[TANKS] Re: Differentials

2009-10-25 Thread Derek Engelhaupt
Now that the family and I are back from the Caribbean, I can add my two
cents.  I bought a couple of riding scooter (type used for people that have
difficulty walking) differentials to play with.  They are a limited slip
type with a single motor.  They are heavy (15lbs/per differential), but I
think the heaviness could aide in traction for a battle vehicle.  I was
going to play with a seesaw type of suspension and use two of them on a
vehicle so I could get 4 wheel drive.  I do agree that the complexity of the
steering and suspension of a wheeled vehicle is more daunting that actually
creating a tracked vehicle.  In order to steer the vehicle, I would need to
make one of those heavy duty steering servos using a geared motor and a
standard r/c servo.  Building a wheeled vehicle is pretty low on my list of
projects though.

Derek
T065



On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 10:02 AM, Doug Conn dwconn...@comcast.net wrote:

  We talked about self-propelled lawnmower differentials like the ones they
 sell at Surplus Center. It turns out that they cannot go in reverse with
 some mechanical modifications.



 -Doug



 *From:* rctankcombat@googlegroups.com [mailto:
 rctankcom...@googlegroups.com] *On Behalf Of *mac wynkoop
 *Sent:* Tuesday, October 20, 2009 6:25 PM
 *To:* rctankcombat@googlegroups.com
 *Subject:* [TANKS] Re: Differentials



 Well, not too long ago I saw a differential on my neighbor's self-propelled
 lawn mower. It looked like it would fit a tank perfectly. Maybe I should ask
 him if he wouldn't mind pushing it again...

 On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 12:26 PM, Steve Tyng steve...@gmail.com wrote:


 I have given the subject of differentials in a 1:6 scale r/c combat
 vehicles some thought over the years.  At one point I was interested
 in building an armored car (AC) and may still do so.  I looked at the
 various differentials currently available and have yet to find one
 that I feel is appropriate for our vehicles.  On the heavy end are the
 differentials built for go-karts.  These are to large for a typical
 1:6 scale AC and have monster 3/4 or 1 output shafts.  On the other
 end of the spectrum are the hobby differentials produced for monster
 scale r/c trucks.  I've looked at these and weren't impressed with
 there robustness and many plastic parts.  I have seen references to
 differentials for 1/4 scale r/c sand buggy's that sounded good but
 they were on a German site with little info and the pricing looked to
 be exorbitant.  IMO the best option will be a dual motor setup (or
 quad motors for 4wd) driven from one speed controller.  This
 electronic differential provides the same functionality as a
 mechanical one in that it provides varying power to the left or right
 drive wheels depending on load.  It can be built as robust as required
 much as we build our drive-trains currently.  The issue will be
 finding the appropriate motors for such a scheme.  The motors will
 need to be relatively powerful and small to fit into the smaller
 chassis.  For this all we need to do is look to the new electric
 skateboard sport where small high-powered motors of up to 600 watts
 can be found.  While on Allellectonics.com the other day I noted a
 nice 135 watt motor that that I have seen used on electric skateboards
 and may prove to be ideal for the smaller wheeled r/c combat vehicle.


 http://www.allelectronics.com/make-a-store/item/DCM-130/24VDC-135W-MOTOR-W/-BELT-GEAR/1.html

 If I were to start building an AC tomorrow I'd get two of these motors
 and a single reversing scooter controller and design an AC around
 that.


 Steve Tyng







 


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[TANKS] Re: Differentials

2009-10-25 Thread Paul Hilton
Run with it, Derek.  We'll be watching...

Paul H.
  - Original Message - 
  From: Derek Engelhaupt 
  To: rctankcombat@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Sunday, October 25, 2009 4:10 PM
  Subject: [TANKS] Re: Differentials


  Now that the family and I are back from the Caribbean, I can add my two 
cents.  I bought a couple of riding scooter (type used for people that have 
difficulty walking) differentials to play with.  They are a limited slip type 
with a single motor.  They are heavy (15lbs/per differential), but I think the 
heaviness could aide in traction for a battle vehicle.  I was going to play 
with a seesaw type of suspension and use two of them on a vehicle so I could 
get 4 wheel drive.  I do agree that the complexity of the steering and 
suspension of a wheeled vehicle is more daunting that actually creating a 
tracked vehicle.  In order to steer the vehicle, I would need to make one of 
those heavy duty steering servos using a geared motor and a standard r/c servo. 
 Building a wheeled vehicle is pretty low on my list of projects though.

  Derek
  T065




  On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 10:02 AM, Doug Conn dwconn...@comcast.net wrote:

We talked about self-propelled lawnmower differentials like the ones they 
sell at Surplus Center. It turns out that they cannot go in reverse with some 
mechanical modifications.



-Doug



From: rctankcombat@googlegroups.com [mailto:rctankcom...@googlegroups.com] 
On Behalf Of mac wynkoop
Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 6:25 PM
To: rctankcombat@googlegroups.com
Subject: [TANKS] Re: Differentials



Well, not too long ago I saw a differential on my neighbor's self-propelled 
lawn mower. It looked like it would fit a tank perfectly. Maybe I should ask 
him if he wouldn't mind pushing it again...

On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 12:26 PM, Steve Tyng steve...@gmail.com wrote:


I have given the subject of differentials in a 1:6 scale r/c combat
vehicles some thought over the years.  At one point I was interested
in building an armored car (AC) and may still do so.  I looked at the
various differentials currently available and have yet to find one
that I feel is appropriate for our vehicles.  On the heavy end are the
differentials built for go-karts.  These are to large for a typical
1:6 scale AC and have monster 3/4 or 1 output shafts.  On the other
end of the spectrum are the hobby differentials produced for monster
scale r/c trucks.  I've looked at these and weren't impressed with
there robustness and many plastic parts.  I have seen references to
differentials for 1/4 scale r/c sand buggy's that sounded good but
they were on a German site with little info and the pricing looked to
be exorbitant.  IMO the best option will be a dual motor setup (or
quad motors for 4wd) driven from one speed controller.  This
electronic differential provides the same functionality as a
mechanical one in that it provides varying power to the left or right
drive wheels depending on load.  It can be built as robust as required
much as we build our drive-trains currently.  The issue will be
finding the appropriate motors for such a scheme.  The motors will
need to be relatively powerful and small to fit into the smaller
chassis.  For this all we need to do is look to the new electric
skateboard sport where small high-powered motors of up to 600 watts
can be found.  While on Allellectonics.com the other day I noted a
nice 135 watt motor that that I have seen used on electric skateboards
and may prove to be ideal for the smaller wheeled r/c combat vehicle.

  
http://www.allelectronics.com/make-a-store/item/DCM-130/24VDC-135W-MOTOR-W/-BELT-GEAR/1.html

If I were to start building an AC tomorrow I'd get two of these motors
and a single reversing scooter controller and design an AC around
that.


Steve Tyng


















  

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[TANKS] size

2009-10-25 Thread Kamron Duncan
I was wondering if it is better to go with a 1/7 scale or a 1/6 scale.  the
tank im building is a
tiger 2  the length heigth and width for the 1/7 is about 3.57 feet long,
about 1.44 feet tall, and about
1.71 feet wide without aprons. the 1/6 is about 4.16 feet long w/o gun,
about 1.45 feet tall and about 1.715 feet wide without aprons.  any
suggestions coments or complants would be great.

-- 
Conar

   ()
   __)(__
'--'
   )(
   ||
   ||
   ||
   ||
   ||
   ||
   ||
   ||  gnv
   \/

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[TANKS] Re: size

2009-10-25 Thread Clark Ward Jr

1/6!!!

On Sun, Oct 25, 2009 at 5:43 PM, Kamron Duncan kamd...@gmail.com wrote:
 I was wondering if it is better to go with a 1/7 scale or a 1/6 scale.  the
 tank im building is a
 tiger 2  the length heigth and width for the 1/7 is about 3.57 feet long,
 about 1.44 feet tall, and about
 1.71 feet wide without aprons. the 1/6 is about 4.16 feet long w/o gun,
 about 1.45 feet tall and about 1.715 feet wide without aprons.  any
 suggestions coments or complants would be great.

 --
 Conar

                        ()
                    __)(__
                     '--'
                        )(
                        ||
                        ||
                        ||
                        ||
                        ||
                        ||
                        ||
                        ||  gnv
                        \/

 




-- 
Clark in Georgia, Commissar of the Red Banner Southern Fleet
We will pass through the American patrols, past their sonar nets, and
lay off their largest city, and listen to their rock and roll... while
we conduct missile drills.

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[TANKS] Re: size

2009-10-25 Thread Gregory Pwneror
I think everyone who's made a Tiger has made is 1/6th scale. If you make it
1/6th scale it will also be easier to make, due to the larger components and
you will be able fit your electronics, marker and ammo in easier.

-Gregory

On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 11:38 AM, Clark Ward Jr ki4...@gmail.com wrote:


 1/6!!!

 On Sun, Oct 25, 2009 at 5:43 PM, Kamron Duncan kamd...@gmail.com wrote:
  I was wondering if it is better to go with a 1/7 scale or a 1/6 scale.
 the
  tank im building is a
  tiger 2  the length heigth and width for the 1/7 is about 3.57 feet long,
  about 1.44 feet tall, and about
  1.71 feet wide without aprons. the 1/6 is about 4.16 feet long w/o gun,
  about 1.45 feet tall and about 1.715 feet wide without aprons.  any
  suggestions coments or complants would be great.
 
  --
  Conar
 
 ()
 __)(__
  '--'
 )(
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||  gnv
 \/
 
  
 



 --
 Clark in Georgia, Commissar of the Red Banner Southern Fleet
 We will pass through the American patrols, past their sonar nets, and
 lay off their largest city, and listen to their rock and roll... while
 we conduct missile drills.

 


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[TANKS] Re: size

2009-10-25 Thread Derek Engelhaupt
I would go for 1/6 also.

Derek
T065

On Sun, Oct 25, 2009 at 5:59 PM, Gregory Pwneror sockles...@gmail.comwrote:

 I think everyone who's made a Tiger has made is 1/6th scale. If you make it
 1/6th scale it will also be easier to make, due to the larger components and
 you will be able fit your electronics, marker and ammo in easier.

 -Gregory


 On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 11:38 AM, Clark Ward Jr ki4...@gmail.com wrote:


 1/6!!!

 On Sun, Oct 25, 2009 at 5:43 PM, Kamron Duncan kamd...@gmail.com wrote:
  I was wondering if it is better to go with a 1/7 scale or a 1/6 scale.
 the
  tank im building is a
  tiger 2  the length heigth and width for the 1/7 is about 3.57 feet
 long,
  about 1.44 feet tall, and about
  1.71 feet wide without aprons. the 1/6 is about 4.16 feet long w/o gun,
  about 1.45 feet tall and about 1.715 feet wide without aprons.  any
  suggestions coments or complants would be great.
 
  --
  Conar
 
 ()
 __)(__
  '--'
 )(
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||
 ||  gnv
 \/
 
  
 



 --
 Clark in Georgia, Commissar of the Red Banner Southern Fleet
 We will pass through the American patrols, past their sonar nets, and
 lay off their largest city, and listen to their rock and roll... while
 we conduct missile drills.




 


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[TANKS] Re: size

2009-10-25 Thread wsmontg5


 Wrong, Sorry the first Tiger was built to 36. I picked up two Tigers today 
and Frank's is a lot smaller then Doug Conn's.



Will





 





 



-Original Message-

From: Gregory Pwneror sockles...@gmail.com

To: rctankcombat@googlegroups.com

Sent: Sun, Oct 25, 2009 6:59 pm

Subject: [TANKS] Re: size












I think everyone who's made a Tiger has made is 1/6th scale. If you make it 
1/6th scale it will also be easier to make, due to the larger components and 
you will be able fit your electronics, marker and ammo in easier.




-Gregory





On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 11:38 AM, Clark Ward Jr ki4...@gmail.com wrote:






1/6!!!







On Sun, Oct 25, 2009 at 5:43 PM, Kamron Duncan kamd...@gmail.com wrote:


 I was wondering if it is better to go with a 1/7 scale or a 1/6 scale.  the


 tank im building is a


 tiger 2  the length heigth and width for the 1/7 is about 3.57 feet long,


 about 1.44 feet tall, and about


 1.71 feet wide without aprons. the 1/6 is about 4.16 feet long w/o gun,


 about 1.45 feet tall and about 1.715 feet wide without aprons.  any


 suggestions coments or complants would be great.





 --


 Conar





()


__)(__


 '--'


)(


||


||


||


||


||


||


||


||  gnv


\/





 














--




Clark in Georgia, Commissar of the Red Banner Southern Fleet


We will pass through the American patrols, past their sonar nets, and


lay off their largest city, and listen to their rock and roll... while


we conduct missile drills.




































 



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