[Diy_efi] RE: [offlist] Strain gauge on engine mounts

niche at iinet.net.au niche
Wed Apr 20 17:18:30 UTC 2005


mmm,

I'm not quite sure I understand what u think I am getting at,

I have a two part drive shaft, the bit from the end of automatic
to center yoke is pretty well placed in transmission tunnel and
doenst move around much. So I was thinking placing a ring
gear on each end rigidly fixed to the drive shaft, the only piece
of 'stuff' between the two ring gears is the driveshaft, no coupling,
no rubber just hollow metal tube. Sure there wont be much twist
of this tube at torque but there will be some, and what I'd like to
know is just how much...so I can derive a ring gear pitch,

Rgds

mike






At 12:33 AM 21/04/05, you wrote:
>One good thing about using rubber is it's easy to "calibrate" on the bench - just put a known torque on it and measure the twist. Not super-accurate, but probably get within a few % of actual. Can also correlate the torque curve of this to a real chassis dyno. I do think the same thing can be done replacing the rubber with the driveshaft. In any case, the only real challenge is getting the sensors rigidly mounted, and to where they float with any shaft/coupler movement.
>
>
>-Marc
>
>
>
>At 11:03 PM +0800 4/20/05, niche at iinet.net.au wrote:
>>At 07:51 AM 20/04/05, you wrote:
>>>Not sure that is such a good idea Mike ... the rubber is non
>>>linear ... just like the mounts would be, and resolving the
>>>edges requires some very fast counters at high speed and
>>>quite big counters at low speed ... plus who wants that much
>>>slop in the drivetrain ... it's not like you can swap this
>>>thing in and out all that easily is it?
>>
>>Interesting point, think I misread this initially too, way too
>>many mailboxes here...
>>
>>I think it should be possible to do this without any rubber,
>>and avoid any drivetrain slop and be fully differential
>>in respect of drivetrain lateral or even axial motion... !
>>
>>I mean, consider this:-
>>
>>a.   Toothed ring gear (pitch to be determined) on tail shaft
>>      close as possible to universal joint, firmly attached
>>
>>b.   Second toothed ring gear as above but at furthest other
>>     end so max length of tailshaft between gears
>>
>>c.   Tailshaft balanced appropriately
>>
>>Question arises, would there be enough twist of the tailshaft
>>over the most appropriate length for the dynamic range of
>>torque measurement needed ?
>>
>>ie. At lowest extreme the tailshaft twist may be so low that
>>there wont be much discernible phase shift for a coarse
>>pitch ring gear.
>>At highest extreme it may well skip a cycle if too fine pitch,
>>so a sync method would be needed if one is interested in
>>wide dynamic range - which obviously is fairly easy to implement...
>>
>>Any mech structural engineers here care to estimate degrees
>>of twist for say 100 newton metres of torque over length of say
>>650mm and 80mm dia... ?
>>
>>
>>>Regards from
>>>
>>>
>>>Mike Massen
>>>Perth, Western Australia
>>>VL Commodore Fuse Rail that wont warp or melt !
>>>http://niche.iinet.net.au
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>>Cheers
>>>Rod
>>>
>>>-----Original Message-----
>>>From: diy_efi-bounces at diy-efi.org [mailto:diy_efi-bounces at diy-efi.org]On
>>>Behalf Of niche at iinet.net.au
>>>Sent: Tuesday, April 19, 2005 11:13 AM
>>>To: diy_efi at diy-efi.org
>>>Subject: RE: [Diy_efi] Strain gauge on engine mounts
>>>
>>>
>>>At 01:51 AM 20/04/05, you wrote:
>>>>Anyone ever done or considered doing a simple DIY driveshaft torque design?
>>>Heavy rubber coupler with two multi-toothed rings around each end, two
>>>sensors mounted to display phase difference as torque increases?
>>>
>>>Now thats a good idea, far easier than the method in the link just posted,
>>>probably be a lot cheaper too,  makes an inherent lot of sense, use an
>>>all digital method  overall.
>>>
>>>There was a poster before who suggested something similar, use ABS
>>>type pickup, think I misread that, thinking he was using only one, but of
>>>course logical and clever to use two and look for phase difference.
>>>
>>>mmmm, Think I'll take a closer look under my car next chance I get
>>>
>>>Thanks for that,
>>>
>>>:o)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>>Dealing with nonlinearities of rubber engine mounts (amoung other
>>>>>things) is asking for trouble (as in huge wasted time relearning
>>>>>whats already been arrived at), far far more direct, efficient, effective
>>>>>and less invasive to measure the twist of the tailshaft :o)
>>>>>
>>>>>Regards from
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>Mike Massen
>>>>>Perth, Western Australia
>>>>>VL Commodore Fuse Rail that wont warp or melt !
>>>>>http://niche.iinet.net.au
>>>>
>>>>--
>>>>Marc Reviel
>>>>
>>>>PowerLogix
>>>>http://www.powerlogix.com
>>>>_______________________________________________
>>>
>>>_______________________________________________
>>>Diy_efi mailing list
>>>Diy_efi at diy-efi.org
>>>http://lists.diy-efi.org/mailman/listinfo/diy_efi
>>
>>Regards from
>>
>>
>>Mike Massen
>>Perth, Western Australia
>>VL Commodore Fuse Rail that wont warp or melt !
>>http://niche.iinet.net.au
>>
>>_______________________________________________
>>Diy_efi mailing list
>>Diy_efi at diy-efi.org
>>http://lists.diy-efi.org/mailman/listinfo/diy_efi
>
>
>-- 
>Marc Reviel
>
>PowerLogix
>http://www.powerlogix.com
>_______________________________________________
>Diy_efi mailing list
>Diy_efi at diy-efi.org
>http://lists.diy-efi.org/mailman/listinfo/diy_efi

Regards from


Mike Massen
Perth, Western Australia
VL Commodore Fuse Rail that wont warp or melt !
http://niche.iinet.net.au





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