davidoux2020 said:
Hi Haruspex, thanks for your message,
Actually I have the final solution of this problem but not the details , the solution "should be" 2 and
10 DOFs are used as initial value then reduced by constraints down to 2.
the final calculus (given) is 10 - 3[ground] - ( 6-1[Rolling Without Slipping Constraint] ) = 2
"it can only move forward and turn"
I initially struggled to come up with inital 10 DOFs then I realized the 3 wheels are independant (per problem statement), . I know its tricky and not realistic but its an, exam style problem with trickyness on purpose
the tricycle can be modelized by 2 bodies with 1 link,
To simplify lets start with the assumption the tricycle is in freefall, it has 10 DOF because :
6 DOF for the 2 linked bodies (3 Rot + 3Trans)
+3Rot (1 rot per wheel)
+1Rot the rotation axis of the wheel
Then it lands on a 2D rigid surface : -3 for the ground (minus 1 vertical axis, minus 2 rotation axises (yaw& pitch) which left 7 DOFs.
The remaining issue is I struggle to explain the (6-1) Rolling Without Slipping) even if i understand intuitively now how we come to 2 DOFs
Both formulas are of the form A(N-1)-(A-1)(L).
The N-1 shows that we are to take one body as given, so all motion is relative to that.
The (A-1) implies that each linkage is assumed to remove all but one of the A degrees of freedom of a rigid component.
That works if the connectivity is a tree structure and the joints are like simple hinges. In that case, L=N-1 and both formulas give L as the answer.
It goes wrong when there are loops, and when a joint does not act like a simple hinge.
Consider four rods jointed with simple hinges in series. N=4, L=3, dof=3.
Now link the two end ones: dof=1 but the A=6 formula gives -2.
Or, instead, remove one link. dof=8, but the A=3 formula gives 5.
For the tricycle, both exceptions arise.
- Tyre contact with ground is like a universal joint, allowing rotation in two directions.
- There are two loops: chassis-fork-front wheel-ground-rear wheel-chassis (one such loop for each rear wheel).
Perhaps there is a classification of linkages such that a general formula can be made to work, but I have not got that far. For now, just go with the self evident fact that the vehicle can roll back and forth and the front wheel can steer: dof=2.
Btw, I stopped worrying about the differential. I realised that it serves to link the drive train to the rear axles. If we are ignoring the drive train as a body then we can discard the differential and take the rear axles as being independent.