Experimental report on use of additive technologies in special vehicles development.
Valentan, Bogdan ; Brajlih, Tomaz ; Drstvensek, Igor 等
Abstract: Field of special vehicles is a rapid growing and rapid
changing field of industry. When we need to produce a large number of
different parts, we meet modern additive technologies. Use of additive
technologies helps us to produce random parts at very reasonably price
in less time then usually. Lack of materials and advanced manufacturing
technologies were reason, that in past years additive technologies were
not used in development and production of special vehicles. This paper
presents usage of additive technologies in development of hybrid powered
vehicle.
Key words: additive technologies, special vehicles, rapid
manufacturing, advanced manufacturing.
1. INTRODUCTION
Automotive industry these days has some problems with response on
daily problems like environment pollution and high fuel costs. At this
point any debate why this is so is pointless but this position is a good
opportunity for smaller more flexible undertaking that can start with
small series ecological acceptable vehicle production. Basis is well
known from an electrical motor, to assistant human drive and also these
days so praised hydrogen fuel cell (which is by opinion of many men only
attempt to stay dependent on fix "H 2" stations). Paper will
present some new approach in developing parts for one of these
"future" vehicles.
2. ADDITIVE TECHNOLOGIES
Additive technologies are this days known as the "technologies
of the future". Each day a more and more different technologies are
presented, and many more are in development. In the basic principle
Additive technologies is nothing more, then building a part by layers.
It started with SLA (Leong, K.F. 1993), which is still one of the
typical presenters. Through time different materials were needed and so
different variations were developed. Now, development is concentrated in
producing finished parts from several materials from plastic to metal
(steel, titanium ...).
3. HYBRID VEHICLE DEVELOPMENT
In development of new vehicle we need to develop some parts, which
are standard, but unique for every vehicle. In this paper development of
four major parts will be presented:
Steering mechanism
Transmission
Force measuring
Bodywork.
3.1 Steering mechanism
Standard steering mechanism is a well known Ackerman mechanism that
is commonly used in almost every of today's cars. Ackerman
mechanism has some issues, it does not steer vehicle on ideal path and
it needs bar that uses space between booth steering wheels. Our solution
is steering by Bowden cables. Bowden cables were used for steering at
very beginning of automotive industry, but were replaced by Ackerman
mechanism because used ropes were not stiff enough for stable driving.
Presented solution (Drstvensek et al. 2005) uses new stable steel ropes,
and better solution for guidance of steel rope. For mould pattern
PolyJet[TM] part (Figure 1) was used and small series was made with SRM (Drstvensek et al. 2005) and IC (Efunda, 2007) process (Figure 2).
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
3.2 Transmission
Transmission in a car is optimized on vehicle weight and produced
torque. In super light hybrid vehicle we cannot use standard
transmission, since we need more gears and less weight. Since our
vehicle (Valentan, 2006) has two wheels in front and one in rear we head
some options:
* Rear wheel drive
* 3x3 drive
* Front wheel drive.
Decision on rear drive combined with transmission from mountain
bike and some parts from scooter did prevail. Some parts in construction
were made on a SLM machine (Rehme et al., 2007) directly from stainless
steel (Figure 3). Rapid prototyping machines for metal part production
are still relatively new and development is still running at high speed.
3.3 Force measuring
Vehicle has a hybrid drive. Secondary electric drive (el. motor and
storage battery) and primary human powered drive (bicycle like). Fore
intelligent regulation of primary drive force measuring was implemented
in vehicle frame. Measuring spot was defined with FEA simulations
(Figure 4).
3.4 Bodywork
Bodywork is crucial component that has a function of protection
from weather influence and is one of the most important parameters in
attracting customers. All components were designed in CAD software Catia
V5, which is a splendid tool for a free form design; on the other hand,
man must be a designer to produce great looking part, so our project has
here some room to improve. 1:10 scale model was build by PolyJet[TM]
procedure (Figure 5) for shape evaluation and some further aerodynamic
tests in wind tunnel.
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
4. CONCLUSION
Some major advantages of using modern additive technologies must be
pointed out. First: For prototype and small series production this
production techniques produced much cheaper parts in extreme short times
(from CAD model to part in couple of hours). Second: These parts are
fully applicable and have the same property (quality) than the parts
produced by conventional production methods. Third: With those parts we
can make final test on components and so in real life (not only in CAD
model) confirm or deny our thesis.
5. REFERENCES
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