Showing newest 17 of 34 posts from February 2010. Show older posts
Showing newest 17 of 34 posts from February 2010. Show older posts

Sunday, February 28, 2010

I fold.

Still a lot of work to do, but overall the daylight hours were good to us today. Rick is starting to get pretty happy with the way the telemetry is working out -- he was calibrating load cells today and polishing the code.

This evening I'm going to chop up some tube and flat stock and weld the skeleton of the dyno together. I'll post a view of that in a few hours. Still on schedule to spin the vehicle on the dyno this next weekend. I'm pretty confident we'll get there.


Random shots











Mounting the hub to the stand

This was the first time the prop has been able to spin.





Mounting the blades

Several of the SJSU crew came by this morning and gave me a hand with the trial assembly of the vehicle.




It all hinges on this

Spent the better part of last evening finishing fabricating and installing the hinges and stops for the prop tower pylons. These hinges will allow the tower to fold forward for travel.


Saturday, February 27, 2010

It's a long way to the top

No clouds, but the vehicle's got its head in the ceiling insulation.

This evening I'll get the hinges and pins drilled and installed on the pylons. We'll then roll it outside where there is room to put the hub back in and mount the prop. It will be very cool to see it 95% assembled.

Solve the Ridley

The first steps of the vehicle. (And no, Ridley Scott is not just off camera directing -- it actually rained).



This is the approximate pilot position. We'll have a sling seat between the chassis rails but for the pic I was just using my elbows to keep my jeans off the wet pavement.

Frontal Lobes

I built up the front wheel last night. After the struggle and learning experience of the two custom rear wheels, this one went together really easy. Easy lacing and truing.

This morning I milled, mounted and welded on the tabs 100mm apart on the bottom of the forks. I will work on the brake caliper mounts later -- we won't need brakes nor the steering linkage for the dyno tests one week from now.


Thursday, February 25, 2010

Tower of Power

We spent some fun time this evening with our associate sponsor representative, Dr. Chris Uhlik of Google. He dropped in at a great time with the major components coming together. A few weeks ago all we could have shown him were aluminum shavings.

Here is the thrust box temp mounted on the pylons and standing upright. There are a few gussets that need to be installed before putting the prop on it but it was good to see it in near final form.

That prop hub is 10ft off the slab as it sits there in the picture. It will go up almost another 48" when installed on the chassis.


Wednesday, February 24, 2010

One thrust box to go

Tomorrow evening I'll mount this to the prop stand pylons and then I'll start on the dynomometer. I figure I'll be able to finish most of that project by the end of this weekend. Rick should have all the sensors wired and ready to go for dyno testing the following weekend.

Only a week and a half to go before we spin this puppy up.

The last circle (for now)

I'm tired of making stuff on my mill go round and round (no cnc), but sometimes you just have to grind on through. Until after our initial shakedown testing, this drive sprocket hub should be the last aluminum plate that I turn into dinner plate.




Telemetry through the looking glass

This evening, Rick did final assembly on the telemetry boards that Christian designed for us.

Thanks Christian.

Topping it off

Made the 'thrust box' last night.

The prop shaft will be supported by three bearings mounted to the box bulkheads and will run right through the middle of the box. Cantilevered out from the front end of the box will be the prop hub and to the rear the drive sprocket/spool. Inside the box will be the ratchet hub and the brake rotor. I'll get the bearings mounted this evening and slide the shaft through for alignment.

This box will be sandwiched between the two prop pylons at the very top of the chassis.




Monday, February 22, 2010

Woo Hoo!!

All that component work is gonna pay off soon with an assembled cart.

I ordered the parts for the dynomometer today -- that will be the next project after assembly of the vehicle. The 6.5HP Honda engine will spin the wheels and allow us to test initial mechanical reliablility and also prop behavior at static thrust. Data from the sensors will tell us if at windspeed the vehicle will accelerate or fall back ... a rather important distinction. :-)

Final load cells integrated.

Finished up the outboard bulkhead bearing points -- installed the load-cell brackets (lower right of shiny bearing bracket and also installed the limiting stops on each side.


I'm not going to install the brake caliper brackets until after dyno testing (no need for brakes on the dyno), but other than that this rear assembly is ready to install on the chassis.

Next up -- have to build the cap for the prop stand pylons then mount the prop shaft bearings, brake rotor and rear sprocket before mounting the cap and preparing to mount the prop on the chassis.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

To the back of the bus

Worked on the mounting and assembly of the lower rear of the vehicle this weekend.

Here I'm installing the mid bearing bulkheads:



Bulkheads and bearings in place, along with the brake rotors, ratchet hubs and sprocket cassette.



A shot of the (near) total rear assembly.




A closer look at the 'half-shaft' with the ratchet hub installed and the linear bearing bracket where the drive axle load cell will be installed. I'll get the load cells in there tomorrow evening.

Once the vehicle gets off the dyno, these 'half-shafts' will be replaced with full shafts to widen the vehicle track by about 4ft for more stability in the wind.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

No clearance Clarence

Blades on the hub and balanced. Wish we had room to spin it up -- we're about to pull the chassis back in the shop and start nailing stuff to it. This weekend we'll start that process.