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Electrical
- Sep 8, 2003
- 764
This is not a student posting even though it may sound like a homework question. I am phrasing the question in a fairly general manner because the project is very sensitive.
I have a DC motor driving what is essentially a purely inertial load. The load is minimal except when being accelerated, hence I am just interested in the inertial aspects because I want to make it accelerate quickly.
It is my understanding that if the motor drove the load through a (light ideal) gear box the inertial load would effectively be reduced by the gear ratio (not the gear ratio squared for example). In other words if the gear box made the load rotate 4 times slower the inertial load referred to the motor shaft would be reduced by a factor of four. I don’t want to use a gear box, I just want to verify my thinking.
The real application is to drive the load through an offset bearing and push-rod. The net effect is to make the load oscillate (in a rotational manner) backwards and forwards by 10 degrees in each direction about a mid-point. This motion of the load is sinusoidal because of the offset bearing, much like being driven by a cam.
It seems to me that at the ends of the offset bearing motion, the motor hardly moves the output shaft at all. In this case the speed reduction effect makes the inertial load seen by the motor essentially zero. On the other hand 90 degrees further on in the cycle the offset bearing is making the load rotate at its maximum speed and therefore giving the maximum inertial load referred to the motor shaft. Does this sound plausible? What is the inertia division factor (neglecting losses)?
It seems that the position is a sinusoidal quantity so maximum velocity occurs at the point midway between the two extremes. Unfortunately the acceleration is the second derivative of the position so the maximum acceleration seems to occur at the ends of the sweep.
I have a DC motor driving what is essentially a purely inertial load. The load is minimal except when being accelerated, hence I am just interested in the inertial aspects because I want to make it accelerate quickly.
It is my understanding that if the motor drove the load through a (light ideal) gear box the inertial load would effectively be reduced by the gear ratio (not the gear ratio squared for example). In other words if the gear box made the load rotate 4 times slower the inertial load referred to the motor shaft would be reduced by a factor of four. I don’t want to use a gear box, I just want to verify my thinking.
The real application is to drive the load through an offset bearing and push-rod. The net effect is to make the load oscillate (in a rotational manner) backwards and forwards by 10 degrees in each direction about a mid-point. This motion of the load is sinusoidal because of the offset bearing, much like being driven by a cam.
It seems to me that at the ends of the offset bearing motion, the motor hardly moves the output shaft at all. In this case the speed reduction effect makes the inertial load seen by the motor essentially zero. On the other hand 90 degrees further on in the cycle the offset bearing is making the load rotate at its maximum speed and therefore giving the maximum inertial load referred to the motor shaft. Does this sound plausible? What is the inertia division factor (neglecting losses)?
It seems that the position is a sinusoidal quantity so maximum velocity occurs at the point midway between the two extremes. Unfortunately the acceleration is the second derivative of the position so the maximum acceleration seems to occur at the ends of the sweep.