itsmoked
Electrical
- Feb 18, 2005
- 19,114
I'm tasked with building a semiautomatic lift table. I've got the controls covered,(HA!). At first blush I was going to use the classic hydro-electric scissor table. Unfortunately those completely render the space,(needed), below them unusable. So I'm using four screw jacks that I want to gang together.
The four legs will be oriented so that the shafts are parallel across the rear two and across the front two. I want to yank the existing cranks,(12.0mm), which have a bevel gear on them in the top of each jack. I'll tie each of the two sets together with a shaft. Place two gears on the front shaft and one gear on the rear shaft. Tie the front and rear shafts together with a chain drive. The second front gear chained to a gear motor mounted to one of the legs.
The jacks are rated at 3,500lbs each. The table will have about 2,500lbs on it.
One issue I see is timing each leg to be the same height and provide the same lifting force. How can I make fractional adjustments to the shaft timing on one set tied together with a shaft? I can't imagine getting the torque required thru set screws, and a flatted shaft is a 360 degree proposition.
It would be nice to be able to service the tie shafts in the future without messing with the welded together structure. I hope you can suggest a connector style/system that would allow shaft removal/adjustment.
Any other issues you can think of?
Keith Cress
Flamin Systems, Inc.-

The four legs will be oriented so that the shafts are parallel across the rear two and across the front two. I want to yank the existing cranks,(12.0mm), which have a bevel gear on them in the top of each jack. I'll tie each of the two sets together with a shaft. Place two gears on the front shaft and one gear on the rear shaft. Tie the front and rear shafts together with a chain drive. The second front gear chained to a gear motor mounted to one of the legs.
The jacks are rated at 3,500lbs each. The table will have about 2,500lbs on it.
One issue I see is timing each leg to be the same height and provide the same lifting force. How can I make fractional adjustments to the shaft timing on one set tied together with a shaft? I can't imagine getting the torque required thru set screws, and a flatted shaft is a 360 degree proposition.
It would be nice to be able to service the tie shafts in the future without messing with the welded together structure. I hope you can suggest a connector style/system that would allow shaft removal/adjustment.
Any other issues you can think of?
Keith Cress
Flamin Systems, Inc.-