Hi Danger,
Danger said:
I cannot for the life of me figure out what the hell that thing is supposed to be doing. I've seen several CVT designs over the past 30 years or so, and this one appears to be useless. Maybe a better video would change my opinion.
I had the same reaction when I saw it. All the CVT's I've seen are belts riding between 2 sets of conical sheaves. This one is very different. There is a main transmission shaft running from bottom left to upper right in the picture and the idea is to have an input shaft rotating at one speed (say the bottom, left in the picture) and the output shaft to rotate at another speed (say the top, right in the picture). You'll notice that the main shaft has two sets of conical things. These two sets are essentially identical. Where the small sections of the conical parts meet, they are actually separate, so the main shaft is in 3 different pieces, all rotating on the same axis.
The four vertical shafts in the picture are each attached to a disk that runs against the conical things. The disks rotate freely and press against the two conical things allowing the one conical thing to drive this disk and the disk is then driving the second conical thing in each set. There are 2 sets.
The picture shown here, shows just 1 of the 2 sets of conical things and discs. Note the 2 conical things are separated at the small end so they can rotate at different speeds.
http://desmond.imageshack.us/Himg339/scaled.php?server=339&filename=cvt2.jpg&res=landing
The disk is being rotated so that the edge of the disk touches the one conical thing at one point and the second conical thing at a second point. Where that disk touches each conical thing in the picture is indicated by the red stripe on the conical thing. By rotating the vertical shaft, this disk touches the two conical things at different locations, acting as a 'gear' of sorts so the two conical things rotate at different speeds.
cvt-extroid, I think with anything that's new like this, you won't find much documentation, if any. You have to reduce it to basic principals. There is a certain geometry to the transmission that dictates its performance, but to determine if the thing can hold together, you need to look at forces, stresses, frictional loads, etc... There's no cook book that will guide you through the design of something like this, you need to apply basic principals of engineering to determine how to design it. Also, that won't do much for you when it comes to wear rates of things like the disk riding on the two conical things. What materials to use to minimize wear is one of those 'black art' issues that you can only get a handle on by building and running one of these things. And it's those kinds of black art features that are often the most difficult to work out the details on.
Personally, I'd like to see a transmission like this built for industry to do away with VFD motors and the controls associated with them. Everyone wants to go after the automotive market but there are plenty of other applications for this type of technology and it seems no one is going after it.