View Full Version : pic: Team 39 robot climbing ramp
Ken Loyd
05-02-2006, 23:27
[cdm-description=photo]22784[/cdm-description]
zkaratekid
05-02-2006, 23:29
nice u sure that it will still work on the dimond plate
Greg Needel
05-02-2006, 23:43
i am curious about your chain runs. How come you didn't take the second chain off the transmission to the center wheel instead of the front, requiring the use of an idler?
sanddrag
05-02-2006, 23:44
Does your frame between the wheels clear the edge of the ramp? If not, does it make it up anyway?
Does your frame between the wheels clear the edge of the ramp? If not, does it make it up anyway?
I can't speak for their design, but we're using an almost identical wheel setup with the exact same size wheels. Through calculations we believe it does not touch the ramp.
Jonathan Norris
06-02-2006, 08:48
I agree with Greg why would you put your chain that way, it just adds extra weight of all the extra chain. We have a similar 6 wheel drive, but the chain is going from the gearbox to the middle and back wheels, then from the middle to the front. The middle wheel is really the most important set in a 6 wheel drive, so i don't see why you would want a chain setup like that.
just my $0.02.
Ken Loyd
07-02-2006, 09:11
I agree with Greg why would you put your chain that way, it just adds extra weight of all the extra chain. We have a similar 6 wheel drive, but the chain is going from the gearbox to the middle and back wheels, then from the middle to the front. The middle wheel is really the most important set in a 6 wheel drive, so i don't see why you would want a chain setup like that.
just my $0.02.
Thanks one and all.
The chain set up is "for the weight". If we near the 120 limit, we will change the set-up.
Ken
SoftwareBug2.0
20-03-2006, 01:10
Thanks one and all.
The chain set up is "for the weight". If we near the 120 limit, we will change the set-up.
Ken
How does that make sense?
Does your team weigh the robot all the time, and you want to make different parts of the team think that there's more of a weight problem than there really is?
Just guessing here, but it seems like the weight there would lower the COG which would make them less likely to tip.
SoftwareBug2.0
20-03-2006, 04:05
Just guessing here, but it seems like the weight there would lower the COG which would make them less likely to tip.
That's true. I don't see a lot of places where they could easily and securely add an extra chunk of a metal bar.
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