007Driver
Mechanical
- Feb 2, 2005
- 8
Hello all,
I just graduated from mechanical engineering and Im feeling silly about having difficultly with my first design task as a newly employed EIT. This is what I have been working on:
A set of driveway gates for this really nice mansion, these gates are going to be big and heavy and they want them to be all automated, a clean smooth outer appearance with low upkeep.
The gates: 7 feet wide each, 6 feet tall, 2000 pounds each (made out of cast iron and solid steel backing)
Bearings: Tuff Cast machineable resin, the top bearing runs on a shaft 1.5" shaft as does the bottom, the main holding post is a 3"X3" solid steel bar. The bottom bearing has a seat of 4"O.D. for the gate to sit on ( my thrust bearing to hold the weight of the gate ) and with a small radius in the inside of the bearing the surface area of the thrust bearing is ~8in^2
My Question:
I am having troubles designing an automated gate opener, the simplest idea I have come accross is running a bar between the two gates at the bottom and having a rack and gear at the bottom of each gate (gear of 12" DIAM.) and along this shaft having a industrial screw drive push this rod side to side to open/close the gates in unison. I need to figure out how much force I need to close these gates. The co-efficient of friction of the Tuff Cast is .2 So originally I worked out it would take 400lbs to push the gate open, but im not pushing it, im rotating it open, so is this value still mean something though I am turning the gate on a shaft and not sliding it?? The moment of Inertia of these gates is quite large and that value seems very small to open the gates. So how much force will it take to swing these open/close?
Other info:
Id like the gate to swing open/close (90 degrees) in about 20 seconds.
Appologies for the lengthy question, but Im freaking out here not being able to do what seems to be a very simple problem :S
Thanks, John
I just graduated from mechanical engineering and Im feeling silly about having difficultly with my first design task as a newly employed EIT. This is what I have been working on:
A set of driveway gates for this really nice mansion, these gates are going to be big and heavy and they want them to be all automated, a clean smooth outer appearance with low upkeep.
The gates: 7 feet wide each, 6 feet tall, 2000 pounds each (made out of cast iron and solid steel backing)
Bearings: Tuff Cast machineable resin, the top bearing runs on a shaft 1.5" shaft as does the bottom, the main holding post is a 3"X3" solid steel bar. The bottom bearing has a seat of 4"O.D. for the gate to sit on ( my thrust bearing to hold the weight of the gate ) and with a small radius in the inside of the bearing the surface area of the thrust bearing is ~8in^2
My Question:
I am having troubles designing an automated gate opener, the simplest idea I have come accross is running a bar between the two gates at the bottom and having a rack and gear at the bottom of each gate (gear of 12" DIAM.) and along this shaft having a industrial screw drive push this rod side to side to open/close the gates in unison. I need to figure out how much force I need to close these gates. The co-efficient of friction of the Tuff Cast is .2 So originally I worked out it would take 400lbs to push the gate open, but im not pushing it, im rotating it open, so is this value still mean something though I am turning the gate on a shaft and not sliding it?? The moment of Inertia of these gates is quite large and that value seems very small to open the gates. So how much force will it take to swing these open/close?
Other info:
Id like the gate to swing open/close (90 degrees) in about 20 seconds.
Appologies for the lengthy question, but Im freaking out here not being able to do what seems to be a very simple problem :S
Thanks, John