Quote:
Originally Posted by Russman
No probs!
I am working out what materials I should use, I might use aluminium. Do you have optimised dimensions for M6 x 1.0P threaded rod? Running @ 1RPM? That would be awesome if its not too much to ask! 
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I am working out what materials I should use, I might use aluminium. Do you have optimised dimensions for M6 x 1.0P threaded rod? Running @ 1RPM? That would be awesome if its not too much to ask! [/QUOTE]
No probs! Happy to help Russ.
The parameters I'm giving you assume that you are building the type 4 Trott, with the two boards starting parallel and pushing apart. It's not for my mod. My mod involves building something that starts at a negative angle, passes through parallel, then heads out the other way. Easy to mathematically model, easy to say not so easy to make.
You can also use the type 4 principle but make a double tangent arm drive instead of a hinged board type. When I designed the bisymmetric double arm , it was to build it as a high precision 4hr tangent for the RA axis on my old mount. It would end up looking like a complicated Astrotrac arm.
I never built it, I was getting more and more into eclipse chasing and instead my time went in to build a very lightweight EQ mount to carry in my luggage to solar eclipses around the world. Eventually I bought an iEQ45 mount for home observing.
Assuming you are going to build the easier Trott Type 4 with the boards starting parallel and pushing apart, I've optimized the design parameters for that. I have guessed because you asked for M6 and 1rpm that you have a fixed 1 rpm motor/gearbox- perhaps a synchronous motor?
If you saddle yourself with a fixed motor speed, the dimensions need to be very very precise or the errors will blow out really quickly.
An error of 0.025mm on the radius arm will push the error out to 8 arc sec over 2 hrs.
An error of 0.25mm will push the error out to 80 arc sec over 2 hrs.
A variable speed drive will let you fine tune to cancel out any minor construction errors.
If you have a variable speed stepper driver, then you can make fine adjustments to the motor speed to trim out any construction errors at the end.
The construction parameters and error curve are on the excel zip file. The diagrams from the original articles in S&T and show which parameters r, b & c are.
cheers
joe