(Wow, that was an ugly paste...)
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Hmm.... your mentioning microscope adjustment just made me think of lenses focusing or perhaps tape library kind of applications....
For use cases where you want to be able to accurately pick something up(worm/screw drive) and then move it quickly(screw wheel? Worm wheel?) to another location and then switch back to fine movement, this would be kinda cool.
What if the wheel were made from something like acetal, nylon, or some other HDPE/UHMWPE? Would the low friction material help with the wearing away of the wheel assembly?
W.
On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 1:11 AM Whosawhatsis <whosaw...@gmail.com> wrote:
Yeah, you'd really want to to be metal. I've thought about trying this with hobbed drive gears.This would actually make the most sense for manual applications, I think. A microscope, for instance, could give you coarse adjustment by turning these wheels and fine adjustment by turning the screw the wheels run on.On July 18, 2017 at 20:29:30, Ryan Carlyle (temp...@gmail.com) wrote:
Huh. That's new. Interesting idea.With hardware-store threaded rod, it's going to wear the plastic worm wheel like crazy. The surface finish on cheap threaded rod is god-awful, which is totally fine for fastening, but wear-tastic for sliding/rolling contact.I suspect the FDM printed wheels are not going to have precise enough tooth shape to produce the proper rolling contact that you get with involute-generated spur gear teeth and straight rack teeth. So there'll be a tiny amount of velocity variation (probably doesn't matter) and much more propensity to wear than a spur gear shape.Being able to use the same parts for worm drives and linear motion is neat.
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What about trapezoidal thread, a 3D printed wheel wheel with an approximate thread pattern...
... then put the wheel in a jig where rotation / linear movement are controlled, heat the wheel up to the point the material becomes soft, and "mold" the correct inverse geometry into the surface?
-Patrick
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