Battery Buggy B

User avatar
MadCow2357
Exalted Member
Exalted Member
Posts: 776
Joined: November 19th, 2017, 9:09 am
Division: Grad
State: RI
Has thanked: 211 times
Been thanked: 58 times
Contact:

Re: Battery Buggy B

Post by MadCow2357 »

Have you guys experimented with caliper steering yet? I have been trying to figure out how I could mount the bearings to the caliper... Nestor recommended to drill 3 holes in the caliper: 2 for "bearing mount quad block" mounting holes (what a mouthful), and 1 for the axle to go through. Not sure how I would drill through a metal caliper though...

Ideas people? windu I think you worked with calipers for your 2017 electric vehicle, maybe you could clear things up for me?
Current Director at GGSO | Contact us at [email protected]!
Mechanical Engineering @ Stanford
Barrington HS '23 & Gallagher MS '19
User avatar
cheese
Member
Member
Posts: 211
Joined: April 8th, 2017, 7:59 pm
Division: C
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 0
Contact:

Re: Battery Buggy B

Post by cheese »

The two wheel bases are connected with threaded rod. When you turn the threaded rod (make it tighter or looser) it changes the gap on a side. This changes how parallel the two wheel bases are. https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1XKU ... sp=sharing
2018 Nationals: 2nd Place Mystery Architecture || 6th Place Battery Buggy
Cheese's Userpage
User avatar
windu34
Staff Emeritus
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 1384
Joined: April 19th, 2015, 6:37 pm
Division: Grad
State: FL
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 42 times

Re: Battery Buggy B

Post by windu34 »

I would recommend against threaded rods - they are heavy. It was fine for electric vehicle because we had plenty of motor power, but with battery buggy, you do not. I used 3D printed parts and epoxy to for my caliper steering system. I have pictures on the Best of 2017 page. Additionally, if you want to email me, I can send you additional resources.
Boca Raton Community High School Alumni
University of Florida Science Olympiad Co-Founder
Florida Science Olympiad Board of Directors
[email protected] || windu34's Userpage
User avatar
MadCow2357
Exalted Member
Exalted Member
Posts: 776
Joined: November 19th, 2017, 9:09 am
Division: Grad
State: RI
Has thanked: 211 times
Been thanked: 58 times
Contact:

Re: Battery Buggy B

Post by MadCow2357 »

cheese wrote:The two wheel bases are connected with threaded rod. When you turn the threaded rod (make it tighter or looser) it changes the gap on a side. This changes how parallel the two wheel bases are. https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1XKU ... sp=sharing
Ok thanks now I know how it works!!! So basically your frame is partially threaded rod as well... did you take this approach?
windu34 wrote:I would recommend against threaded rods - they are heavy. It was fine for electric vehicle because we had plenty of motor power, but with battery buggy, you do not. I used 3D printed parts and epoxy to for my caliper steering system. I have pictures on the Best of 2017 page. Additionally, if you want to email me, I can send you additional resources.
Yeah I thought the same thing. At least 10% of my vehicle's weight comes from the threaded axles alone. If I were to have more threaded rod in my frame... *shudder*... I would have one really heavy vehicle... :P
I will definitely look at the best of 2017 page... and I would appreciate the additional resources :) ! Should I PM my email to you then?

As an unrelated side note, can I upload pictures of my buggy and my tower to the Best of 2018 page even though they weren't the best?
Current Director at GGSO | Contact us at [email protected]!
Mechanical Engineering @ Stanford
Barrington HS '23 & Gallagher MS '19
User avatar
windu34
Staff Emeritus
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 1384
Joined: April 19th, 2015, 6:37 pm
Division: Grad
State: FL
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 42 times

Re: Battery Buggy B

Post by windu34 »

MadCow2357 wrote:
cheese wrote:The two wheel bases are connected with threaded rod. When you turn the threaded rod (make it tighter or looser) it changes the gap on a side. This changes how parallel the two wheel bases are. https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1XKU ... sp=sharing
Ok thanks now I know how it works!!! So basically your frame is partially threaded rod as well... did you take this approach?
windu34 wrote:I would recommend against threaded rods - they are heavy. It was fine for electric vehicle because we had plenty of motor power, but with battery buggy, you do not. I used 3D printed parts and epoxy to for my caliper steering system. I have pictures on the Best of 2017 page. Additionally, if you want to email me, I can send you additional resources.
Yeah I thought the same thing. At least 10% of my vehicle's weight comes from the threaded axles alone. If I were to have more threaded rod in my frame... *shudder*... I would have one really heavy vehicle... :P
I will definitely look at the best of 2017 page... and I would appreciate the additional resources :) ! Should I PM my email to you then?

As an unrelated side note, can I upload pictures of my buggy and my tower to the Best of 2018 page even though they weren't the best?
I think as long as you were top 10 at nats, you can post? Idk I don't make those rules haha. Yes please email me, not PM. That goes for anyone who wants resources on steering - I cant add attachments through PM.
Boca Raton Community High School Alumni
University of Florida Science Olympiad Co-Founder
Florida Science Olympiad Board of Directors
[email protected] || windu34's Userpage
User avatar
MadCow2357
Exalted Member
Exalted Member
Posts: 776
Joined: November 19th, 2017, 9:09 am
Division: Grad
State: RI
Has thanked: 211 times
Been thanked: 58 times
Contact:

Re: Battery Buggy B

Post by MadCow2357 »

windu34 wrote: I think as long as you were top 10 at nats, you can post? Idk I don't make those rules haha.
Haha I was 26th but I think my Battery Buggy looked wicked awesome!!! :lol:
Current Director at GGSO | Contact us at [email protected]!
Mechanical Engineering @ Stanford
Barrington HS '23 & Gallagher MS '19
User avatar
cheese
Member
Member
Posts: 211
Joined: April 8th, 2017, 7:59 pm
Division: C
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 0
Contact:

Re: Battery Buggy B

Post by cheese »

MadCow2357 wrote:
cheese wrote:The two wheel bases are connected with threaded rod. When you turn the threaded rod (make it tighter or looser) it changes the gap on a side. This changes how parallel the two wheel bases are. https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1XKU ... sp=sharing
Ok thanks now I know how it works!!! So basically your frame is partially threaded rod as well... did you take this approach?
?
I did not take this exact approach. I might share in best of 2018 and you will see there.
2018 Nationals: 2nd Place Mystery Architecture || 6th Place Battery Buggy
Cheese's Userpage
Locked

Return to “Battery Buggy B”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests