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Extendable apparatus

Engineering Asked on November 30, 2020

  1. Is there a kind of “handbook” for general engineering ideas and possible applications? I vaguely remember a machinist friend mentioning some standard book to glean ideas from…
  2. I’m in need of an extendable arm. I wish to raise something into the air ~10-12 feet (with no anchor above), hold ~3-5 lbs, and be as compact as possible when retracted. Telescoping mechanisms are the obvious choice, but I think their collapsed size makes them already too long (especially to reach 12 feet, with their sections being >2 feet). I’d like to be able to carry this on a belt or small harness without being cumbersome.

My mind keeps turning to something like a retractable tape measure but I’m sure there’s a better solution, and that’s not stable enough to hold the weight steady.

Thanks in advance, I appreciate you reading this!

3 Answers

the handboook is probably the McMaster-Carr Company parts catalog, which contains all sorts of mechanical gizmos and doodads available off-the-shelf for jobs like yours.

Answered by niels nielsen on November 30, 2020

What you are asking is impractical and impossible to handle even in a scale that a normal person wrist can handle.

Basically anything that can deploy a load of 5lbs at a distance of 12 feet, if it has a handle that you describe in the order of 6 inches, will cause a torque of $$5*12ft/0.5ft=120lbs.ft $$ Which is beyond a regular man wrist power.

Answered by kamran on November 30, 2020

For mechanical devices, a good source of information is "Mechanisms and Mechanical Devices Sourcebook" by Sclater and Chironis (McGraw-Hill, 2007).

Another good book is "507 Mechanical Movements - Mechanisms and Devices" by Brown.

A google search on "mechanisms" and "machine design" will throw up a lot of possibilities. Beyond that, a patent search is a good idea.

Answered by Biswajit Banerjee on November 30, 2020

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