I Give Up-- what's It called??
Got a bunch of those really cheap (price) 12V gearhead motors that are flooding the market. Slowest 5RPM, all the way up to 300 RPM.
I have large (6 to 62 tooth, 1/4in thick!) Kelvin plastic gears, and I've been attaching them to the motor shaft by drilling them out to 1/4in and press-fitting the gears on. So far, so good, but if I don't run into a problem with load exceeding friction, I'll have one in October after 1, hopefully 2 weeks (if I place in the top 10 after the first week is up).
The motors all have flatted shafts. I can't find the matching connector because I have no idea what it's called! It's a disk with a hole that has the matching part of the flat filled in to keep itself from spinning on the shaft. The dish has some way of attaching to a gear or wheel.
And, how do I spec it for an order, and here do I get a bunch? I guess I'd use diameter across a round dimension, but is the flat a "standard", or do I have to measure that too? Diameter at flat. or width of flat?
I have large (6 to 62 tooth, 1/4in thick!) Kelvin plastic gears, and I've been attaching them to the motor shaft by drilling them out to 1/4in and press-fitting the gears on. So far, so good, but if I don't run into a problem with load exceeding friction, I'll have one in October after 1, hopefully 2 weeks (if I place in the top 10 after the first week is up).
The motors all have flatted shafts. I can't find the matching connector because I have no idea what it's called! It's a disk with a hole that has the matching part of the flat filled in to keep itself from spinning on the shaft. The dish has some way of attaching to a gear or wheel.
And, how do I spec it for an order, and here do I get a bunch? I guess I'd use diameter across a round dimension, but is the flat a "standard", or do I have to measure that too? Diameter at flat. or width of flat?
Comments
Rich H
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The Simple Servo Tester, a kit from Gadget Gangster.
www.mcmaster.com/#catalog/116/1069/=8617br
Or are you talking about a keyway on a shaft?
Post Edited (ElectricAye) : 7/29/2010 6:54:56 AM GMT
Its just a hub with a set screw meant for attaching to a D shaft. Measure the diameter of the motor shaft only as if it were fully round. I doubt you will find a hub with a D hole, the set screw will secure it fully.
ServoCity has them www.servocity.com/html/set_screw_hubs.html The holes in the face of the hub are for attaching your gears/sprockets.
Kevin
Tiny shafts use collets or set screws on a round shaft, sometimes just a friction fit (toy gear motors).
The next size up often use a set screw of a shaft that has a flat spot (you can make your own flat spot with a file).
Really powerful motors have a keyway slot in the shaft and the pulleys or gears have a matching keyway. A piece of metal called a shear pin is inserted to transfer the torque. Sometimes these have set screws as well.
If you get any large (like the drive shaft on an automobile to a universal joint) the shaft and mate are splines (cut with a series of matching grooves).
Often you can enhance the grip of the smaller shafts with a glue - like epoxy. Locktite has specific products for this.
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Ain't gadetry a wonderful thing?
aka G. Herzog [noparse][[/noparse] 黃鶴 ] in Taiwan
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Ain't gadetry a wonderful thing?
aka G. Herzog [noparse][[/noparse] 黃鶴 ] in Taiwan