Motor combination to drive multiple tyres

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the torque requirements for rotating a large wheel, similar to the London Eye, using multiple motors. It is clarified that the total torque is the vector sum of the individual motors, meaning they do not need to be connected to each other. The participants express concerns about the high torque per tyre, with calculations suggesting that each of the five motors could effectively handle around 10,000 Nm when distributed across multiple tyres. The calculations also indicate that the required torque for the design may actually exceed initial estimates, leading to discussions about the feasibility of the setup. Additionally, there are warnings about potential issues with asymmetric load sharing when motors are connected in parallel.
Jay1298
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If I need 50,000 Nm of torque to rotate a wheel, and I am rotating it about its rim (like the London eye), would 5 10,000 Nm motors each connected to a set of tyres to rotate it (the motors are not connected to each other), or would these motors first need to be connected to each other and then drive a set of tyres or would I need a single 50,000 Nm motor connected to a set of tyres?

Thank you.
 
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Hello Jay, :welcome:

The total torque is simply the net (vector) sum of the torques applied, so it isn't necessary to connect the motors or have only a single one.

My first guess is that 10000 Nm is way too much to ask from a tyre, but you may have better info.

Good luck with your design !
 
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The plan is to split the 10,000 between 4-5 tyres
BvU said:
Hello Jay, :welcome:

The total torque is simply the net (vector) sum of the torques applied, so it isn't necessary to connect the motors or have only a single one.

My first guess is that 10000 Nm is way too much to ask from a tyre, but you may have better info.

Good luck with your design !
 
My reasoning: accelerating a 1000 kg car with 4 m/s2 requires 1000 N per tyre.
With a radius of 0.25 m that is 250 Nm of torque per wheel
 
BvU said:
My reasoning: accelerating a 1000 kg car with 4 m/s2 requires 1000 N per tyre.
With a radius of 0.25 m that is 250 Nm of torque per wheel
I understand but our acceleration is tiny, the wheel runs at 1 revolution per 24.17 minutes and an acceleration time of around 3 minutes, giving an angular acceleration of something like 10^-5 if I remember right.
 
But you said you needed 50000 Nm ?
 
Jay1298 said:
I understand but our acceleration is tiny, the wheel runs at 1 revolution per 24.17 minutes and an acceleration time of around 3 minutes, giving an angular acceleration of something like 10^-5 if I remember right.
Yes we are going to have 5 10,000 Nm motors each connected to 4-5 tyres
 
Still don't understand: your final angular velocity is ##\displaystyle{{2\pi\over 24.17 * 60 }\approx 0.0043} ## rad/s. If you reach that in 180 s, your angular acceleration is 2.4 10-5 rad/s2.

With 50 kNm you could handle a moment of inertia of 2.1 109 kg##\cdot##m2 which I guess is not far from the London eye !?
 
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BvU said:
Still don't understand: your final angular velocity is ##\displaystyle{{2\pi\over 24.17 * 60 }\approx 0.0043} ## rad/s. If you reach that in 180 s, your angular acceleration is 2.4 10-5 rad/s2.

With 50 kNm you could handle a moment of inertia of 2.1 109 kg##\cdot##m2 which I guess is not far from the London eye !?

My mistake with the numbers i didn't have access to exact numbers of our project when writing this thread so I used approximations, here are my workings:

The time to accelerate is 240 s
The angular velocity is 0.00433 rad/s
The inertia is 4.3*109
Therefore the torque needed is 77500 Nm approx.

This is spread over 8 motors so for simplicity let's say 10,000 Nm per motor, each motor will drive 4 x 0.5m radius tyres.
 
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https://www.patana.ac.th/parents/curriculum/Physics_K5/units/010304.html. With 1900 tonnes and 70 m radius London eye has ##I = ## 9.3 109 kg##\cdot##m2.

Your thingy half that ##I## ? If so, I agree with your calculations. Still worry about 5000 N per tyre, but I suppose truck tyres manage it too.
 
  • #11
BvU said:
https://www.patana.ac.th/parents/curriculum/Physics_K5/units/010304.html. With 1900 tonnes and 70 m radius London eye has ##I = ## 9.3 109 kg##\cdot##m2.

Your thingy half that ##I## ? If so, I agree with your calculations. Still worry about 5000 N per tyre, but I suppose truck tyres manage it too.

Yes we are planning on using big tyres, and our radius is 50m
 
  • #12
Just a heads up...you can have problems with asymetric load sharing if you connect some types of motors in parallel.
 
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