gravesity
Mechanical
- Nov 18, 2010
- 9
Hello any math wizards out there,
I'm designing a machine that includes a large, heavy arm which pivots on a shaft. When the unit is in operation, we hold the arm up with an electromagnet; when the magnet is shut off, gravity swings the arm down through 35 degrees until it hits a stop.
To lift the arm up again we want to use an electric actuator with a roller bearing, rather than a pin, so the actuator can retract out of the way and the arm can fall freely when it needs to.
The actuators doesn't like to take side loads, so I want to contour the contact surface on the arm so that the roller is always pushing normal to it. I can't seem to figure out a proper equation for it.
Essentially I want to control the slope of the contact surface. I can get that in terms of the swing angle, very easy. Presumably I take the integral from there, and that's where I'm struggling. The slope is a cartesian quality, but describing angles in terms of swing angle is a polar situation.
See the attached PDF of my final attempts before giving up. The vertical dotted line is the path of the circular roller. The shape of the contour is a straight segment (about 6 inches long) followed by a short curve (the contact area) which I have approximated here with a circular chord. I've shown it here in three positions; 0 degrees, 35 degrees, and somewhere in the middle. Ignore the graphical error here where the ending position (at alpha = 0) is a tad beyond horizontal; in reality it will have to end at horizontal so the roller isn't traveling back along the contour in the reverse direction (the 3.500 dimension will have to grow a little).
With the contour at alpha = 0, I imagine an x-y plot of the equation we seek. x varies from Xo onward, and y from 0 onward.
At first I thought it was a simple problem of defining the slope as a function of x, and then integrating. Slope as a function of beta is easy, but slope as a function of x is baffling.
Now my mind starts to lose hold of the problem. This could be a parametric equation with x and y as functions of alpha or beta (beta = -alpha), or perhaps polar?
I'm sure I can come up with a contour, freely-sketched if necessary, that gets me within a percentage of the desired slope (since in theory the actuator can handle some very minimal side load) but I’d be more comfortable with an explicit solution, since one must exist.
Is anyone interested in tackling this? I'd be much indebted to you.
Thanks,
Simon
I'm designing a machine that includes a large, heavy arm which pivots on a shaft. When the unit is in operation, we hold the arm up with an electromagnet; when the magnet is shut off, gravity swings the arm down through 35 degrees until it hits a stop.
To lift the arm up again we want to use an electric actuator with a roller bearing, rather than a pin, so the actuator can retract out of the way and the arm can fall freely when it needs to.
The actuators doesn't like to take side loads, so I want to contour the contact surface on the arm so that the roller is always pushing normal to it. I can't seem to figure out a proper equation for it.
Essentially I want to control the slope of the contact surface. I can get that in terms of the swing angle, very easy. Presumably I take the integral from there, and that's where I'm struggling. The slope is a cartesian quality, but describing angles in terms of swing angle is a polar situation.
See the attached PDF of my final attempts before giving up. The vertical dotted line is the path of the circular roller. The shape of the contour is a straight segment (about 6 inches long) followed by a short curve (the contact area) which I have approximated here with a circular chord. I've shown it here in three positions; 0 degrees, 35 degrees, and somewhere in the middle. Ignore the graphical error here where the ending position (at alpha = 0) is a tad beyond horizontal; in reality it will have to end at horizontal so the roller isn't traveling back along the contour in the reverse direction (the 3.500 dimension will have to grow a little).
With the contour at alpha = 0, I imagine an x-y plot of the equation we seek. x varies from Xo onward, and y from 0 onward.
At first I thought it was a simple problem of defining the slope as a function of x, and then integrating. Slope as a function of beta is easy, but slope as a function of x is baffling.
Now my mind starts to lose hold of the problem. This could be a parametric equation with x and y as functions of alpha or beta (beta = -alpha), or perhaps polar?
I'm sure I can come up with a contour, freely-sketched if necessary, that gets me within a percentage of the desired slope (since in theory the actuator can handle some very minimal side load) but I’d be more comfortable with an explicit solution, since one must exist.
Is anyone interested in tackling this? I'd be much indebted to you.
Thanks,
Simon