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jnelly
15-02-2013, 21:20
If we place our radio only about a half inch from a CIM motor will we have issues with magnetic interference?

cgmv123
15-02-2013, 21:34
Don't put it that close if you can help it. Especially after the FMS issues last year, you are strongly advised to put it up high, not near a motor, and not behind any pieces of metal.

DonRotolo
15-02-2013, 22:15
Not magnetic interference, but metal has this way of not letting radio waves through it. The antennas need to be not near metal. Find somewhere else if you can, like on a piece of something not-metal and flat, up higher on the robot, and mount it with velcro.

lior9999
16-02-2013, 00:38
My team is mounting our wireless bridge inside of our electrical box at the bottom base of the robot (it's a rather tall machine). Do you think this could be an issue/cause us to have poor coms?

Alan Anderson
16-02-2013, 02:24
My team is mounting our wireless bridge inside of our electrical box at the bottom base of the robot (it's a rather tall machine). Do you think this could be an issue/cause us to have poor coms?

In a word: yes.

My advice is to keep it as high and exposed as you can without compromising the functionality of your 'bot and without risking having its wires snagged by other robots.

DonRotolo
16-02-2013, 10:53
My team is mounting our wireless bridge inside of our electrical box at the bottom base of the robot (it's a rather tall machine). Do you think this could be an issue/cause us to have poor coms?
Unless you have a non-metallic box and components (e.g., wires), yes.

Find some random space up high on the machine and velcro it there.
In past years we have lexan "sides" we use to display sponsor logos, we velcro it on the inside of one of those.

jmiller18
17-02-2013, 02:12
A simple sheet of aluminum, even as thin as aluminum foil, wrapped around the cim will lower the emi to negligible amount

DonRotolo
17-02-2013, 12:15
A simple sheet of aluminum, even as thin as aluminum foil, wrapped around the cim will lower the emi to negligible amountElectrical, yes, but this has no effect upon magnetic, since aluminum is not a conductor of magnetism.

jmiller18
17-02-2013, 20:19
Electrical, yes, but this has no effect upon magnetic, since aluminum is not a conductor of magnetism.

Ok then just go to your local osh or hardware store and pick up some dryer tubing, which is as close to steel foil you can get and rap it around ur cims

Kevin Sevcik
17-02-2013, 20:24
Ok then just go to your local osh or hardware store and pick up some dryer tubing, which is as close to steel foil you can get and rap it around ur cimsWhich will be entirely saturated by the large magnetic field of the CIM because it's so thin. Notice how thick the flux rings are on the BaneBots motors.

All of that is beside the point, however, because a CIM is still a big hunk of metal that is going to block radio from the field. Save yourself a headache and just put the radio somewhere away from metal and motors where it'll get good reception.

Al Skierkiewicz
21-02-2013, 07:06
While the CIMs are mostly steel the RFI from the brush assy. still will be emitted from the motor through the end bells and the wiring. Twisting the motor wires and making them short runs to the speed controllers helps a little.
The radio has two antennae, one on each side of the box. These are required for the 802.11 standard, they are not either/or (diversity). To insure maximum connectivity and throughput, your radio should be mounted away from surrounding metal of any kind and higher up in your robot. When metal is in close proximity to the sides of the radio, the antennae become detuned and output power is affected. When metal is close to the top, the same occurs. What you are trying to achieve is that the radio can 'see' the field antenna while you drive.

jmiller18
27-02-2013, 20:24
Electrical, yes, but this has no effect upon magnetic, since aluminum is not a conductor of magnetism.

also the routers use dipole antenna which use the electric field, not the magnetic, so that's all you need to block

Al Skierkiewicz
27-02-2013, 21:27
The radio actually uses PIFA antennae, vertically polarized to the plane of the bottom of the AP. The circuit board is the ground plane.
Antenna actually have both electric and magnetic fields, but they are 90 degrees apart. Most discussions center around the magnetic field so the electric field lives in obscurity.