jkaras
Electrical
- Jun 19, 2012
- 5
Hello Everyone, I am a electrical/lighting engineer and we have a project that is very mechanical. It consists of a series of pulleys mounted in a row along a wall. On the other side of the room there is another series of pulleys. One motor is positioned to drive one continuous loop of stranded cable that weaves back and forth from one side of the room pulley to the other side of the room pulley and back around to the motor. (See attached image) We used 1" pulleys and 3/64 7x7 strand galvanized cable. We chose the galvanized so we could run power through it. We have light elements that mount onto the cable itself, so the cable loop never makes a complete rotation. The light elements basically go back and forth in the room and never pass around a pulley. The cable itself after running for an hour or so started to unwind and fray. Could this be an issue with the cable making right turns then left turns? Could the issue be pulley size related (This is actually our next step)? Could it be caused by the cable just going in one direction and then switching back in the other direction over and over, never making a complete loop? Any other suggestions? We need this to run nonstop for over a decade. Thank you in advance.
Jason
Jason