Torque Required to turn a wheel

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The discussion centers on determining the weight capacity of a motor and wheel setup, specifically with a 6000 ft-lb torque electric motor driving 44" wheels at a maximum of 2 RPM. Key factors influencing weight capacity include the wheel's inertial properties and the load ratings of the supporting bearings. The driving force is calculated using the rolling resistance and mass factor, indicating that the maximum weight is limited by the torque and friction coefficients. The user aims to handle approximately 100,000 lbs with this setup. Overall, the feasibility of achieving this weight depends on the specific parameters of rolling resistance and friction.
lysolmax
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Hello,

I am trying to figure out how much weight a particular motor/wheel setup can handle.

I have an electric motor that puts out 6000ft*lb of torque, and is driving 44" wheels and needs to reach a maximum of 2RPM. Acceleration doesn't really matter so long as the wheels are able to get up to speed in a reasonable amount of time.

How much weight am I capable of handling on this setup?
 
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You limitations will be in the inertial of whatever wheel you are accelerating, and the load ratings for the bearings supporting the wheel. 6000 ft-lb of torque sounds like a lot, are you sure you're right on your number there?
 
Rolling Resistance + ma = Driving Force​
R_r W + \lambda W \frac{a}{g} \le \frac{T}{r}
W \le \frac{T}{\left(R_r +\lambda\ ^a/_g \right) r}
Where:
In any cases, the Driving Force will not exceed the available friction force (##\mu W##), thus:
W \le \frac{\mu W}{R_r +\lambda \ ^a/_g}
Or:
R_r +\lambda \ ^a/_g \le \mu

Where ##\mu## is the tire-road friction coefficient.

EDIT: Added mass factor.
 
Mech_Engineer said:
You limitations will be in the inertial of whatever wheel you are accelerating, and the load ratings for the bearings supporting the wheel. 6000 ft-lb of torque sounds like a lot, are you sure you're right on your number there?

Yeah it should be. The mass value I'm hoping to get is somewhere around 100,000 lbs
 
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