不锈钢BA管

不锈钢 BA 管–Bright Annealed tube( 真空光亮退火管 ),它是气氛保护热处理( BrightAnnealed)的简称。这种管现在被广泛使用与半导体行业、液晶行业、太阳能行业、药品行业、仪表系统、压缩空气、超高纯气体、化学品系统、WFI系统和其他有高纯和超高纯要求的气体管道系统或无尘室或者设备方面 内壁光洁度 Ra 可达到0.1um,无伤痕,无灰尘,无油渍的冬种高性能,高精度管和超长管;本产品、规格:公制、英制为 6mm-25.4mm ,厚度0.5mm-2.11mm。其内外径尺寸可精确至 0.05mm、(注:产品耐压公 192 乘壁厚除外径=公斤压力以内 。单支套袋、两头套盖帽每米喷码。每根尺寸长度为 4米、2 米。特殊要求可以切割( 切割机锯床,或线切割 。


参考:

316L不锈钢管表面分AP级、MP级、BA级、EP级?有区别吗? – 知乎 (zhihu.com)

不锈钢BA管/EP管_产品_上海久砾不锈钢管有限公司官网 (jiulisteel.com)

三星手机安装谷歌三件套

这两天新到的三星S23手机,支持谷歌框架,但是没有google play store

两步即可:

  1. 三星国行手机(s23)自带google服务:设置 > 账号与备份 > 管理账户 > 开启 Google 服务
  2. 手机自行下载并安装 APKPure 应用商店,在 APKPure 搜索并更新 google play store,该应用就会出现在主屏幕上了

在设置中打开google后,

Google Play Store


参考:

手机安装谷歌三件套 – ZsmHub – Blog

机械行业常见术语

不时补充

管路:

由任 活接头(union)又叫由壬或由任,是一种能方便安装拆卸的常用管道连接件,主要有螺母,云头,平接三部分组成。承插活接头的品种有等径和异径。

活接头_百度百科 (baidu.com)

法兰(Flange),又叫法兰凸缘盘或突缘。法兰是轴与轴之间相互连接的零件,用于管端之间的连接;也有用在设备进出口上的法兰,用于两个设备之间的连接,如减速机法兰。法兰连接或法兰接头,是指由法兰、垫片及螺栓三者相互连接作为一组组合密封结构的可拆连接。管道法兰系指管道装置中配管用的法兰,用在设备上系指设备的进出口法兰。法兰上有孔眼,螺栓使两法兰紧连。法兰间用衬垫密封。法兰分螺纹连接(丝扣连接)法兰、焊接法兰和卡夹法兰。法兰都是成对使用的,低压管道可以使用丝接法兰,四公斤以上压力的使用焊接法兰。两片法兰盘之间加上密封垫,然后用螺栓紧固。不同压力的法兰厚度不同,它们使用的螺栓也不同。水泵和阀门,在和管道连接时,这些器材设备的局部,也制成相对应的法兰形状,也称为法兰连接。凡是在两个平面周边使用螺栓连接同时封闭的连接零件,一般都称为“法兰”,如通风管道的连接,这一类零件可以称为“法兰类零件”。但是这种连接只是一个设备的局部,如法兰和水泵的连接,就不好把水泵叫“法兰类零件”。比较小型的如阀门等,可以叫“法兰类零件”。

法兰(工具零件)_百度百科 (baidu.com)

密封

盘根(编制盘根)(packing)也叫密封填料,通常由较柔软的线状物编织而成,通常截面积是正方形或长方形、圆形的条状物填充在密封腔体内,从而实现密封。填料密封最早是以棉麻等纤维塞在泄漏通道内来阻止液流泄漏,主要用作提水机械的轴封。由于填料来源广泛,加工容易,价格低廉,密封可靠,操作简单,所以沿用至今。如今盘根被广泛用于离心泵、压缩机、真空泵、搅拌机和船舶螺旋桨的转轴密封、活塞泵、往复式压缩机、制冷机的往复运动轴封,以及各种阀门阀杆的旋动密封等。

现代工业密封产品之盘根 – 知为材料 (chem1024.com)

Understanding the Mysteries of Inertia Mismatch 一文搞懂惯量匹配

Learn How Inertia and coupling stiffness combine to create instabilities in servo axis operation – and what you can do about it.

学习关于 惯量和联轴器刚度的组合 如何 产生伺服轴操作的不稳定,以及如何解决这个问题。

When it comes to motion control, torque alone is not enough. Applications like 300-part-per-minute packaging or web printing require ultrahigh speed operation, accurate positioning, and tight synchronization among dozens of axes.

当谈到运动控制时,仅仅提到扭矩是不够的。例如:300件/min的打包应用 或者 超高速网络打印操作,精确定位,还有多轴间的紧密同步等应用。

Electromechanical systems can provide this degree of performance, but they depend on proper interplay between the mechanical properties and the electrical properties of the system. If an axis has poor mechanical characteristics caused by a high inertia mismatch between load and motor and/or significant compliance (torsional flex) in the coupling, shafts, and belts, mechanical resonances will prevent the electrical controls from performing as required. At best, you might wind up with overshoot and extended settling times; at worst, the axis may fall into runaway oscillation. It doesn’t matter how much torque you have – if your load inertia is too high for your motor and coupling, your system simply will not perform as required.

You may have seen the commercial that shows a pickup truck towing a jumbo jet down a runway. Now imagine that the truck is pulling a free-wheeling jet using an ultra-strong bungee cord. Maybe the truck can generate enough torque to get the plane rolling but it’s pretty obvious that with the combination of inertia mismatch and elastic conditions, there is no way that a vehicle the size of the truck could control that load effectively. Although rules of thumb abound for ratios of load inertia to motor inertia (10:1, 1:1, 5:1, etc.), performance varies from design to design based on systems-level characteristics. Let’s take an analytical look at the issues involved and how they can affect your system.

Servo axes are able to deliver top performance because of the ability of the electrical control and drive system to optimize the mechanical performance based on closed-loop feedback. The controller sends path commands to the servo amplifier (drive), which generates an electrical drive signal that tells the motor when and how to rotate. An encoder or resolver monitors the actual position/speed of the motor, allowing the system to quantify the magnitude and frequency of the error introduced by mechanical issues and external forces. Based on this feedback, the properties of the drive signal can be tuned to optimize the performance of the axis.

To understand how mechanical issues can affect this process, consider a load connected to a motor via a shaft/coupling (see figure 1). [Note: for purposes of this article, we will confine the discussion to a rotary servo motor with an internal spinning rotor]. We can define the inertia ratio as the driven-load inertia JL and rotor inertia of the motor JM as:

Inertia ratio=JL/JM    [1]

In a perfect system with an infinitely stiff motor shaft and coupling, the rotor would spin and turn the load along with it. In reality, all couplings have some degree of compliance. We can model the shaft/coupling as a spring with spring constant Ks. In such a case, when the shaft begins to turn and encounters a high JL, the shaft winds up and the load at best lags the rotor and at worst either moves the opposite direction from the rotor (anti-resonance) or wildly amplifies the force applied by the motor (resonance). The frequencies of these points essentially define the usable bandwidth of the motor across which the system can optimize motion to effectively deliver the load to the commanded position or move it at the commanded velocity.

Let’s take a closer look at how inertia ratio and coupling stiffness interact in our compliantly coupled system to introduce mechanical resonances that degrade motion. We start with the expression for angular acceleration for both the motor and the load.

where

JM = rotor inertia of the motor
JL = the load inertia
KS  = coupling elasticity
T = applied torque
BML = viscous damping of the coupling
BM = viscous damping between ground and rotor
BL = viscous damping between ground and load

Next, we move the analysis into the frequency domain using the Laplace transform

to obtain the equations of motion in terms of the complex frequency s:

This gives us the transfer functions

where D(s) represents a denominator function common to both, introduced for simplicity:

We can set BM and BL to zero, since their effect on resonance is negligible. With that change, our transfer functions become:

If we group terms, we obtain:

where

Equation 3 and equation 4 are the key results from this derivation. They are the frequencies of the vibration modes excited in the axis by the interaction between the coupling compliance and the inertias. They are the anti-resonance frequency ωAR and the resonance frequency ωR .

The resonance and anti-resonance peaks of the system identify areas of anomalous behavior. At  ωAR , the load moves with an equal and opposite torque from the motor – the two are 180o out of phase. The result is that the motor’s rotor stands still while the load oscillates back and forth. The energy from the motor essentially gets trapped in a subsystem consisting of the load and the compliant coupling. The problem is that most designs attach feedback devices only on the motor, which means that motor might appear broken while the load oscillation may go undetected. At best, load does not complete the commanded motion. At worst, the machine and/or product gets damaged.

At  ωR , the motor and load are in phase, so instead of dissipating energy, the system amplifies it. As a result, increasing the gain of the system overall means introducing potentially catastrophic behavior at the resonance peak. This explains why, for example, a beverage line might work perfectly well at 280 parts per minute but when it’s bumped up to 300, it starts flinging bottles across the room.

Now let’s take a closer look at how anti-resonance and resonance spikes can potentially interfere with the tuning process and was system performance. Under normal circumstances, a servo would be tuned by analyzing the feedback and adjusting the drive signal to achieve more or less consistent response across the operating frequencies of interest. This process typically starts with increasing the gain to optimize system response. The problem is that in the curve shown in figure 2, increasing the gain on the drive signal would push the resonance peak up past unity, causing erratic behavior like the bottle flinging.

The standard way to address this issue is to apply a low-pass filter that removes the two spikes (or any secondary resonances, for that matter). This works when the resonances fall at high frequencies, but when they fall at lower frequencies, that filtering technique sacrifices much of the usable bandwidth of the axis. It might be possible to raise the gain but the system might not be able to complete the motion cycle the allotted time. This is the crux of the problem we discussed at the beginning of the article?the motor may have plenty of torque but if the inertia ratio and coupling stiffness are such that resonances crop up at low frequencies, even the best electrical engineer will not be able to make the system operate stably higher speeds. Over time, the industry has mined practical experience and intuitive understanding to develop rules of thumb. That’s not the most effective method of dealing with the problem, however.

“When people talk about rules for inertia mismatch, I say wait a minute, if you have a flexible coupling, you have to understand where the anti-resonance and residences are,” says Kevin Craig, mechatronics specialist and professor of mechanical engineering at Hofstra University (Hempstead, New York). “If you’re trying to control over some frequency range and you stay away from them that’s fine, but if you get close to the anti-resonance or the resonance frequencies, you have to deal with them.”

Let’s take a closer look at the Bode plot of  ΘM​/T(s)  (equation 1) to better understand how adjusting inertia ratios can help address the situation. As equations 3 and 4 show, the positions of  ωAR and ωR  are strongly affected by spring constant and the inertia ratio. The usable bandwidth of the system runs roughly to the shoulder where the plot begins to tip into the anti-resonance peak. Obviously, the higher the upper bound of the bandwidth, the greater the system response.

Take a close look at the three curves. As the inertia ratio drops, both the magnitude and separation of the two resonance peaks drop. More important for our purposes,  ωAR and ωR  shift to higher frequencies, increasing the bandwidth of the axis. The shift also makes it easier to apply filtering techniques to clean up the signal prior to tuning the loop. At a 1:1 ratio, for example, the peaks move to high enough frequencies that we can remove them with a low pass filter and then apply tuning techniques to flatten out the gain. Alternatively, inertia ratio and coupling stiffness can be used push the two peaks sufficiently close together that it is possible to apply a notch filter to remove one or more peaks prior to tuning the servo.

“I could never understand inertia mismatch because it’s all a matter of knowing what the stiffness is, knowing what the inertia ratio is, then looking at the Bode plots and staying. ‘What am I trying to do? What’s the bandwidth of my controller? How am I trying to control this load?’” says Craig. “I could never put down a rule and say, ‘It’s got to be this.’  I never understood that approach.”

Addressing resonance frequencies
To boost the frequency of the natural resonance, we can increase the spring constant or modify the inertia ratio by either increasing motor size or decreasing load inertia. Working with a more powerful motor typically adds to cost, size, weight, and energy consumption. Using the stiffest possible shaft for the coupling can improve the situation, but here, too, there are drawbacks. Ultra-stiff shafts require very accurate installation. Any alignment errors can cause premature wear on the bearings, leading to early failure.

Another method is to reduce the inertia mismatch by adding mass to the rotor, which is the source of JM. It does not change the torque of the system but it does damp the motor’s response to the coupling. “You’ve slowed down the response of the motor, and since the motor responds slower it is less prone to vibration when you turn your gain up,” says Steve Huard, staff engineer at Parker Hannifin (New Ulm, Minnesota). “That’s another way of fixing the problem.” On the downside, this reduces system response.

Direct-drive motors provide another solution for the right application. Also known as frameless or kit motors, these designs involve making the motor a part of the load. One example would be a conveyor belt for which the rotor of the motor protects out as the axle for the belt. In such a case, KS rises toward infinity. These designs can tackle enormous inertia mismatches and still position effectively. On the downside, they are more complex to install and very unforgiving of misalignment. They may work well in robotic arms, for example, but in a factory environment that relies on maintenance staff handle replacing failed components, they may not be a good fit.

Reduction ratios and reflected inertia
Another way to address the issue of load inertia is to add a gearhead. We define the gear ratio N for two gears as the ratio of their diameters: 

N=D_2/D1

If we attach a motor producing torque  τ2​ at speed ω1​ ,our output torque  τ2​ and angular velocity  ω2​ are given by:

\tau_2=\tau_1\cdot N\\
\omega_2=\omega_1/N

Meanwhile, the gearhead scales the load inertia “seen” at the motor shaft as:

J_{reflect}=J_L/N^2

In other words, the addition of the gear reducer boosts the torque linearly but reduces the reflected inertia affecting resonance by 1/N2. “Reduction ratio is kind of the magic bullet,” says Bryan Knight, automation solutions team leader, Mitsubishi Electric (Vernon Hills, Illinois). “Sometimes going to a smaller motor and better gearing can give you a better inertia mismatch.” A standard 3:1 gearhead could reduce a potentially troublesome 54:1 inertia mismatch to 6:1, for example, while increasing torque by a factor of three at the load side.

You might assume that adding a reduction ratio would also had cost, but that’s not necessarily true. “If you use a gearhead to do inertia matching, you can reduce your cost and overall size compared to using a motor alone,” says Jeff Nazzaro, servo and gearhead manager for Parker Hannifin. “We have shown examples of an application that needed a 142-mm frame size motor. If you add a gearhead, you can drop the overall frame size down to 90 mm and also save a good 35% to 40% in the cost of the whole system. The gearhead is an added cost but the motor gets smaller and you can go with a smaller drive, too.”

That said, the approach has to be considered within a systems context, including load speed and torque multiplication. Gearheads have maximum input speeds, typically 6000 RPM and below. A gearhead might be able to effectively rescale a 10:1 inertia ratio in an application with moderate speed and consistent load but if you use it in a spindle application operating at 60000 RPM, it won’t survive. Applying that same design at a lower speed to correct a 100:1 ratio on an application like a conveyor belt could also create problems. “As you use higher gear ratios to get better and better inertia ratios, you create higher torque multiplication through the gear train,” Nazzaro notes. “If your conveyer belt jams and you’re not current limiting your motor, you will strip the gear train.”

Using gearheads involves other trade-offs. As mechanical components, they may require maintenance like lubrication or replacement of seals. They add length and introduce audible noise. Lifetime depends on load, gearhead type, duty cycle, etc. but they’ll typically need replacing after several years of operation.

There’s another issue that arises related to speed. For systems with high reduction ratios and rapid deceleration, the regenerative energy produced is very high. Although this can be beneficial for energy sharing among multiple axes operating on a common DC bus, for example, it can also be problematic in the case of an emergency stop or line stoppage. “You’re limited by the amount of energy you can dissipate,” says Knight. “You don’t have anything that can absorb the energy because all the axes are stopping at the same time, but all of that energy has to go somewhere.”

A process that undergoes an emergency stop a few times a month or a quarter, for example, might not be a problem but a line programmed to stop when a product is missing or defective might stop multiple times a shift. “You chose a high gear ratio to get away with a smaller motor that still has plenty of torque but your regenerative braking energy, which you have to dissipate with its own braking resistor, goes up tremendously,” he adds. “This is where sizing software becomes important as it helps identify motor and gear reduction combinations that provide the right torque and speed for the application, while minimizing inertia ratio and wasted regenerative energy.”

Designing at the system level
The most straightforward method for arriving at the ideal system is to begin by determining the appropriate size of directly coupled motor to do the job. Frequently, this requires an unacceptably large motor. In that case, determine whether a gearhead can be used to reduce the load inertia so that it will deliver acceptable performance in terms of resonances. This should allow you to rescale the motor/drive. From there, it’s a matter of iterating to find the best combination for your application, keeping in mind issues of speed, torque multiplication, etc. If your system cannot permit the use of a gearhead, then a direct drive motor may be your best choice. This is the general methodology used by most motor sizing programs.

Any time you’re working with a product engineer or a motor sizing program, make sure that you understand the assumptions on which are operating. Those 10:1 or even 5:1 rules of thumb are based on an intuitive understanding based on experience, but may not take into account the fact that the real problem comes from the interaction of the inertias and the coupling. Particularly in systems pushing the performance envelope, rules of thumb are not likely to be successful. “I don’t think anything replaces a good model and understanding of your system and application,” says Craig. “What you’re doing with these rules of thumb is saying that you’re not willing to understand what’s really happening.”

Motion control is a systems-level function and should be evaluated from a systems perspective. Don’t just boost your motor size by 10% or 20% over that of the previous platform, take the time to understand the effects of inertia ratio, compliance, speed, etc. before settling on your design. Develop a system that takes into account the factors we’ve discussed above, and make sure that you understand how it will function. The best way to do this is for the mechanical design team to work with the electrical and controls engineers to establish components and parameters that will best serve the application. Using an integrated, system-level approach in the beginning will help prevent frustration and unexpected problems later on.

FURTHER READING
K. Craig, “Inertia Mismatch: Fact or Fiction?” Design News, 2/2013.
G. Ellis, “Cures for Mechanical Resonance in Industrial Servo Systems,” IEEE Industry Applications Conference, 9/2001.
G. Ellis, “How to Work with Mechanical Resonance in Motion Control Systems,” Control Engineering, 4/2000.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks go to Kevin Craig for the detailed derivation.


参考文献:

[1] Understanding the Mysteries of Inertia Mismatch | Motion Control & Motor Association Industry Insights (automate.org)

[2] Inertiamatch.pdf (motersz.com)

NX不能选中CAD导入的曲线

NX 奇怪的问题
不能选中从cad中导入的曲线

即使在过滤器中选择对应的类型,范围也选到最大,“整个装配体”,也不能选择曲线。

后从百度搜到这一条

UG NX11.0选不中CAD导入的曲线怎么回事?-NX网-老叶UG软件安装包|NX升级包|NX2212|NX2206|NX2007|NX1980|NX1953|NX1926|NX1899|NX1872|NX1847|NX12.0|NX11.0|NX10.0|NX8.5|NX8.0|NX6.0|NX4.0|

关于这个问题已经困扰我两年,今天我偶然发现是因为wcs坐标距离图档太远导致的,用非时间戳记几何体里面的线选择进入移动对象定义一下坐标后就可以编辑选择cad导入ug的线了

主要是因为曲线距离WCS太远了!!!

展开非时间戳记几何体,如下图,选中移至WCS附件,即可。

NX12 属性同步 报错

NX12.0工程图GC工具箱属性工具重量报错:Use askUserMessage() or askSyslogMessage

解决过程,从参考链接下载 NX12.0GC工具箱修复文件.rar

..\Siemens\NX 12.0\LOCALIZATION\prc\application

添加两个文件:

nx_china_package_drafting.men
nx_china_package_modeling.men

并在如下目录替换如下文件

..\Siemens\NX 12.0\LOCALIZATION\prc\gc_tools\application

libgctool.dll

参考:

NX1847 GC工具箱属性工具名称超过2个汉字、图号超过7个数字报错

NX装配体零件都不见了

今天在模型出工程图时,有一个零件位置不合适,模型中调整一下。结果发现,其余零件都不见了。

其原因,是调整过程中,将两个零件隔离出来后,在“模型视图”中生成了一个“隔离”视图。

还有一个原因是可能是其中存在剖切视图。


参考:

NX子件在装配体中无法显示 – NX装配技术区 – UG爱好者 (ugsnx.com) 8楼提醒了我

NX装配体制图时零件明细表相关的组件属性

忽略零件明细表中带有属性的组件

可以对零件明细表进行编辑以添加或移除单个的组件或整个子装配。您可以向组件添加以下特殊属性,这样可以自动防止组件被添加到零件明细表中。

  • PLIST_IGNORE_MEMBER – 如果该属性存在于组件中并设置为除“off”(文本必须为小写)以外的任何值,该组件将被所有零件明细表排除。
  • PLIST_IGNORE_SUBASSEMBLY – 如果组件有该属性,则该组件和其所有的衍生组件都不会在所有的零件明细表上出现。