An M200 motor powers this cleaning brush, put to work on abandoned pipes and tires (during a harbor cleanup event) in Hawaii. Make your own with bolts, bearings, and 3d printed parts! bluerobotics.c...
Just out of curiosity, what is the intended purpose for this brush? Cleaning boats? It seems to work pretty well, though oddly noisy, is it orbiting as well as spinning? If not something is rubbing pretty hard lol.
Hi! It's just a demonstration of the M200 subsea motor in an application with a gear train. The gears are 3D printed, and minimally constrained, so it is definitely pretty noisy! Read more here: bluerobotics.com/learn/making-an-m200-powered-brush/
Hi Tony )) could you please guide me how did you connect the switch on and off, I have this jumper connected and not sure where I should connect the 2 switch wires. And not sure if the connection for this wires I have it or not
Hi! You can learn about that in the guide, I just added a link in the Description. The blue disc is a planetary gear box, and it is there to multiply the torque while reducing the rotary speed of the M200 motor.
Hi Tony once again)) Currently I am building same project as you did. But I am replacing the brush with 6inch polishing pad. From your experience do you think the M200 is strong enough for commercial use? I mean this will be used for real Rov work, and I see that it has small size compared to other models on the market which is 3 times larger? Many thanks for your support ❤
@@abdelrahmanmohamed983 Hi! I think it will have enough torque, maybe enough speed, but a better gearbox design may be necessary for long term usage? Best of luck!