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![]() "Alan Nishioka" wrote in message ups.com... On Jul 13, 7:12 am, msg wrote: Please view these photos of a three-turn planetary drive pot that uses a conventional "stackpot" formfactor athttp://www.cybertheque.org/homebrew/rcvr/images/antennas/pot.jpg Resistance = 1K Interesting. I've never seen a pot like this. So the turns ratio is determined by the shaft diameter to ball diameter ratio? And the wiper arm is connected to the ball carrier? So this assumes the metal to metal, shaft to ball won't slip, but the ball will turn in the carrier, causing the carrier to have 1/3 the rotation of the shaft? Sorry, this doesn't help you at all... Alan Nishioka The ratio, is determined by the shaft diameter, to the internal diameter of the casing in which the balls sit. If (for instance), you have a 3mm shaft, and 10mm balls, the casing has to have an internal diameter of 26mm, and the ratio is 26/3 = 8.66:1. The drive can be made remarkably good (the same system is used on some micro focussers for telescopes, which carry significantly more torque than needed for a pot). Units like the 'Williams optics feathertouch focusser', use exactly this drive. Best Wishes |
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