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-   -   "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower" (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=100943)

DavisDad 23-01-2012 08:26

"Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
We are investigating the feasibility of a ball launcher using a cannon design. I want to avoid the complexity of compressed air and use a high pressure blower. Approximate blower specs:
  • 2.9 psig "dead head" pressure
  • 1.5 psig working pressure
  • 750 CFM (200 CFM if accumulator)
  • Velocity 35 ft/sec

I'd like to use an accumulator (reservoir) but if this will be considered compressed air, this will nix the design (Cv issues).

Any thoughts on this subject?

Thanks in advance!

IndySam 23-01-2012 08:42

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
I'm on my DROID so I can't give you exact text but r73 I think is the number that states the only source of compressed air is the KOP compressor or its equivalent.

nitneylion452 23-01-2012 08:47

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
Quote:

[R73]
Compressed air on the Robot must be provided by one and only one compressor. Compressor specifications may not exceed nominal 12V, 1.05 cfm flow rate, 120 psi maximum working pressure. Off-board compressors must be controlled and powered by the Robot.

Blue Box
Quote:

If an alternative compressor is used, the team may be required to provide documentation to show compliance with the performance specifications.

The only difference between an on- and off-board compressor is that the off-board compressor is physically removed from the Robot. The intent of this rule is to permit teams to take advantage of the weight savings associated with keeping the compressor off-board. However, using the compressor off-board of the Robot does NOT permit non-compliance with any other applicable rules.

The compressor may be mounted on the Robot, or it may be left off the Robot and used to pre-charge compressed air in the storage tanks prior to bringing the Robot onto the Court.

Jeff Pahl 23-01-2012 10:05

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
Standard "This is not an official reply" disclaimer applies here:

If I was being asked to inspect such a system, my first question would be "Does the pressure of the air in question at any time exceed atmospheric pressure?" If so, then it is considered "compressed" and all pneumatics / compressor rules apply.

Daniel_LaFleur 23-01-2012 10:29

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Pahl (Post 1111802)
Standard "This is not an official reply" disclaimer applies here:

If I was being asked to inspect such a system, my first question would be "Does the pressure of the air in question at any time exceed atmospheric pressure?" If so, then it is considered "compressed" and all pneumatics / compressor rules apply.

Technically when a robot drives forward it compresses the air in front of it, thus (according to your definition) all drivetrains are illegal.

Fans and blowers, in the past, have been deemed legal and not part of the 'pneumatics system' as long as they were powered by a legal motor.

I would Q&A this question, and I would expect a blower system to be legal. Whether it's effective or not is another question ;)

Aur0r4 23-01-2012 11:21

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
During Lunacy, we explored the idea of using blowers to add down force and/or thrust vectoring. We abandoned the idea for feasibility issues.

Sure enough, someone at GSR added some big fans, and didn't seem to have any problems with inspection. Can't remember their number (Peterborough, I think), but it seemed to add to their maneuverability.

Compressed air has a far, far higher energy density than the blast of air from a blower, which is why FIRST hasn't seemed to come out against it, so long as the motors are legal (as stated before) and the blades are properly guarded.

Jon Stratis 23-01-2012 11:22

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Daniel_LaFleur (Post 1111813)
Technically when a robot drives forward it compresses the air in front of it, thus (according to your definition) all drivetrains are illegal.

Fans and blowers, in the past, have been deemed legal and not part of the 'pneumatics system' as long as they were powered by a legal motor.

I would Q&A this question, and I would expect a blower system to be legal. Whether it's effective or not is another question ;)

The difference is the accumulation of air. If you are constraining air in a high pressure environment, it's a pneumatic system. The concern here is mostly one of safety - any constrained high-pressure (in this case, greater than normal air pressure) system carries with it the risk of sudden rupture... aka something similar to an explosion. Fans and blowers, on the other hand, simply push air from one point to another - they can create a current of air that might be higher pressure than the surrounding air in the venue, but it's not constrained. The dissipation of that higher pressure stream can occur naturally, and there's no worry of rupture or danger to others since its not constrained. Of course, the design of such a fan or blower would be scrutinized for safety in and of itself, the same as any moving mechanism on a robot.

Daniel_LaFleur 23-01-2012 11:30

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Aur0r4 (Post 1111843)
During Lunacy, we explored the idea of using blowers to add down force and/or thrust vectoring. We abandoned the idea for feasibility issues.

Sure enough, someone at GSR added some big fans, and didn't seem to have any problems with inspection. Can't remember their number (Peterborough, I think), but it seemed to add to their maneuverability.

Compressed air has a far, far higher energy density than the blast of air from a blower, which is why FIRST hasn't seemed to come out against it, so long as the motors are legal (as stated before) and the blades are properly guarded.


That was us. 1729 :D

Quote:

Originally Posted by eagle33199 (Post 1111844)
The difference is the accumulation of air. If you are constraining air in a high pressure environment, it's a pneumatic system. The concern here is mostly one of safety - any constrained high-pressure (in this case, greater than normal air pressure) system carries with it the risk of sudden rupture... aka something similar to an explosion. Fans and blowers, on the other hand, simply push air from one point to another - they can create a current of air that might be higher pressure than the surrounding air in the venue, but it's not constrained. The dissipation of that higher pressure stream can occur naturally, and there's no worry of rupture or danger to others since its not constrained. Of course, the design of such a fan or blower would be scrutinized for safety in and of itself, the same as any moving mechanism on a robot.

I agree. Which is why I said I expect the Q&A to call blowers and such as non-pneumatic (With respect to the pneumatic rules) as long as it's not 'contained'.

DavisDad 23-01-2012 11:31

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
Al Skierkiewicz (Lead Robot Inspector) answered the question of what qualifies for the compressed air rules in another thread:


Quote:

Originally Posted by Al Skierkiewicz (Post 1111715)
Dad,
...any pneumatics are inspected under the pneumatics rules regardless the pressure. Blowers on the other hand will be looked at for electrical, motor, mechanical and safety parts of the inspection checklist. Of particular concern would be exposed moving parts. They are pretty much handled the way ball launchers would be. We don't want fingers getting damaged or worse so things do need shields when they pose a threat to humans.

This makes sense as any stored energy from CA is a potential danger and following a standard CA safety standard is needed.

Aur0r4 23-01-2012 11:35

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
DAN! Yes it was....sorry I forgot your number.

Saw your bot zip around with those blowers, seemed to work pretty well.

Jeff Pahl 23-01-2012 14:29

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
I inspected a large number of fan/blower robots during Lunacy, and I agree that the use of a fan or blower in those applications was not "pneumatics". The air was free flowing in those applications.

The deciding point for me is when the air becomes contained somewhere in the system at an increased pressure, be it in an accumulator, shooter barrel, etc. Does the ball just fall into a free-flowing air stream, or is it constrained in a barrel with the blower building pressure behind it? There's a difference between the two. Just too many questions at this point.

I love the idea, and would be very impressed to see it well implemented on a robot. I don't think I could make a call on "legality" without actually seeing a specific implementation.....

Tristan Lall 23-01-2012 16:20

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
As long as FIRST doesn't pretend that a ducted fan is a traction device,1 I'm happy. (In all seriousness, the distinction between accumulating pressure and blowing air seems to be a good, practical one.)

1 I'm not making that up. In 2009, a fan thrusting the robot downward was allegedly a traction device. That was ridiculous.

DavisDad 23-01-2012 20:48

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Pahl (Post 1111973)
... I don't think I could make a call on "legality" without actually seeing a specific implementation.....

The concept is simple (implementation not). I can't imagine that this would be considered constrained compressed air. The only constraint is the inertia of the ball when fan creates pressure to move air and ball.
  1. The ball is loaded into the barrel and rolls to stops
  2. Fan motor is energized to a variable voltage (volts determine exit velocity)
  3. After ball leaves cannon, fan motor is de-energized

DonRotolo 23-01-2012 21:11

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by DavisDad (Post 1111737)
We are investigating the feasibility of a ball launcher using a cannon design. I want to avoid the complexity of compressed air and use a high pressure blower.

My opinion is that such a system would not be Pneumatic. I base this opinion on the lack of separation between the "pressure area" and atmosphere. That is, if no ball was there, you;d just get some wind with a barely measurable pressure difference above ambient.

Of course, my opinion doesn't count at competition.

I would strongly recommend you submit this, carefully worded please, to the official FIRST Q&A system for a ruling. That, you can take to competition.

DavisDad 24-01-2012 06:43

Re: "Compressed Air" vs. "High Pressure Blower"
 
I looked at power requirements for a blower @ 750 CFM and 40 inWC (~1.5 PSI) --> 20 HP ballpark. Yikes!

That would require something like sketch below. I think this is getting too complicated and error prone. I'm abandoning this idea...



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