I get a -.118 result that seems to be a clear indication that I'm on the wrong track.
Can anyone suggest the proper way to determine minimum belt tension just to convey the belt under these conditions?
Thanks,
The .042 thick by 4.875" wide by 144" long cotton belts weigh only .131 lbs/sq ft.
The conveyor's top speed is 465 FPM.
The driving shaft is 1.563" in diameter.
The wrap on the driving shaft is about 150 degrees (2.62 Rad) and coefficient of friction is .3.
The only friction comes from the idler rollers that support and tension the belt.
I've attempted to solve for high side belt tension using (T1-wv^2/g)/(T2-wv^/g)=e^(F*alpha) solving for T1 assuming T2 =0 represents the point of slippage. I'm not so sure that that's a correct interpretation.
I get a -.118 result that seems to be a clear indication that I'm on the wrong track.
Can anyone suggest the proper way to determine minimum belt tension just to convey the belt under these conditions?
Thanks,