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#41
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lid wrote in
: .... I want to be able to spin 100 pounds items on a 24" wide turntable that will spin freely as long as possible. www.mcmaster.com Browse through their online catalog. Lots of ways to do what you describe. The company is also very good to deal with (standard disclaimer, no affilitation). |
#42
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#43
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#44
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![]() Can you point me at one of these hub units on the net so I know what to ask for? Sure - give me a couple of days - I'm leaving town in a few minutes and will be back at the end of the week. |
#45
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J. Clarke wrote:
lid wrote: On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 05:50:57 -0500, Prometheus wrote: My kitchen cabinets have magnets holding the doors closed- and they were built at least 50 years ago, judging from the hardware. I guess along with reasoning, reading isn't your strong suit. You know, you'd have a lot more fun if you weren't spring-loaded in the ****ed-off position. John: I'm curious -- what did you calculate as the side force on the bearing -- worst case (edge load of 100lb. -- c.o.g. at platform level -- point mass -- 150 rpm -- 24" disk -- assuming no vibration due to imbalance i.e. simplest case). You seem to be a mech. eng. my specialty is elsewhere -- so not sure I remember all the stuff I should take into account especially once I looked at a bit of vibration all bets seemed to be off :-) . (I had to grab one of my mech eng. books to remind myself of the factors... at least you can see electrons unlike this mechanical stuff. LOL) I ask because my quick calculations gave me a higher figure than the rating of the hub suggested. Not sure there is any safety factor there, not even sure that the hub suggested is within "required" spec. Thanks for the thoughts -- even if you don't reply... :-)) -- Will Occasional Techno-geek |
#46
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WillR wrote:
J. Clarke wrote: lid wrote: On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 05:50:57 -0500, Prometheus wrote: My kitchen cabinets have magnets holding the doors closed- and they were built at least 50 years ago, judging from the hardware. I guess along with reasoning, reading isn't your strong suit. You know, you'd have a lot more fun if you weren't spring-loaded in the ****ed-off position. John: I'm curious -- what did you calculate as the side force on the bearing -- worst case (edge load of 100lb. -- c.o.g. at platform level -- point mass -- 150 rpm -- 24" disk -- assuming no vibration due to imbalance i.e. simplest case). I didn't. I took it as a point mass on the rim secured by friction with a 1.5 safety factor and got 24 RPM before it falls off and stopped there until I got confirmation that 24 RPM was sufficient. That was giving 20 pounds lateral load, friction-limited, neglecting any unbalance in the table itself--I didn't look at the moment. You seem to be a mech. eng. my specialty is elsewhere -- so not sure I remember all the stuff I should take into account especially once I looked at a bit of vibration all bets seemed to be off :-) . (I had to grab one of my mech eng. books to remind myself of the factors... at least you can see electrons unlike this mechanical stuff. LOL) It's been so long since I've actually done ME (computers bit me hard) that I'd have to dig out the references before I got much deeper into this. I ask because my quick calculations gave me a higher figure than the rating of the hub suggested. Not sure there is any safety factor there, not even sure that the hub suggested is within "required" spec. Thanks for the thoughts -- even if you don't reply... :-)) -- --John to email, dial "usenet" and validate (was jclarke at eye bee em dot net) |
#48
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J. Clarke wrote:
WillR wrote: J. Clarke wrote: wrote: On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 05:50:57 -0500, Prometheus wrote: I'm curious -- what did you calculate as the side force on the bearing -- worst case (edge load of 100lb. -- c.o.g. at platform level -- point mass -- 150 rpm -- 24" disk -- assuming no vibration due to imbalance i.e. simplest case). I didn't. I took it as a point mass on the rim secured by friction with a 1.5 safety factor and got 24 RPM before it falls off and stopped there until I got confirmation that 24 RPM was sufficient. That was giving 20 pounds lateral load, friction-limited, neglecting any unbalance in the table itself--I didn't look at the moment. You seem to be a mech. eng. my specialty is elsewhere -- so not sure I remember all the stuff I should take into account especially once I looked at a bit of vibration all bets seemed to be off :-) . (I had to grab one of my mech eng. books to remind myself of the factors... at least you can see electrons unlike this mechanical stuff. LOL) It's been so long since I've actually done ME (computers bit me hard) that I'd have to dig out the references before I got much deeper into this. Thanks. I just had a cursory look - but at 150 RPM (since he had mentioned a motor and 150 RPM in another post) I was a little surprised at the force on the bearing -- assuming the load was constrained and didn't fall off... LOL A little flexing or vibration and it could get interesting. :-) I had pulled out my ME text and that's why I asked. Anyway. Not our problem. And not my field. Best wishes... -- Will Occasional Techno-geek |
#49
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