wangp1283
Automotive
- Oct 19, 2004
- 56
I need to produce such a response to a load:
an constant acceleration of 0.5m/s^2 for 1/100 of a second.
The initial velocity is not important. What matters is that during that 1/100 second time interval, the acceleration is 0.5 m/s^2
I thought about using a cam to produce this response. Basically, a parabolic camshaft.
The problem is, such a cam would be very hard to machine, because the lobe would be practically non existant.
the distance traveled would be (1/2)(acceleration)(time)^2, which would be (1/2)(0.5m/s^2)(1/100 sec)^2 = 1/40 mm (0.025mm). This is very small distance so a cam lobe is hard to manufacture.
My idea is to use a gear train via rack, pinions, and gears. I will "amplify" the acceleration by a factor or 25 at the cam lobe (so the parobolic lobe is steeper), and then "bring it" down via a gear reduction.
I wonder if this is a way to do it? Please help. Thanks. I'd like to hear your feedback and opinions. This is an interesting and very important (to me) application.
Thanks
an constant acceleration of 0.5m/s^2 for 1/100 of a second.
The initial velocity is not important. What matters is that during that 1/100 second time interval, the acceleration is 0.5 m/s^2
I thought about using a cam to produce this response. Basically, a parabolic camshaft.
The problem is, such a cam would be very hard to machine, because the lobe would be practically non existant.
the distance traveled would be (1/2)(acceleration)(time)^2, which would be (1/2)(0.5m/s^2)(1/100 sec)^2 = 1/40 mm (0.025mm). This is very small distance so a cam lobe is hard to manufacture.
My idea is to use a gear train via rack, pinions, and gears. I will "amplify" the acceleration by a factor or 25 at the cam lobe (so the parobolic lobe is steeper), and then "bring it" down via a gear reduction.
I wonder if this is a way to do it? Please help. Thanks. I'd like to hear your feedback and opinions. This is an interesting and very important (to me) application.
Thanks