Differential Screws, 11 Lenses, Harmonic Gear (robot series)
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@droftarts I didn't know this blog, I'll read it, thank you!
I've read the blog now, his build has a different goal. I'll describe my build and use cases here. Mark's descriptions how to design a good endstop with differential screws is very good.
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@joergs5 itβs a great blog, really good stuff on machine design. Thanks Mark!
Ian
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I had my personal disaster yesterday: having gauge blocks, I measured the exactness of the caliper. It's 0.1 mm off every time ;-( (calibrated to 0, same error for 6 mm or for 30 mm). The micrometer screw below is much more exact, in the region 1/100 mm.
Everything I built (every hole) is wrong... Now I understand why I have so many problems, the biggest problem was wrong measuring of shaft diameters, resulting in play of pulleys.
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I have one of those unbranded ones for quick measurements and using as an adjustable scriber, but also a Mitutoyo one for precision work.
The unbranded / no-name ones sometimes list accuracy as 0.1, though some claim 0.01
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@rjenkinsgb I put a lot of effort to punch and to drill exactly, but if the starting measuring is wrong, this was worthless. Same with doing lathe work to make own threads. But I start anew, new game - learned something! (There is a book: measure twice, cut once). Mitutoyo have a good reputation.
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@joergs5 One advantage of being older is that, when I served my apprenticeship back in the 60s and 70s nothing was digital. So I learned to read a vernier scale. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vernier_scale
I do have calipers with digital readout for quick measurements when accuracy isn't too important, but when it matters, and when I can't use a (non-digital) micrometer, I resort to my 40+ year old non-digital vernier calipers. Another advantage is that they don't need batteries.
Ultimately, when measurements are absolutely critical, the only way to be sure is to calibrate the instrument at a nominal value close to that which you are going to measure, take the reading, then re-check the instrument calibration. If it hasn't drifted, then you can have a reasonably high degree of confidence that the measurement is correct. But few of us have the time or inclination to do that.
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@joergs5 Those Harbor Freight $10 calipers are crap.
I spent about $40 for a good one: https://www.amazon.com/iGaging-ABSOLUTE-Digital-Electronic-Caliper/dp/B00INL0BT
Measurements are accurate, battery lasts over a year, the battery cover doesn't fall off and get lost if you look at it sideways. -
@deckingman @mrehorstdmd thanks for feedback, I agree with both of you. There's still a lot to learn...
My father gave me his lathe as a gift and I produced the first threaded spindle. I wondered why I could not produce an even diameter for the whole length. Until I was aware that the shaft bent while turning, more at the beginning, then less.
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@joergs5 said in Differential Screws, 11 Lenses, Harmonic Gear (robot series):
@deckingman @mrehorstdmd thanks for feedback, I agree with both of you. There's still a lot to learn...
My father gave me his lathe as a gift and I produced the first threaded spindle. I wondered why I could not produce an even diameter for the whole length. Until I was aware that the shaft bent while turning, more at the beginning, then less.
You do have a lot to learn!. When I bought my lathe, I wondered how much I would remember from the last time I used one which was over 40 years ago. Fortunately, I remembered most of it
For turning shafts, a centre in the tails stock will give you support at both ends and prevent that bending. Do an internet search for "live centre" and you'll see what I mean. For especially long shafts or especially thin ones, another steady in the centre can be great help, because even with both ends supported, they can tend to bed away from the cutting tool in the centre. Either a fixed or travelling steady (Google "travelling lathe steady" and you'll see what I'm talking about).
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@deckingman thank you for your hints. Using the lathe is a useful next step to DIY needed parts.
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@joergs5 said in Differential Screws, 11 Lenses, Harmonic Gear (robot series):
@deckingman thank you for your hints. Using the lathe is a useful next step to DIY needed parts.
I'm finding the same thing. For info, I've just made a set of 6 threaded heat breaks out of stainless steel, with the heat break section having a wall thickness of 0.3 - 0.4mm. That was a challenge.
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@deckingman yes, I check your videos and blogs regularly, it's always interesting. I saw a video about Bondtech CHT today and thought, why not make my own nozzle in the future?
I tried thread cutting yesterday with M3 again and failed, it broke. I cannot remove the broken part. I have an impression what you have achieved!
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@joergs5
bye! I follow you step by step on the work you are doing! I am waiting to see the differential screw reducer, to understand how it should be built! me to learn how to use a lathe, or watched the videos of (delfino brunelli) on you tube! he has a lathe from the early 1900s, rearranging by him with high precision is what he does with that lathe is amazing! I consider it the best I've seen among many! -
@tony73 said in Differential Screws, 11 Lenses, Harmonic Gear (robot series):
delfino brunelli
hello Tony, the youtube channels are worth a lot, thanks for the hint. I discovered "Huygens Optics", "Applie Science", "CNC Kitchen" and many others, it's a real gold source. Especially Huygens Optics is really impressive!!
I am currently developing the forward kinematics for the robot, so I make a little pause for the differential screw. But I am training using the lathe, damaged some parts, but it's getting better!
Interestingly, the forward kinematics of the robot allows as many axes as one wishes, from 1 to 10 or more axes, without problem. The inverse kinematics is the problem... (but I have ideas).
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@deckingman said in Differential Screws, 11 Lenses, Harmonic Gear (robot series):
So I learned to read a vernier scale.
Vernier calipers go well with a sliding rules and Rapidographs .
I often watch the youtube channel of Nero 3D (a Canadian in his thirties) and I found it interesting that he refers to his digital calipers as 'vernier'.
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@zapta said in Differential Screws, 11 Lenses, Harmonic Gear (robot series):
@deckingman said in Differential Screws, 11 Lenses, Harmonic Gear (robot series):
So I learned to read a vernier scale.
Vernier calipers go well with a sliding rules and Rapidographs .
Yes. I'm old enough to remember going to school before calculators were invented. As well as using books of log tables, we had slide rules. When I went to college, calculators were just coming on to the market but few people could afford to buy them. The first college exams I sat, calculators were banned but slide rules were permitted.
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Slide rules? Luxury! (with a Yorkshire accent)
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@dc42 Yes - pure decadence. We even used paper and ink - none of this slate and chalk stuff (although the teachers used blackboards and chalk). I think it was mostly because chalk made good missiles to throw at wayward students (or in the case of one teacher it was a great big lump of wood in the form of a board rubber). I never did work out why giving a student concussion would make them pay more attention........
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@tony73 I've managed to have a working kinematics and inverse kinematics code for 6 axis robot now, based on Jacobian matrix calculation. I need about 3 iterations to approach an exact inverse kinematics position and orientation, on the PC about 5 ms for 100 segments. I hope it's fast enough for running it on Duet.
I proceed with building differential screw / 1:1 lens / harmonic drive now to build a robot prototype.