You made your own driver for the stepper, then designed a rugged metal pin and delrin based cycloidal drive and made it work!! What makes you think there is something you can not do? So well done. Keep it up 👍👍👍
When designing for 3D printing, keep in mind that every measurement in Z has to be a multiple of your 3D printer's Z step size. If it isn't, your parts will be off by whatever amount is necessary to bring the height to the nearest z-step. Also, use machinist's feeler gauges to get your bed dead nuts accurate.
@@FreeOfFantasy the elephant's foot setting just adjusts the xy expansion of the first layer I think @BrosBrothers is talking about the not perfectly defined hight of the first layer ;)
Unicorn turds per full moon Also I wonder how this thing turns at all, considering the "wobbly" wheel seems to be directly connected to a fixed output. But maybe I overlooked something.
Your output shaft can only do circular motion, however your gear moves in a wave form around your motor axis. Pining these two together creates a lot of friction. Using long holes towards the center of your output shaft would allow for the wave motion of the pins and no sticking.
A little hint for making those full depth cuts through metal, use cyanoacrylate glue to bond to a metal base that acts as a heat sink and cut all the way through your thickness of stock to be cut. If the metal stays cool enough (by keeping your depth of cut small enough) the glue will hold throughout machining for thin parts like you fabricated. When the stock your cutting gets too thick, the side of your cutting tool will grab and toss the part with this technique with full length cutting flutes, but you can cut thicker stock by adding a draft angle to just keep the tip of your tool engaged with the part when cutting deep. To release, heat the metals and the CA glue will fail avoiding warpage and dinging from manually shearing the joint (a little acetone soak works well too, but takes longer). This and some of the other good machining tips I see in the comments will really improve your finished parts.
...though some hammers are more hammer-like than others. Love the Adam Savage quote. And, I too have found that particular style of pliers to make a really good hammer on many occasions.
@@LeviJanssen I had the same problem so I used a second disk/plate on the other side of the lobe. My gearboxes, though, are pulley driven so I can assemble them from both sides - I don't have to stack parts on top of a motor - www.franksworkshop.com.au/wordpress/2018/03/04/3d-printed-hypocycloidic-gearboxes-iii/
The offset lobes won’t reduce backlash. The purpose of the 2nd lobe is to eliminate vibration. Any mechanism which includes an eccentric rotator will have vibration. The 180 degree out of phase counter-rotator cancels it out. As for backlash, if a cycloid is manufactured with the correct tolerances, there will be zero backlash. All teeth are simultaneously engaged. The lack of backlash is why cycloids and harmonic drives are used in robotic arms. Without the lack of backlash, repeatable, precise positioning is not possible.
Just a note regarding attaching the NEMA23 motor to the black plastic. The screws are intended to be inserted from the back of the motor toward the face of the motor. Epic job btw. I'm going to try building one with a brushless motor. Might might a good servo motor.
@@neur303 There is too much slop in the mechanisms as well as too much friction. Therefore it would have horrible backlash in an extruder, and would extrude inconsistently. Planetary gears are superior in just about every way to this. Of course this does allow a bigger gear ratio in a small form factor, but the negatives aren't worth it.
@@Chris-hn4lp It seems planetary gears offer more torque per volume. Which would be quite reasonable for a direct drive as lower volume should also equal lower weight. But I still believe there's more to it. Like you wouldn't be able to use a planetary gear with plastic gears. And the cycloidal gear should be a lot easier to manufacture. www.machinedesign.com/news/article/21829580/comparing-cycloidal-and-planetary-gearboxes
@@Chris-hn4lp yeah this a one of the few designs without backlash, not that it is an issue for the extruded as it can be correct with extra restart on retract ...
Just found your channel and am not only impressed but inspired. And I've seen you're going to college soon. You have more than the capability to thrive at any ivy league college. *Please don't* they will exhaust you with irreverent "busy-work" and you won't gain as much from their curriculums (as a self-learner). So much so you might lose your special spark. Especially with the "cultures" and horrendous bureaucracy that enshroud them Personally, I'm at Montana state in Bozeman and they have a great pace for hw, lectures and exams with enough time and freedom to do projects both through the school and independently (atleast for me) Wherever you choose, please don't try to get the most prestigious, as that doesn't really matter. Just one that you can afford and that allows your mind to be free to learn as you have done already
The wobbly vid was funny at first but got to be an eye strain. Being a person working with mechanical devices, might want to find a camera mounting with some isolation from the work table. As a side note, having recently been to the dentist, I was a bit fascinated with the ceiling mount for the work light, with it being totally free within it's range of motion and total isolation from everything else (except maybe the floor above). This won't cover all needs though, which is why it's just a side note.
I was surprised to see you had just 4k subs. I was expecting around 2 million subs. For such amazing and original content, you are underra ted. Good job lad.
An easier setting for your nema23 might be an arduino with a cncshield, a drv8825 or better stepper driver and estlcam as control software. Much easier to set up and vary.
I think some grease will help smooth out the motion. It's common to use things like white lithium grease in airsoft gearboxes that have high torque and plastic/metal components, can hear a difference when properly applied.
I recently decided to design a 3D printed cycloidal gearbox and throw it on top of a 2300kv brushless motor... After a lot of fiddling, I actually got it to work. I think the ratio was 29:1 It ran for 10 glorious seconds. Then the motor windings burned and the magic smoke came out of the ESC. I think my problem was that the main gear was sitting right on top of the housing. Even though I put some grease in between them the friction was still too high. I was planning on putting some ball bearing between them but I just don't have the time. They are a bitch to design and manufacture but it's wild how such a compact gearbox can produce 30:1 ratio.
It's not friction that prevents you from backdriving it, it's mechanical advantage (or lack thereof). 20:1 ratio means this is like trying to use a level to lift something, but the fulcrum is 20 times closer to you than to the thing you've trying to lift.
Very compact and nice 👍🏻 I was thinking to 3D print one but after seeing this I think I’ll go the laser cutting a Delrin sheet instead. Thanks for sharing 👍🏼
The hole in the square black piece that sits on the motor should have the exact same size as the pilot sticking out of the motor. It's going to be a standard size for any motor of that NEMA 23 size.
@@MM-24 one way is to make the output shaft ot the motor moves the first stage and the output of the first stage moves the second stage but that does not cancel the wobbling ... its like puting two of this devices in line . u get a lot of reduction. the way wobble got canceled for me was to put two of the center parts of this design ( the one that moves) 180 degrees from each other one above the other. so you dont have the wobbling , its cheaper than the first way i told you , it has less parts but ... you dont get the added reduction of a proper double stage. chose your destiny...
If you need pins to go thru 2 or more plates, place the plates together and then push the pins thru all of them. Otherwise, when you are pushing the second plate onto the pins that are already inserted into the first, any imbalance will try to bend your pins or wallow the holes they are mounted into.
Great job! I think not continuous (not smooth) rotation of the output shaft is caused by step rotation of the step-motor multiplied to gear ratio (x20).
I would reccomend using a much shorter endmill on your router, like only a couple mm longer than the thickness of your material. That'll improve the cut quality and reduce chatter
Try to design for a 1:10 ratio if you plan to use in robotics. Also the pins inside should be able to rotate as the eccentric wheel pushes and leans on them (not rattle though)... maybe have them on tiny bearings? Also, maybe lubricate the inside of the mechanism...
I have noticed that you never put any grease or lubricants in your gear systems you would greatly reduce friction and increase produced torque values if you used some grease...
I can see why you chose to use pins but wear isn't really going to be your main concern with the plastic gear and the printed base is going to always have flexing. Have you considered milling the pin profiles into the base so it is one solid piece of aluminum? This would solve your bending issues if you can get your CNC feeds and speeds dialed in (those parts seem a bit crufty!). You may be better off with something like Jeff Kerr's "Anti-Backlash Compound Planetary Gearhead" which is designed to flex and uses the flex to reduce backlash with a similar reduction ratio and it can be easily printed.
If you ever do such a project again think about using the tmc 2209 drivers they will remove all noise and are controllable over a single wire. Cool mechanism tho
i admit im a picky person n have n eye for problems but this was a pretty dam good video man u dont have a bunch of sophisticated tools, but youve made aLOT work with what u have i respect the hell out of that if u keep makin videos like this youll do good for sure i hope u have more like this minus the mandatory ads :p jp
Interesting you used a power supply to apply holding torque during drilling... fun fact - shorting the leads together is another way to greatly increase the detent torque of a stepper, without needing a supply. Trying to move the shaft creates a voltage - shorting the leads says voltage=0. Limited by R =/= 0.
Hey, I really like your build. What kind of aluminium is that? It looks like you should go for higher feeds, the chips are way too tiny. This way the end mill produces enormous amounts of heat, because it mostly rubs over the surface. It will definitely die sooner than later :) Also it might make sense to go for holding bridges, which are easier to remove. Just my two cents. Did you make progress with the uneven rotation speed of the gear? How would you consider to fix it? Best
Awesome! Did you shave down the bolts before drilling out the pins? (Maybe those bolts were the only problem?) Great results! So few people have discovered cycloidals. Can this be made using only a cnc? Or would it have to be bigger (using a 3mm bit).
I did grind down those screws. This certainly can be made with only a CNC. I would have done that had I had thicker plastic to cut out the base. The only thing you’d have trouble with would be the hexagonal holes in the plastic bearing spacer. I used a 1/8 inch bit.
I feel like I may have seen one on your bench but I didn't see you use it. You need a "Noga Deburring Tool" It makes getting rid of those machining/cutting burrs SO freaking easy. Very cheap too. Check out ABOM79, This Old Tony, Keith Fenner, etc for tips on making really clean metal parts. Machining is fun!
There is a lot we cannot see without the design but it looks like the holes that hold the pins from the output disc do not match the holes in the internal gear. The holes in the internal gear should match the pins plus the eccentric motion in order for the output pins to move freely without (much) play. With the pins being crooked in the output disc I am sure that is not the case anymore. Drilling out the plastic part of the output disc by hand and then forcing the pins in location with the aluminum disc will not help - if anything it will exaggerate the problem. A good solution would be to use two discs, one on each side of the internal gear, to make sure the pins are mounted straight.
Hey Levi, cool vid. How did you get your measurements to make this actuator? I am trying to design parts of a tape recorder atm, referencing old tape players, but am having trouble recreating the gear mechanisms exactly.
To ensure the straightness of output pins you should use two bearings instead of one. The second bearing system should be under the cycloidal lobe. the output shaft and bottom bearing system ( similar to output disk ) of your gearbox will be connected through output pins. This will increase the stability of op shaft and also the radial load capacity of the gearbox.
Just watched your video and want to say good job. Looks clean and efficient. I'm just getting into fabrication and still learning which tools do what and their names. I'm curious to what the machine you used to carve out parts is called, is it another type of cnc machine? Lol sorry for the noob question. Hope all is well Thanks, Jesse
I have no experience of cnc routing (but i do with manual milling & turning) your cutter looks very long. which is just asking for chatter added to the already less than rigid structure of the machine, the shorter you can make the cutter (shorter cutter, or cut the shank and pushed all the way into the collet) would improve the finnish and accuracy your getting on your aluminum parts.
Could you... use a smaller amount of "loose" pins, and leave space between, so that you could put each pin on a small bearing supporting it at top and bottom, which "should" reduce friction, but also increase load bearing capability as it would need to rub up against an outer wall.
You made your own driver for the stepper, then designed a rugged metal pin and delrin based cycloidal drive and made it work!! What makes you think there is something you can not do? So well done. Keep it up 👍👍👍
When designing for 3D printing, keep in mind that every measurement in Z has to be a multiple of your 3D printer's Z step size. If it isn't, your parts will be off by whatever amount is necessary to bring the height to the nearest z-step. Also, use machinist's feeler gauges to get your bed dead nuts accurate.
Yeah but you have to think about the first layer too. Because for adhesion you squish it most of the time
For simplicity i stick to all dimension being 1/10th of a mm tolerance and use that as layer size
@@BrosBrothersLP There is the elephants foot setting for that to compensate the overextrusion in the first layer.
@@FreeOfFantasy the elephant's foot setting just adjusts the xy expansion of the first layer I think @BrosBrothers is talking about the not perfectly defined hight of the first layer ;)
Adaptive layers solves this issue to a great degree.
Removing pins may remove overall friction, but having more pins will have more surfaces for load distribution
Instablaster
doesn't make a difference if it can't move at all ;)
Saw another video on Cycloidal drives where small bearings were used on all the contact surfaces - they demonstrated the design _is_ back-driveable.
yeah, James Bruton I think ;)
Ounce inches?
Burger pattys per hot dog...
Metric is the answer
My reaction was pretty similar xD
My cursor instantly hovered frantically above the "thumbs down" icon ... imperial "units" gives me the creeps :-/
@@jorgenskyt I know,
So complicated and frightening.
Unicorn turds per full moon
Also I wonder how this thing turns at all, considering the "wobbly" wheel seems to be directly connected to a fixed output. But maybe I overlooked something.
And the whole project should take about 15,6/31 metric light yards of time to complete :).
Cool project. Honestly its always a success when your part doesn't end up smoking, or melting, or breaking.. You get my meaning.
Oh, this is a very streamlined design, I like it.
Your output shaft can only do circular motion, however your gear moves in a wave form around your motor axis. Pining these two together creates a lot of friction. Using long holes towards the center of your output shaft would allow for the wave motion of the pins and no sticking.
You made a stepper driver...my world just got rocked.
I think you drilled out the wrong holes. You need to allow eccentric motion between the output drive pins and the white cycloidal gear.
Yeah I don't know how it would even be able to turn without that, interesting
Right, that is why it doesn't have a contineous and smooth rotation as the acrylic is being smashed by the 4 Pin (from output shaft).
A little hint for making those full depth cuts through metal, use cyanoacrylate glue to bond to a metal base that acts as a heat sink and cut all the way through your thickness of stock to be cut. If the metal stays cool enough (by keeping your depth of cut small enough) the glue will hold throughout machining for thin parts like you fabricated. When the stock your cutting gets too thick, the side of your cutting tool will grab and toss the part with this technique with full length cutting flutes, but you can cut thicker stock by adding a draft angle to just keep the tip of your tool engaged with the part when cutting deep. To release, heat the metals and the CA glue will fail avoiding warpage and dinging from manually shearing the joint (a little acetone soak works well too, but takes longer). This and some of the other good machining tips I see in the comments will really improve your finished parts.
You need a second disc to offset the vibrations for when the 1 disc hits the pins.
Yep, with the cams for each cycloid disc set at 180 deg to each other.
@@owenjones9608 I see... That's beautiful
would be pretty cool too see you test this baby out, maybe puts some weights on a pulley and see when it cant pull anymore ?
...though some hammers are more hammer-like than others. Love the Adam Savage quote. And, I too have found that particular style of pliers to make a really good hammer on many occasions.
Looks so neat man... Im being mesmerized by all the different implementations of your idea!
Good job! I tried bearings instead of pins for the roller and got smooth running.
If your system is similar to mine, how did you ensure the straightness of the output pins? I think this is my primary issue.
@@LeviJanssen I had the same problem so I used a second disk/plate on the other side of the lobe. My gearboxes, though, are pulley driven so I can assemble them from both sides - I don't have to stack parts on top of a motor - www.franksworkshop.com.au/wordpress/2018/03/04/3d-printed-hypocycloidic-gearboxes-iii/
3:24 tape the hole up first I know there is a bearing, but metal shavings/dust+ magnets are just something that will give you a head ache.
It is a realy good proyect. Actualy, it look prety profesional and in the same line of the clasical way stepper motors look.
Wauw! Cool project. Little tip: don’t mess up clearance and tolerance... 😉
I think most cycloidal reduction drives have two sets of gears with 180 degree offset lobes. That may reduce your backlash somewhat
The offset lobes won’t reduce backlash. The purpose of the 2nd lobe is to eliminate vibration. Any mechanism which includes an eccentric rotator will have vibration. The 180 degree out of phase counter-rotator cancels it out.
As for backlash, if a cycloid is manufactured with the correct tolerances, there will be zero backlash. All teeth are simultaneously engaged. The lack of backlash is why cycloids and harmonic drives are used in robotic arms. Without the lack of backlash, repeatable, precise positioning is not possible.
Just a note regarding attaching the NEMA23 motor to the black plastic. The screws are intended to be inserted from the back of the motor toward the face of the motor. Epic job btw. I'm going to try building one with a brushless motor. Might might a good servo motor.
Wow! That was fun to watch! I would ABSOLUTELY want to see pulling a car with this! What an amazing device! :-)
Dude , just the preview of the video is astonishing . I subscribed !
Oz/Inch? Please use Nm 😎
If you need reliable and good stepper drives, I recommend Trinamic.
design a direct drive 3d print head using a very small stepper motor and this concept.
Second that :) I only found one project using a cycloidal gear for an extruder. Wonder what's the reason we don't see this more often for extruders.
@@neur303 There is too much slop in the mechanisms as well as too much friction. Therefore it would have horrible backlash in an extruder, and would extrude inconsistently. Planetary gears are superior in just about every way to this. Of course this does allow a bigger gear ratio in a small form factor, but the negatives aren't worth it.
@@Chris-hn4lp I read quite the opposite. That they minimze backlash in comparison to other gears.
@@Chris-hn4lp It seems planetary gears offer more torque per volume. Which would be quite reasonable for a direct drive as lower volume should also equal lower weight.
But I still believe there's more to it. Like you wouldn't be able to use a planetary gear with plastic gears. And the cycloidal gear should be a lot easier to manufacture.
www.machinedesign.com/news/article/21829580/comparing-cycloidal-and-planetary-gearboxes
@@Chris-hn4lp yeah this a one of the few designs without backlash, not that it is an issue for the extruded as it can be correct with extra restart on retract ...
Just found your channel and am not only impressed but inspired. And I've seen you're going to college soon.
You have more than the capability to thrive at any ivy league college. *Please don't* they will exhaust you with irreverent "busy-work" and you won't gain as much from their curriculums (as a self-learner). So much so you might lose your special spark. Especially with the "cultures" and horrendous bureaucracy that enshroud them
Personally, I'm at Montana state in Bozeman and they have a great pace for hw, lectures and exams with enough time and freedom to do projects both through the school and independently (atleast for me)
Wherever you choose, please don't try to get the most prestigious, as that doesn't really matter. Just one that you can afford and that allows your mind to be free to learn as you have done already
Second this. My research opportunities paid out dividends, and probably wouldn't have existed at an ivy league.
The wobbly vid was funny at first but got to be an eye strain. Being a person working with mechanical devices, might want to find a camera mounting with some isolation from the work table.
As a side note, having recently been to the dentist, I was a bit fascinated with the ceiling mount for the work light, with it being totally free within it's range of motion and total isolation from everything else (except maybe the floor above). This won't cover all needs though, which is why it's just a side note.
nice work, but I think pins on shafts greatly weaken the shaft by subtracting up to 40% at a crosssection. Grinding a flat spot is much better IMO.
I was surprised to see you had just 4k subs. I was expecting around 2 million subs. For such amazing and original content, you are underra
ted. Good job lad.
Dude, your work is so incredibly inspiring 🦾
This is a really smart gear box. Loved it
An easier setting for your nema23 might be an arduino with a cncshield, a drv8825 or better stepper driver and estlcam as control software. Much easier to set up and vary.
I only made a custom drive because I didn't have one lying around. A proper shield/circuit would have been desirable, yes.
@@LeviJanssen it's just the arduino with a "cncshield" for about 10 bucks at aliexpress and a stepper driver like a drv8825 or a tmc2208.
I think some grease will help smooth out the motion. It's common to use things like white lithium grease in airsoft gearboxes that have high torque and plastic/metal components, can hear a difference when properly applied.
I recently decided to design a 3D printed cycloidal gearbox and throw it on top of a 2300kv brushless motor... After a lot of fiddling, I actually got it to work. I think the ratio was 29:1
It ran for 10 glorious seconds. Then the motor windings burned and the magic smoke came out of the ESC. I think my problem was that the main gear was sitting right on top of the housing. Even though I put some grease in between them the friction was still too high. I was planning on putting some ball bearing between them but I just don't have the time.
They are a bitch to design and manufacture but it's wild how such a compact gearbox can produce 30:1 ratio.
Those ridges that are supposed to keep things precisely in place should be deburred and cleaned up.
It's not friction that prevents you from backdriving it, it's mechanical advantage (or lack thereof). 20:1 ratio means this is like trying to use a level to lift something, but the fulcrum is 20 times closer to you than to the thing you've trying to lift.
Awesome job, like the use of those pins, brill
Very compact and nice 👍🏻 I was thinking to 3D print one but after seeing this I think I’ll go the laser cutting a Delrin sheet instead. Thanks for sharing 👍🏼
As other people mentioned, you drilled out the wrong holes. The holes in the white piece needed to be bigger
Completely off-topic from the video, but what camera are you running to record?
The hole in the square black piece that sits on the motor should have the exact same size as the pilot sticking out of the motor. It's going to be a standard size for any motor of that NEMA 23 size.
Mist have been great to put the whole thing together
Beautiful idea an pretty promising mechanism
nice job,and especially done with your own design and realization. Congrats
u need to make it double staged to cancel the wobbling. been there. done it.
what does double staged mean?
@@MM-24 one way is to make the output shaft ot the motor moves the first stage and the output of the first stage moves the second stage but that does not cancel the wobbling ... its like puting two of this devices in line . u get a lot of reduction.
the way wobble got canceled for me was to put two of the center parts of this design ( the one that moves) 180 degrees from each other one above the other. so you dont have the wobbling , its cheaper than the first way i told you , it has less parts but ... you dont get the added reduction of a proper double stage.
chose your destiny...
If you need pins to go thru 2 or more plates, place the plates together and then push the pins thru all of them. Otherwise, when you are pushing the second plate onto the pins that are already inserted into the first, any imbalance will try to bend your pins or wallow the holes they are mounted into.
The clamping on the cnc router gave me chest pains. Great video though 👍
Was looking for this comment.
Wow, really great video! Love it 😍
Great job! I think not continuous (not smooth) rotation of the output shaft is caused by step rotation of the step-motor multiplied to gear ratio (x20).
divided, not multiplied.....
@@fabricioleinat Right. My mistake
Not the cycloidal great design I was looking for, but still very interesting. I guess I was looking for harmonic gears
14:33 the motor has laggy internet connection
I would reccomend using a much shorter endmill on your router, like only a couple mm longer than the thickness of your material. That'll improve the cut quality and reduce chatter
You should use tabs for holding your workpiece when cutting aluminum, you get a much better-cutting line and not such a cleanup hassle.
Cool video. I would like to see a test on the torque. Thanks for posting.
Great design, interesting.
Thank you
Try to design for a 1:10 ratio if you plan to use in robotics. Also the pins inside should be able to rotate as the eccentric wheel pushes and leans on them (not rattle though)... maybe have them on tiny bearings? Also, maybe lubricate the inside of the mechanism...
I have noticed that you never put any grease or lubricants in your gear systems you would greatly reduce friction and increase produced torque values if you used some grease...
looks really cool, I would buy this if I had a use for it
In the future, please mention the non-US metrics as well, not only once-inches. Thanks.
Liked your video. Good job for the equipment you're using. Would've liked to see a test of a 1ft-lbs. winding lift or until stall for maximin force.
impressive design :)
Have you tried a full 3d print version of this build? I suspect it'd be more challenging to get the right tolerances.
good work mate! love it.
Называется "Волновой редуктор". Я видел такие на спутниках, когда работал в космическом производстве в 1991 году. На советских спутниках...
I can see why you chose to use pins but wear isn't really going to be your main concern with the plastic gear and the printed base is going to always have flexing. Have you considered milling the pin profiles into the base so it is one solid piece of aluminum? This would solve your bending issues if you can get your CNC feeds and speeds dialed in (those parts seem a bit crufty!). You may be better off with something like Jeff Kerr's "Anti-Backlash Compound Planetary Gearhead" which is designed to flex and uses the flex to reduce backlash with a similar reduction ratio and it can be easily printed.
If you ever do such a project again think about using the tmc 2209 drivers they will remove all noise and are controllable over a single wire. Cool mechanism tho
NEMA - National Electrical Manufacturer's Association. Say it with me. _Neema_
nice design!!
i admit im a picky person n have n eye for problems but this was a pretty dam good video man u dont have a bunch of sophisticated tools, but youve made aLOT work with what u have i respect the hell out of that if u keep makin videos like this youll do good for sure i hope u have more like this minus the mandatory ads :p jp
Interesting you used a power supply to apply holding torque during drilling... fun fact - shorting the leads together is another way to greatly increase the detent torque of a stepper, without needing a supply. Trying to move the shaft creates a voltage - shorting the leads says voltage=0. Limited by R =/= 0.
Tried that first, wasn’t enough.
Awesome achievement.
Very good attempt
Holy shit, this is amazing.
Hey, I really like your build. What kind of aluminium is that? It looks like you should go for higher feeds, the chips are way too tiny.
This way the end mill produces enormous amounts of heat, because it mostly rubs over the surface. It will definitely die sooner than later :)
Also it might make sense to go for holding bridges, which are easier to remove. Just my two cents. Did you make progress with the uneven rotation speed of the gear? How would you consider to fix it? Best
Based on your wasteboard, I see someone's been making some ear savers.
Awesome! Did you shave down the bolts before drilling out the pins? (Maybe those bolts were the only problem?)
Great results! So few people have discovered cycloidals.
Can this be made using only a cnc? Or would it have to be bigger (using a 3mm bit).
I did grind down those screws. This certainly can be made with only a CNC. I would have done that had I had thicker plastic to cut out the base. The only thing you’d have trouble with would be the hexagonal holes in the plastic bearing spacer. I used a 1/8 inch bit.
@@LeviJanssen oh I meant: did you test it with ONLY grinding down the bolts (without having drilled out the pins)?
I feel like I may have seen one on your bench but I didn't see you use it. You need a "Noga Deburring Tool" It makes getting rid of those machining/cutting burrs SO freaking easy. Very cheap too. Check out ABOM79, This Old Tony, Keith Fenner, etc for tips on making really clean metal parts. Machining is fun!
where's the oil?
3:30 this is why I have nightmares at night lol
Great job
great job
Genius!!! Curious for the lifetime ... Can you run it loaded for a few weeks?
We're you cutting steel with your cnc router? Could we get a tour of your machine?
Very nice! What 3d design program do you use?
I assumed that rotation is how a stepper motor works anyway. But the reduction of speed is showing it more. Thats and possibly exaggerated by the pins
Great ingenuity !
There is a lot we cannot see without the design but it looks like the holes that hold the pins from the output disc do not match the holes in the internal gear.
The holes in the internal gear should match the pins plus the eccentric motion in order for the output pins to move freely without (much) play.
With the pins being crooked in the output disc I am sure that is not the case anymore. Drilling out the plastic part of the output disc by hand and then forcing the pins in location with the aluminum disc will not help - if anything it will exaggerate the problem. A good solution would be to use two discs, one on each side of the internal gear, to make sure the pins are mounted straight.
sir, hayırlı olsun birader, hindistandan selamlar
Hey Levi, cool vid. How did you get your measurements to make this actuator? I am trying to design parts of a tape recorder atm, referencing old tape players, but am having trouble recreating the gear mechanisms exactly.
To ensure the straightness of output pins you should use two bearings instead of one. The second bearing system should be under the cycloidal lobe. the output shaft and bottom bearing system ( similar to output disk ) of your gearbox will be connected through output pins. This will increase the stability of op shaft and also the radial load capacity of the gearbox.
Thanks for sharing.
Just watched your video and want to say good job. Looks clean and efficient. I'm just getting into fabrication and still learning which tools do what and their names. I'm curious to what the machine you used to carve out parts is called, is it another type of cnc machine? Lol sorry for the noob question.
Hope all is well
Thanks,
Jesse
Also any recommendations on a decent affordable 3d printer?
I have a question: would it be possible to make a functional, useful cycloidal drive on a 28BYJ-48 stepper?
Good Question!
Sure. Its only a matter of construction techniques.
@@maxhouseman3129 I wonder if the decrease in size would make it bind....
@@odinata If the whole construction is smaller, than it should work.
I have no experience of cnc routing (but i do with manual milling & turning) your cutter looks very long. which is just asking for chatter added to the already less than rigid structure of the machine, the shorter you can make the cutter (shorter cutter, or cut the shank and pushed all the way into the collet) would improve the finnish and accuracy your getting on your aluminum parts.
do you have any indication about the wear of the cycloid disc against the steel pins?
Use the shortest bit possible when doing steel. Or just sink it as deep as possible in the collet.
Hey boss, what about the coilgun ?
From your stepper motor specs (and your input power settings), what is the expected torque?
Milk of magnesia works well as lube for working with stainless steel.
Don't know if this is a joke or not but what does the MOM do? Prevent galling, (which is the biggest problem when working with stainless)?
@@pierdolio idk what it does but a welding instructor of mine said he used it all the time in the nukes.
Could you... use a smaller amount of "loose" pins, and leave space between, so that you could put each pin on a small bearing supporting it at top and bottom, which "should" reduce friction, but also increase load bearing capability as it would need to rub up against an outer wall.
Doesn't the cycloidal disk push against the pins such that you're relying on the pin frame not to deflect?