tygerdawg
Mechanical
- Mar 31, 2004
- 1,163
I am designing a single axis linear drive for a client. For several important design reasons I wish to use timing belts if possible. My fallback position will be rack & pinion, but that causes some other problems.
It's a strange application: 57 ft pulley-to-pulley distance, open-ended belt clamped to a carriage in linear bearings, carriage attached to a 6500 lbs buggy on flanged casters, reciprocating back/forth, +/-0.25in position tolerace, slow speeds and accels. I'll drive it with as big a gearmotor as needed.
I've done an exhaustive analysis of torques, inertia, horsepower, tension loads, etc. Several buggy sizes will be towed by the carriage, so I have a good understanding of the range of torques required and have made system assumptions and adjustments to make this work.
Now I'm at the point of selecting a belt and have hit a brick wall. I've contacted Gates, Goodyear, Carlisle, and Mectrol and have gotten nowhere with these guys except for Mectrol. All except Mectrol ignore me because in their words "no one knows how to calculate the tensile limits on slow moving belts". It seems their entire market is constantly moving endless belts like on your car and my app is so oddball that no one wants to touch it. What I have done is iteratively plug my numbers into each company's design calculator and generate strength, rating values, and recommended part numbers as if my app were endless belts of varying length. From this calculated data and their catalogs, I try to infer working tensile loads, tooth shear strengths, and horsepower capacity from the results. All the sizing exercises in the catalogs are very simplistic and are based on RPM/Torque/HP/length/pitch and constantly rotating systems. The results from all vendor sizing calculators are encouraging, but inconsistent enough with my own calculations to cause me concern. I've narrowed my choice to a certain pitch, tooth style, material, and width. But without explicit confirmation, I'm leary.
My gut tells me that if I put a big enough honkin' belt on this system, it will pull the load. But no vendor will commit to an answer, either "use this one" OR "our belts won't work". And I'm tired of teaching mechanical engineering to application engineers.
Can anybody out there provide any insight?
Thanks in advance
TygerDawg
It's a strange application: 57 ft pulley-to-pulley distance, open-ended belt clamped to a carriage in linear bearings, carriage attached to a 6500 lbs buggy on flanged casters, reciprocating back/forth, +/-0.25in position tolerace, slow speeds and accels. I'll drive it with as big a gearmotor as needed.
I've done an exhaustive analysis of torques, inertia, horsepower, tension loads, etc. Several buggy sizes will be towed by the carriage, so I have a good understanding of the range of torques required and have made system assumptions and adjustments to make this work.
Now I'm at the point of selecting a belt and have hit a brick wall. I've contacted Gates, Goodyear, Carlisle, and Mectrol and have gotten nowhere with these guys except for Mectrol. All except Mectrol ignore me because in their words "no one knows how to calculate the tensile limits on slow moving belts". It seems their entire market is constantly moving endless belts like on your car and my app is so oddball that no one wants to touch it. What I have done is iteratively plug my numbers into each company's design calculator and generate strength, rating values, and recommended part numbers as if my app were endless belts of varying length. From this calculated data and their catalogs, I try to infer working tensile loads, tooth shear strengths, and horsepower capacity from the results. All the sizing exercises in the catalogs are very simplistic and are based on RPM/Torque/HP/length/pitch and constantly rotating systems. The results from all vendor sizing calculators are encouraging, but inconsistent enough with my own calculations to cause me concern. I've narrowed my choice to a certain pitch, tooth style, material, and width. But without explicit confirmation, I'm leary.
My gut tells me that if I put a big enough honkin' belt on this system, it will pull the load. But no vendor will commit to an answer, either "use this one" OR "our belts won't work". And I'm tired of teaching mechanical engineering to application engineers.
Can anybody out there provide any insight?
Thanks in advance
TygerDawg