interlocking mechanisms Smile
Post Reply   Forum
Posted by: rarvind ®

01/08/2006, 22:46:35

Author Profile eMail author Edit

Hiii all

im arvind doing my final year project ....
i have a cylindrical flexible element which is supposed to lock in its greater diameter upon expansion ...

any idea as to how to design the interlock would be of great help ........
please can any one tel me where can i find some relevant information ..








Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator View All   | |

Replies to this message


Re: interlocking mechanisms
Re: interlocking mechanisms -- rarvind Post Reply Top of thread Forum
Posted by: zekeman ®

01/11/2006, 17:00:05

Author Profile eMail author Edit

Your description is not clear. If you want some help, send a sketch of your setup.







Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator Where am I? Original Top of thread | |
Re: interlocking mechanisms Smile
Re: Re: interlocking mechanisms -- zekeman Post Reply Top of thread Forum
Posted by: rarvind ®

01/11/2006, 23:32:23

Author Profile eMail author Edit

Hiii thanks a lot for your response ... sorry im unable to attach the file

its like i have a hollow cylindrical element which is flexible and expandable diametrically.
the purpose is to design an interlock where in the cylindrical element locks it self in the expanded position and does not contract back to the original dimension .

request your inputs please ....
regards
arvind








Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator Where am I? Original Top of thread | |
Re: interlocking mechanisms
Re: Re: interlocking mechanisms -- rarvind Post Reply Top of thread Forum
Posted by: zekeman ®

01/12/2006, 09:51:15

Author Profile eMail author Edit

Can you make the outer surface a sawtooth that would engage another on the fixed cylindrical "stop" in a ratchetlike fashion?
Look at a tywrap mechanism for some insight on this. Or more simply, if you could put a pin protusion on the end of the piece and when it expands it would fall into a hole in the mating stop.
Hope this will give you a starting point.







Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator Where am I? Original Top of thread | |
Re: interlocking mechanisms Smile
Re: Re: interlocking mechanisms -- zekeman Post Reply Top of thread Forum
Posted by: rarvind ®

01/16/2006, 00:11:12

Author Profile eMail author Edit

Thanks for the reply

well the main problem is the hollow cylindrical element is a polyurethane material ... which engages on expansion into another rubber material and hence the idea of a saw tooth mechanism or any friction type concept will not be very effective i guess ....
and also i cannot make any depressions or projections onto the outer cylinder ...... again a major constraint ..

n thats why i wanted to figure out whether i can incorporate any mechanism which enables the inner cylinder to lock when expanded ......
im free to make some arms or struts onto the inner cylinder which can support any kind of a mechanism .....

request your inputs ......








Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator Where am I? Original Top of thread | |
Re: interlocking mechanisms
Re: Re: interlocking mechanisms -- rarvind Post Reply Top of thread Forum
Posted by: Yates ®

01/18/2006, 07:46:59

Author Profile eMail author Edit

Does your device need to transmit torque ?
Are you looking for a permanent interlock or rather one which engages and disengages as a function of direction of rotation or torque transmitted, or both ?







Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator Where am I? Original Top of thread | |
Re: interlocking mechanisms Smile
Re: Re: interlocking mechanisms -- Yates Post Reply Top of thread Forum
Posted by: rarvind ®

01/18/2006, 08:55:35

Author Profile eMail author Edit

thanks for your reply

well the basic purpose is to lock itself in its expanded position ... there is no transmission or motion of either flexible cylinders .....
its just that the smaller cylinder has to keep the outer cylinder open ...

Regards








Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator Where am I? Original Top of thread

Powered by Engineers Edge

© Copyright 2000 - 2024, by Engineers Edge, LLC All rights reserved.  Disclaimer