Dan 1038
20-07-2008, 01:22
So, after an experience at IRI which reminded me of some inginuity I have seen during my day job (automotive manufacturing engineering and maintenance), I pose the following question to the group with our team's example from IRI as exhibit A.
Question - What functional parts have you put on your robot which have absolutely no business acting in the manner of which you elected to use them for...? Bonus points will be assessed if the product is manufactured by a sponsor.
Exhibit A - Team 1038's ball detect limit switch arm snapped in our second to last seeding match this weekend at IRI 2008. The switch is used to ensure a ball is present when the arms are closed, to help center the ball correctly. The switch can be seen in the picture below attached to the right arm...
http://www.frcpics.com/albums/Misc/Pose.jpg
Without the switch, accuracy of acquiring the ball goes down... So, we scoured the pits and initially determined that we did not have a suitable replacement (didn't want to use metal, due to the chance of popping the ball). A second look through the tool box, however, led us to an ideal solution:
http://www.frcpics.com/albums/Misc/Crest.jpg
This was a brush we used for cleaning those "hard to reach places", as a bonus Crest is manufactured by our primary sponsor P&G - had it been a Colgate brush we found in the box, we would most likely still be looking for a suitable switch arm!
Your examples, please!
Question - What functional parts have you put on your robot which have absolutely no business acting in the manner of which you elected to use them for...? Bonus points will be assessed if the product is manufactured by a sponsor.
Exhibit A - Team 1038's ball detect limit switch arm snapped in our second to last seeding match this weekend at IRI 2008. The switch is used to ensure a ball is present when the arms are closed, to help center the ball correctly. The switch can be seen in the picture below attached to the right arm...
http://www.frcpics.com/albums/Misc/Pose.jpg
Without the switch, accuracy of acquiring the ball goes down... So, we scoured the pits and initially determined that we did not have a suitable replacement (didn't want to use metal, due to the chance of popping the ball). A second look through the tool box, however, led us to an ideal solution:
http://www.frcpics.com/albums/Misc/Crest.jpg
This was a brush we used for cleaning those "hard to reach places", as a bonus Crest is manufactured by our primary sponsor P&G - had it been a Colgate brush we found in the box, we would most likely still be looking for a suitable switch arm!
Your examples, please!