Spying on the heavens with GROB linear drives
GROB Antriebstechnik GmbH was still just a small handicrafts company when then-Prince Charles officially put the Anglo-Australian reflecting telescope AAT into operation in the observatory on Siding Spring Mountain in Australia on 16 October 1974. The reflecting telescope installed there was one of the first telescopes in the southern hemisphere and at that time the largest in Australia with a mirror diameter of 3.9 meters.
What do reflecting telescopes do? They're used in observatories for observational astronomy. Scientists use them to observe celestial bodies by means of the radiation that they emit.
For reflecting telescopes to be able to take precise pictures of distant regions of space, they must be exactly aligned with those regions. A sophisticated mechanical system is required to move the telescope's 16.2-tonne mirror precisely, especially for maintenance work.
The "GROB solution" for the Australian observatory
When the complete system was overhauled in 2012, the commissioned service provider, the PM Design Group, opted for a system from GROB Antriebstechnik GmbH. First and foremost, the new system had to be long-lasting, virtually non-wearing, and positionable with great precision. They didn't have to search long - the solution from GROB Antriebstechnik GmbH was ideally suited.
Ultimately three BJ5 Screw Jacks were installed, each with a maximum lifting capacity of 500,000 N. GROB's scope of delivery was: three BJ5 Screw Jacks, each with a maximum lifting capacity of 500,000 N, which are driven via two transfer gearboxes and three Cardan Shafts by a drive motor with a drive output of 15,000 W (from SEW Eurodrive).
The special feature of this solution: the Screw Jacks are equipped with ball screws. This allows more precise positioning, there is less wear and the spindles last longer. The stroke speed is 0.52 m/min.
What has proven itself in Australia will also work perfectly in Chile
Because this system has proven its worth ever since and the Australians have nothing but praise for this solution, a further observatory has now opted for the proven "GROB solution".
The Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) in Chile has now ordered from GROB Antriebstechnik GmbH similar solution to that described in the observatory in Australia for the Blanco telescope with a diameter of 4 meters.
The solution for Chile: the previously installed linear drives (not supplied by GROB) were designed for a lifting capacity of 227,000N each. Due to the high wear, GROB recommended larger linear drives with a maximum lifting capacity of 500,000N. GROB Antriebstechnik GmbH has now delivered three BJ5 Screw Jacks, each with a lifting capacity of 500,000N, an electric motor with an output of 15,000W, two transfer gearboxes and three Cardan Shafts. The stroke speed is 0.5 m/min.
It's about long life and higher positioning accuracy
In the past, the observatory in Chile had experienced high wear in the installed linear drives. Therefore, GROB recommended a version of the Screw Jack with a ball screw. In this case, balls move between the spindle and the nut. Instead of sliding friction, rolling friction now occurs. This means:
- Higher efficiency
- Less drive power is required
- Lower investment costs
Screw Jacks from GROB
With the Screw Jacks from GROB, maximum loads ranging from 2,500N to 2,000,000N can be achieved. In this case, there are three BJ5 Screw Jacks, each with a lifting load of 500,000N.
Typically, the Screw Jacks are equipped with trapezoidal screw spindles. For this installation, ball screw spindles are used. The gearboxes are in the standard configuration. However, in this case, it's a special form of the standard configuration: it's a 'climbing' Screw Jack. The ball screw spindle is fixed in the system. Once the drive motor is started, the Screw Jack, along with the load, 'climbs' up or down along the spindle.
The Screw Jack "climbs" up and down the spindle – the spindle rotates
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