2009/6/9 Frank Tkalcevic <[email protected]>:
>
> How much "backlash" would the rubber teeth on the belt contribute?

"Some" I guess. Though it might matter less than you think. In fact,
that thought has been occurring to me throughout this thread. There
has been a lot of concern over absolute accuracy, when repeatability
is probably more important in the real world. I can't think of many
things where dimensions over a couple of feet have been important to a
few thousandths, and in cases where they are, if the two parts are
made on the same machine then they will  fit anyway. (And it has been
a source of some frustration to me watching machinists fretting over
the last n-th of accuracy on a part I wanted yesterday, and where I
have specified +/- 5mm "I don't care" accuracy. )

Similarly with a resilient belt or "springy" ballnut, it will always
sit in the same place for the same cutting force, so if you have a
light finishing cut you will probably get better accuracy than the
ballscrew spec suggests. (or even if you have a consistent roughing
cut)

You will, however, probably get more chatter and vibration, but then a
visco-elastic element might damp vibration that would be there in a
fully rigid system.

(Note, I am not a machinist, I am not even really an engineer, but I
play one on the internet)

-- 
atp

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