![]() |
Team 2363 turret actution
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Looks Great! :)
We got ours mounted today. Only thing left it to put a belt around it and some tensioners, then we are done the spinning aspect of the turret. :D |
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Looks pretty snazzy!
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
That is impressive, we were looking at a direct mount idea for the motor... this has shown me that I HAVE to gear down. Awesome design!
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
At what power are you spinning that motor? We were using one of those for our collector, we may need to rethink.
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
This is the motor we are using |
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Out of curiosity, why is the chain fixed to the lazy Susan? Wouldn't a continuous chain allow you to shoot back wards? ( with proper wire routing of course)
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Looks good, very smooth rotation.
Quote:
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Looks very nice! We finally got our turret testing, and we're doing pretty much the same thing, only with a belt cut in half. We also don't plan on shooting backwards. Same motor too.
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
In this case, perhaps you are in the process of collecting a ball. Murphy says the ball will be in the most awkward location possible. Your design decision is, can I shoot immediately, or do I need to rotate the chassis. As mentioned, a small deadzone might be acceptable. But full 180 turns to shoot might not be. |
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Love it! We have made a few modifications to our original prototype, pictures to come soon I hope.
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Very nice, FIRST Team 1296 is using the same motor and a similar gear ratio but we turned the entire rotating plate into a giant gear - so no chain
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
I never said it wasn't possible, however it's unlikely, and easy to mess up. |
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
I agree. Your robot itself is capable in moving every which direction it wants. So why have a totally separate part of the robot that turns independently of your robot when you can turn your robot just as easily in any way it wants? Unless your robot can hardly turn, or you haven't considered the robot's orientation a factor during the match, turning a robot 180 degrees is the same as turning a turret 180 degrees, if not faster since most drives are powered by 4 CIMs, whereas most turrets are going to be powered by one of the weaker motors. I've seen robots turn 180 degrees pretty fast. As for limiting actions, isn't that what engineering is all about? Tradeoffs. Torque vs speed is my favorite one. And sometimes you end up limiting things you don't really need anyways. As for your Murphy's law example (My favorite law :D), there are so many ways to engineer your robot so that doesn't happen, and good driver training will easily be able to fix a ball in an awkward position. I'm not at all saying turrets are bad, and love all of the videos that are being posted. Just that there are ways to make an effective robot without turrets. |
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
If, by some miracle, the computer runs fast enough, and the software is good enough, it is conceivable that we could keep the shooter locked on the target with an accurate "firing solution" such that we just drive around picking up balls and firing them continuously through the hoop, on the move. Can't do that without a turret. As a mechanical guy, I always want to say, "The robot would be so much cooler if only the software could do ..." I never want to hear, "The robot would be so much cooler of only it was mechanically able to do ..." Of course, both software and mechanical people will always say, "If only the drivers were better, the robot could do ..." and the drivers will say, "If only we had the robot sooner to practice with, we could have done ..." Such is life when asked to do the impossible with too little time and not enough money. |
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
|
Re: Team 2363 turret actution
Quote:
One of our sponsors is a sheet metal fabrication shop. So we drew it in SolidWorks and they made it for us. They make several and we sandwich them together with rivets to yield cheap aluminum gears of any size or shape. We "borrowed" this technique from the RoboWranglers. HTH |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 13:51. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi