I'm trying to solve the following problem:
I'm making a GT2 belt drive, and now I want to calculate the exact needed belt length, or rather the exact needed spacing between the two axes.
Does anyone have a formula for this calculation?
Maybe also some rules of thumb to account for proper belt tension?
How to calculate timing belt lengths / diameters?
- jonnybischof
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- jonnybischof
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- Joined: February 15th, 2016, 2:48 am
- Location: Zurich, Switzerland
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Re: How to calculate timing belt lengths / diameters?
As always, I trust Misumi to be a very good source for information:
http://uk.misumi-ec.com/vona2/detail/11 ... 96%3A%3Aag
So, the important decisive dimension is the length and position of the core wire.
The length is ( n * 2 ) with n being the number of teeth, and 2 being the "GT2" 2mm pitch
This means that if I were to wrap a 60T belt around that 60T pulley, I would have a 120mm belt circumference, which results in a belt ( = core wire) diameter of 38.2 mm (120mm / pi)
Doing the same for the 20T Pulley, I get 40mm circumference and a core wire diameter of 12.7mm
Now, I just add tangents to the two circles, and measure their length: Then select the nearest valid belt length, which would be 154mm (77 teeth) in my case, and adjust the axis spacing until I get the correct value: Does that sound ok, or am I missing something?
Now, I have a very nice CAD program that lets me do this comfortably. But is there a general way to mathematically describe those tangents? It would be really nice to have an Excel spreadsheet where you can enter two diameters and a spacing and get the belt length...
/edit:
About belt tension:
Mounting the motor (smaller pulley) with slotted holes should solve that problem without having to do a lot of calculations. I actually have slotted holes in the parts that I already had lasercut. I just noticed that there's an error in my SpaceClaim drawing where the slotted holes are actually round holes there. Gonna fix that error.
http://uk.misumi-ec.com/vona2/detail/11 ... 96%3A%3Aag
So, the important decisive dimension is the length and position of the core wire.
The length is ( n * 2 ) with n being the number of teeth, and 2 being the "GT2" 2mm pitch
This means that if I were to wrap a 60T belt around that 60T pulley, I would have a 120mm belt circumference, which results in a belt ( = core wire) diameter of 38.2 mm (120mm / pi)
Doing the same for the 20T Pulley, I get 40mm circumference and a core wire diameter of 12.7mm
Now, I just add tangents to the two circles, and measure their length: Then select the nearest valid belt length, which would be 154mm (77 teeth) in my case, and adjust the axis spacing until I get the correct value: Does that sound ok, or am I missing something?
Now, I have a very nice CAD program that lets me do this comfortably. But is there a general way to mathematically describe those tangents? It would be really nice to have an Excel spreadsheet where you can enter two diameters and a spacing and get the belt length...
/edit:
About belt tension:
Mounting the motor (smaller pulley) with slotted holes should solve that problem without having to do a lot of calculations. I actually have slotted holes in the parts that I already had lasercut. I just noticed that there's an error in my SpaceClaim drawing where the slotted holes are actually round holes there. Gonna fix that error.
- jonnybischof
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- Joined: February 15th, 2016, 2:48 am
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Re: How to calculate timing belt lengths / diameters?
For the belt thickness, I offset the initial curve inwards by 0.25mm (0.254mm as per Misumi spec, leaving the 0.004mm away), then from that new curve outwards by 0.65mm (belt thickness). Then deleted the initial curve (or you could leave it for future modifications) and extruded the result by 6mm. I left the teeth away, seemed unnecessary...
- jonnybischof
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Re: How to calculate timing belt lengths / diameters?
Shit, I just got lmgtfy'd
The results of the linked calculator are accurate, so it succeeds in calculating those tangents. What I don't like about that one is that you have to know your pulley diameter (which you usually don't).
If I can extract that formula into Excel, I can extend it to accept "pulley style & number of teeth" --> pulley diameter.
** working **
The results of the linked calculator are accurate, so it succeeds in calculating those tangents. What I don't like about that one is that you have to know your pulley diameter (which you usually don't).
If I can extract that formula into Excel, I can extend it to accept "pulley style & number of teeth" --> pulley diameter.
** working **
- Amedee
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Re: How to calculate timing belt lengths / diameters?
Yes absolutely -- the main thing was to get the math for the tangents in an easy way...
And pulleys are a great when you don't need a big conversion ratio
And pulleys are a great when you don't need a big conversion ratio