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WAM™ Wrist – Cable Maintenance Guide [email protected] 

www.barrett.com 

© 2008 Barrett Technology®, Inc. 

Document: D1004, Version: AG.00 

Page 3 of 13 

1  General Wrist Cable Circuit Descriptions 

The Wrist has three distinct cabling regions: (1) the motor 5 (M5) transmission, (2) the motor 6 (M6) transmission, and (3) the 
differential. Stages 1 through 3 of the motor transmission circuits are stages of reduction for the main motors in the base of the 
Wrist. The differential circuit translates the rotations of the motor circuits (M5 and M6) into the main pitch and roll motion of the 
Wrist. An exploded schematic of the entire Wrist, shown in Figure 1, outlines the three distinct cabling circuits. 
 
Each stage of the cabling circuits, except the differential, is made up of one pulley and one pinion; the pinion having the smaller 
diameter. In the M5 and M6 input circuits, the pinion 

is

 the motor shaft in stage 1.  In stages 2 and 3, the reductions are 

implemented with the pinion of each stage attached to the pulley on the stage beneath it.  In the differential, all mating pairs of 
pulleys are of identical size resulting in a 1:1 ratio.  In the worm gear tensioning system, the worm gear on the level with the 
smaller diameter creates pretension for differential levels 1 and 2, while the worm gear on the level with the larger diameter 
creates pretension for differential levels 3 and 4. 

M6 

 

Differential

 

M6 3rd Stage

 

M6 2nd Stage

 

M6 1st Stage

 

M5 3rd Stage 

M5 2nd Stage

 

M5 1st Stage

 

M5 

Figure 1 -- Schematic Diagram of Wrist Cable Circuits 

2  Helpful Tools & Tips 

2.1  For First Time Cablers 

Re-cabling the Wrist is generally easier if the user is familiar with cabling other mechanisms such as the WAM Arm. If the user is 
cabling the Wrist for the first time, she should read this entire section on wrist cabling (especially Section 6.5 on pre-tensioning 
input circuits) and section 1 of the WAM Arm cabling manual before beginning to cable the Wrist. Make sure that proper tools 
and cable parts have been gathered prior to any cabling activities. Figure 2 shows the tools provided with the Wrist. You will also 
need the wider masking tape provided in the 4-DOF WAM Maintenance kit. The cabling instructions have numbered checkboxes 
next to each step for tracking progress. These pages may be photocopied for use as a cabling checklist. 
 
Allow roughly 4 hours to cable one of the circuits for the first time. Subsequent cabling of the wrist after the user is familiar with 
the instructions can be completed in 1 hour. 
 
One important point to keep in mind is that each cable of a given drive must be held in place at all times until the entire circuit is 
pre-tensioned. The wrapped cables act like light torsion springs which, when released, even momentarily, may quickly unravel 
your work back to your starting point. This is the most common error for the first-time cabler. Pre-tensioning, which prevents this 
unraveling, cannot be done until all cables in that circuit have been installed. Masking tape is a tremendous aid in temporarily 
preventing this unraveling. As cables are wrapped onto each pulley or pinion, hold each wrap with your fingers to keep it from 
unwinding. At the end of each cabling step, one or two pieces of masking tape temporarily immobilize transmission elements and 
keep cables in place. 

Summary of Contents for WAM Wrist

Page 1: ...WAM Wrist Cable Maintenance Guide Barrett Technology Inc Document D1004 Version AG 00 ...

Page 2: ...2 2 TERMINOLOGY 4 2 3 CABLES AND CABLING ORDER 6 3 CABLING THE DIFFERENTIAL 6 4 M5 STAGE 3 9 5 M6 STAGE 3 10 6 M5 AND M6 STAGES 1 AND 2 11 6 1 TOOLS AND TIPS 11 6 2 M5 M6 STAGE 1 PREINSTALLATION 11 6 3 M5 M6 STAGE 2 11 6 4 M5 AND M6 STAGE 1 12 6 5 PRE TENSIONING M5 M6 CIRCUIT 12 7 AUTOTENSIONING 13 Barrett Technology Inc 625 Mount Auburn Street Cambridge MA 02138 U S A US 617 252 9000 This manual ...

Page 3: ... 1 For First Time Cablers Re cabling the Wrist is generally easier if the user is familiar with cabling other mechanisms such as the WAM Arm If the user is cabling the Wrist for the first time she should read this entire section on wrist cabling especially Section 6 5 on pre tensioning input circuits and section 1 of the WAM Arm cabling manual before beginning to cable the Wrist Make sure that pro...

Page 4: ...s or pulleys the drive cable crosses the plane that contains the axes of both elements This wrap results in the elements rotating in opposite directions when cabled M5 M6 Side directions often used in this text to identify an item The motor number indicates the motor or side of the wrist containing the motor the component is closest to Tension Tool in while tensioning the Wrist Open wrap when span...

Page 5: ...ing the number of turns Throughout this manual there are instructions to wind a cable around a pinion or pulley a certain number of turns It is important to understand exactly how the number of turns are counted Always start at the anchor brass termination of the cable as the zero point and end where the cable comes off of the pulley In the example picture below the lower cable is wound around the...

Page 6: ...ength between terminations mm B1216 WristCable Differential Level1 1 1 97 2 B1217 WristCable Differential Level2 1 1 107 2 B1218 WristCable Differential Level3 1 1 132 2 B1219 WristCable Differential Level4 1 1 152 2 B3477 WristCable Stage1 4 2 860 5 B3478 WristCable Stage2 4 2 610 5 B3479 WristCable Stage3 4 2 560 5 3 Cabling the Differential The differential circuits are shown in Figure 5 They c...

Page 7: ... the Level 2 horizontal pulley anchor Rotate the bottom 3rd stage pulley counter clockwise approximately turn The cable should now be threaded through the small gap between the Level 2 horizontal and vertical pulleys Remove the brass termination from the horizontal pulley and leave both ends of the cable unconnected 4 Get a Level 1 cable B1216 and insert one end of the cable into the vertical anch...

Page 8: ...ecessary and insert the free end of the Level 3 cable into the anchor on the horizontal pulley and rotate back to tighten 12 Rotate J6 slightly in the negative direction while keeping tension on the Level 3 cable so that the Level 4 horizontal termination is visible and accessible Insert one termination of the Level 4 cable B1219 into the anchor in the horizontal step Wrap the cable around approxi...

Page 9: ...ble B3479 to the lower anchor in the lower 3rd stage pulley Wrap the cable up the pulley 3 times using tape to hold each wrap as necessary This cable will transition above the first cable so it must wrap between the wraps of the first see color enhanced Figure 10 7 Cross over to the pinion using a cross wrap Attach the free end of the cable to the anchor in the top of the pinion and rotate the top...

Page 10: ...le is tight 5 Immobilize the bottom of the pinion with tape to prevent cable unwinding see Figure 14 6 Attach one end of another 3rd stage cable B3479 to the lower anchor in the upper 3rd stage pulley Wrap the cable up the pulley 3 5 times using tape to hold each wrap as necessary This cable will transition above the first cable so it must wrap between the wraps of the first see color enhanced Fig...

Page 11: ... B3478 Attach one end to the top anchor of the 2nd stage pulley 2 Wrap the cable around the pulley 1 75 2 times using tape to hold the wraps 3 Transition over to the 2nd stage pinion using an open wrap Attach the free end of the cable to the bottom anchor of the pinion Slowly and evenly wind on the cable by rotating the pinion until the cable is tight after approximately of a turn the cable should...

Page 12: ...utch Housing which houses the one way clutch and rotate the Clutch Housing to take up the slack Guide the cable carefully to ensure that the cable winds on smoothly and evenly Rotate the Clutch Housing until the cable is tight It is normal that the Clutch Housing may be a bit difficult to rotate The stage should now look like Figure 21 7 Remove all tape except for the tape across the stage 3 pinio...

Page 13: ...nt themselves but not necessarily in the proper arrangement Once the cables have been repositioned as shown in Figure 22 retension again by inserting the Wrist Tension Tool into the clutch lock to keep the motor shaft from turning and pushing on the clutch housing with the push pull hook Repeat the process of running the wrist through its range of motion and re tensioning until all the stage 1 and...

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