glowytheglowbug Posted September 19, 2023 Posted September 19, 2023 (edited) just a simple place to deposit how many degrees it takes from the input to fully extend and contract a linear actuator (ill be posting them soon) Edited September 19, 2023 by glowytheglowbug Quote
glowytheglowbug Posted September 21, 2023 Author Posted September 21, 2023 (edited) 7160 degrees seems to be the limit for a small linear actuator, (7 to 10 studs) 71.6 degrees per millimeter (50x0) (remember to have something tensioning the output or else u get backlash) 9649 degrees seems to be limit for large actuator (11 to 16 studs) 241.225 degrees per millimeter (33x3) i cant find my XL :/ Edited September 22, 2023 by glowytheglowbug Quote
Davidz90 Posted September 21, 2023 Posted September 21, 2023 (edited) Interesting. For small LA, 71.6 degrees per mm translates to 0.7955 rotations/mm. In my (less accurate) measurements, I got 0.7911. I couldn't find any technical data sheet that would specify the thread pitch of LA, but the number (1.25698 mm/rotation) is a bit odd; does not give a nice, even number in inches as well (0.04949 inches/rotation). Maybe the actual value is 0.8 rotations/mm and 1.25 mm/rotation, respectively? That is one of the standard thread pitches Edited September 21, 2023 by Davidz90 Quote
glowytheglowbug Posted September 21, 2023 Author Posted September 21, 2023 53 minutes ago, Davidz90 said: Interesting. For small LA, 71.6 degrees per mm translates to 0.7955 rotations/mm. In my (less accurate) measurements, I got 0.7911. I couldn't find any technical data sheet that would specify the thread pitch of LA, but the number (1.25698 mm/rotation) is a bit odd; does not give a nice, even number in inches as well (0.04949 inches/rotation). Maybe the actual value is 0.8 rotations/mm and 1.25 mm/rotation, respectively? That is one of the standard thread pitches measures small again its 7157 degrees so its pretty accurate Quote
MAB Posted September 21, 2023 Posted September 21, 2023 9 hours ago, glowytheglowbug said: 7160 degrees seems to be the limit for a small linear actuator, (7 to 10 studs) 71.6 degrees per millimeter (50x0) (remember to have something tensioning the output or else u get backlash) 9649 degrees seems to be limit for large actuator (11 to 16 studs) 37.69 degrees per millimeter (33x3) i cant find my XL :/ I thought they all have the same degrees per mm extension ratio. As shown in the speed section of Sariel's video... Quote
glowytheglowbug Posted September 22, 2023 Author Posted September 22, 2023 (edited) 6 hours ago, MAB said: I thought they all have the same degrees per mm extension ratio. As shown in the speed section of Sariel's video... ooh thats interesting i have to check how many degrees to LA length again for the large actuator (i might have gotten a different reading from using a slightly damaged actuator) Edited September 22, 2023 by glowytheglowbug Removed quoted video. (more words now) Quote
Milan Posted September 22, 2023 Posted September 22, 2023 53 minutes ago, glowytheglowbug said: ooh thats interesting Please do not quote videos and images from the same page, and please use proper punctuation and capital letters. Thanks. Quote
Lego Tom Posted September 22, 2023 Posted September 22, 2023 (edited) 14 hours ago, MAB said: I thought they all have the same degrees per mm extension ratio. As shown in the speed section of Sariel's video... That would stand to reason since I believe they all use the same size thread. Thus, it wouldn't matter how long the actuator was, it would expand/contract at the same rate. A nut on a 5mm bolt will travel the same distance with 10 turns of the nut whether the bolt is 15mm long or a 150. Edited September 22, 2023 by Milan Please do not quote images and videos from the same page. Quote
glowytheglowbug Posted September 22, 2023 Author Posted September 22, 2023 (edited) 4 hours ago, Lego Tom said: That would stand to reason since I believe they all use the same size thread. Thus, it wouldn't matter how long the actuator was, it would expand/contract at the same rate. A nut on a 5mm bolt will travel the same distance with 10 turns of the nut whether the bolt is 15mm long or a 150. by that logic im guessing a XL actuator's degrees per mm can be gotten from that measurement ill continue to test my actuators and see if they work that way small actuator = 7112retract , 7226extend, 7144retract, 7187extend, 7169retract, 7151extend large actuator = 9703 extend, 9694retract, 9689 extend, 9709retract, 9689 retract , 9665 extend these are 5 readings i got from testing (theres prob like 10-20 degrees error since it relies on me waiting till the actuators clutches provinde enough torque for me to see movement on the output) Edited September 22, 2023 by glowytheglowbug Quote
recklessGlitch Posted May 9, 2024 Posted May 9, 2024 (edited) On 9/21/2023 at 4:06 PM, Davidz90 said: Interesting. For small LA, 71.6 degrees per mm translates to 0.7955 rotations/mm. In my (less accurate) measurements, I got 0.7911. I couldn't find any technical data sheet that would specify the thread pitch of LA, but the number (1.25698 mm/rotation) is a bit odd; does not give a nice, even number in inches as well (0.04949 inches/rotation). Maybe the actual value is 0.8 rotations/mm and 1.25 mm/rotation, respectively? That is one of the standard thread pitches excuse me ... what? Last Time I checked a full rotation had 360°, so if (accuracy?) it has 71,6° per mm that means 71,6 °/mm / 360 °/rot = 0.2 rot/mm. You calculated with 90° that is a right angle, as in a quarter rotation, even in the US and UK! Anyway, LONG linear actuator 40918c01 measured by manual rotation: 43,75 Rotations = 15750° 64mm = 8studs => 5.5 rot/stud = 0,68 rot/mm 1969 °/stud = 246 °/mm Edited May 9, 2024 by recklessGlitch Quote
Davidz90 Posted May 9, 2024 Posted May 9, 2024 5 hours ago, recklessGlitch said: excuse me ... what? Last Time I checked a full rotation had 360°, Of course you are right. I don't know what I meant here, tbh. Tested it again now, small linear actuator did 19.75 rotations for full extension (3 studs = 23.4 mm) so 0.84 rotations/mm. Quote
recklessGlitch Posted May 12, 2024 Posted May 12, 2024 On 5/9/2024 at 8:45 PM, Davidz90 said: Of course you are right. I don't know what I meant here, tbh. Tested it again now, small linear actuator did 19.75 rotations for full extension (3 studs = 23.4 mm) so 0.84 rotations/mm. well with a symetrical part, like the connector at the end of the actuator's bar - maximum rotational offset would be 90°, so then it's rotated ;) anyway, thanks, that was the information I intended to get. Quote
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