Hey Sammo, one thought had occured about using the linear actuator.
Scott thinks that the blades need to pitch @ 20 degrees per sec.
This can be done with the satilite gizmo, but to pitch the blades using a see/saw double lever with a fulcrum, the lever that is doing the driving force, has to be 1/3 the length of the lever opposite the fulcrum, to get that kind of response time.
The travel speed is only .5" per sec on the linear gizmos. So you would need 4 times the driving force then you would if you used the longer lever. Note that is only if you were trying to hold a steady RPM. 20 degrees in 3 seconds may be quite acceptable, that part of the equasion is unknown.
A cheap servo can travel at 150 IPM. If you used the longer lever to get more power, you could use a very small servo and get more power out if it.
I was going to use equal length levers and a huge servo to maximize servo life.
I bet I could update pitch so fast, it would seem instantanious with a servo/encoder/frictionless/ball-screw/nut.
Scott...I think you could do the same thing equally as well with gears, but gears would be alot more costly, because to be frictionless you would have to have more bearings.
Another consideration for using gears is the weight of rotating mass of metal.
A simple screw has far less inertia than a large gear mass to start up and slow down. Your servo would only be working in very small operating bursts because you would not be turning the shafts very many turns. Acel/decel algorythms would not work as good.
A screw on the other hand will distribute the wear along more of an area than gears, where the wear on the gears would be more localized to one small spot in where they mesh.
Rotating 90 degrees would not use up that much of a gear if you wanted to keep the servo size down. The gears on the blades would be large and the gear on the servo would be the small one. And be prone to wearing out.
The thing about the gears on a car lasting so long is that they are always traveling in the same direction and not oscillating back and forth. You get a little worm gear and move it back and forth alot and it is going to wear very fast, even if you use prime materials.
You cannot temper the gears hard enough to keep them from wearing because they would be too brittle.
I worked on an old Monarch CNC machine a few years ago and it had a gear/rack design incoroprated in the tool change arm. It was always wearing out. The small gears always seem to be the achellies heal on machines that use it alot.
The worm gear works very well when they just do intermitent jobs.
Just a couple more thoughts about things...
Murlin