How do I calculate the required torque for a drum with a wire rope load?

  • Thread starter Thread starter wzrdstrm
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Drum Force
AI Thread Summary
To calculate the required torque for a drum with a wire rope load, it's essential to consider the effective drum radius, which includes the rope diameter and the drum's root diameter. The number of wraps of cable on the drum significantly impacts the torque needed, as the winch capacity decreases with additional layers of rope. For accurate calculations, the effective radius should be determined by measuring the total diameter, including the rope layer, and dividing by two, then adjusting for the rope's diameter. This method ensures that the torque calculation reflects the actual load conditions. Understanding these factors is crucial for proper motor selection and load management in winching applications.
wzrdstrm
Gold Member
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
I'm doing some work were its necessary to calculate the force acting on a drum via a wire rope. If I have a known weight acting on the rope already and I want to back calculate the minimum torque necessay for a motor connected to that drum to hold that load, do I add the diameter of the rope to the radius of the drum to do so?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
It depends on how many wraps of cable you have on the drum. In general you will need to take into account the diameter of the wire for a couple of wraps on the drum.

Here's an example in off-road vehicle winching:

http://www.pangaea-expeditions.com/resources/winchworksheet/index.html
Winch capacity

One of the common misconceptions regarding winches is that the maximum rated winch capacity is available any time the winch is hooked up. Unfortunately, this is false. Maximum winch capacity is in fact determined by the number of layers of cable wrapped on the winch drum.
...
As you can see based upon this chart, the number of layers of cable or winch rope on the drum greatly affects the winch capacity. With the top layer losing almost half the pulling power.
 
What sort of hoist system is this? If a crane or elevator, then all sorts of standards and requirements apply.
 
Simple design only, not for commerical review/standards. We have a motor connected to a gear box (1:1) ratio, connected to a drum that has wire rope wrapped half way across the drum on the root layer (1st layer). What I am expecting is that that if the drum had a root diameter of 100 inches (including lebus grooving) and a roper diameter of 2 inches, for calculation purposes we would have an effective drum radius of 52 inches for the first layer. Is correct?
 
Center of drum to center of rope. 51 inches. But if you measure carefully, the Lebus shell will probably make that number a little different. Just measure total diameter including the rope layer and divide by 2. Then subtract one inch.
 
Last edited:
Confused, why subract one inch? the total diameter would be

2 X Rope diameter + Root Drum Diameter
 
Last edited:
How did you find PF?: Via Google search Hi, I have a vessel I 3D printed to investigate single bubble rise. The vessel has a 4 mm gap separated by acrylic panels. This is essentially my viewing chamber where I can record the bubble motion. The vessel is open to atmosphere. The bubble generation mechanism is composed of a syringe pump and glass capillary tube (Internal Diameter of 0.45 mm). I connect a 1/4” air line hose from the syringe to the capillary The bubble is formed at the tip...
Thread 'Physics of Stretch: What pressure does a band apply on a cylinder?'
Scenario 1 (figure 1) A continuous loop of elastic material is stretched around two metal bars. The top bar is attached to a load cell that reads force. The lower bar can be moved downwards to stretch the elastic material. The lower bar is moved downwards until the two bars are 1190mm apart, stretching the elastic material. The bars are 5mm thick, so the total internal loop length is 1200mm (1190mm + 5mm + 5mm). At this level of stretch, the load cell reads 45N tensile force. Key numbers...
I'd like to create a thread with links to 3-D Printer resources, including printers and software package suggestions. My motivations are selfish, as I have a 3-D printed project that I'm working on, and I'd like to buy a simple printer and use low cost software to make the first prototype. There are some previous threads about 3-D printing like this: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/are-3d-printers-easy-to-use-yet.917489/ but none that address the overall topic (unless I've missed...
Back
Top