[ARTICOLO DUPLICATO DALLA HOMEPAGE]
in the design phase of machines in which rotating drives are present, it is not rare to have to assess the effects of inertial imbalance of the system. a golden rule for the sizing of the rotating system previews to couple a motor system with a load in order to have a moment of inertia of the engine greater than 10 times than that of the load.in this article we will see how excessive inertial imbalance worsens the dynamic features of the application and what to do to improve them.
rigid or elastic systems
from the chart you can see the behavior of a “rigid” system compared to a “elastic” given a bike profile:
rigid system
elastic system
reducer foreplay and defectsthe introduction of a reducer has the advantage of containing the apparent inertia of the load. In fact the presence of a reducer decreases the dynamic load perceived by the motor due to the inertial response of the load to the variation of motion. This reduction is proportional to the square of the transmission ratio of the reducer:
- a proper torsion rigidity that weighs on the rigidity of the transmission. in other words the torsion rigidity of the transmission will be lower than that of the transmission without reducing
- among the organs of the reducer there are games that produce relative rotations of the axes, regardless of elastic deformation. even in the case of reduced playbacks it is not possible to cancel the game between the parts in relative motion
- additional vibrations are introduced
- global transmission stiffness decreases and system resonance frequencies lower
However, a solution to the question was raised: “Is it right to have an imbalance of 1:10? ”
as demonstrated the answer is not trivial and univocal. much depends on the system response time, the more the response time is low (fast system in response) the more the system itself is accurate. below are examples of response for two systems having different response times when operated by the same motion law.
author: chierici pierluigi, asotech srl