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URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
My team is at the St. Louis regional. We have already completed inspection and have been running practice matches today. A short time ago an inspector/referee (not sure which) told our team that our robot might be out of compliance with the 2 to 10 inch bumper zone. What happens is our drive train will raise up when we accelerate. This is an side effect of having a freely articulating drive train to converse the bump.
The question is how is this 2 to 10 inch window measured. Is it during inspection? Is it during play? Is the robot supposed to be moving? I could see this call going either way. The total max height the bumpers get to is 13 inches, before the articulating drive hits a mechanical stop. One part of me sees the issue being a referee issue, but then again how r they going to judge it. You can't take a ruler out during a match and check. The other part of me says it should be an inspector issue since its a rule in the "robot" rules. We have been basically given the clear by the inspectors, but now they are discussing it with the field crew. We did compete at Knoxville regional with no issue. No questions at all. Actually we got some, that's really cool. I know this doesn't mean anything, but just thought I would add that. I know I won't get an official answer from you all, but would just like to see what the general consensus would be. I personally, am not there yet. So all this information is coming second hand from phone calls. Any comments would be appreciated. |
Re: URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
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Not sure about your situation. I just wanted to post the relevant rule. Hope it helps some. Try searching the Q&A |
Re: URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
The bumper zone is measured on a flat floor, while the robot is standing normally.
If you passed inspection, you're fine. If that inspector/ref keeps bringing that up, send him to the Lead Robot Inspector to get the official ruling/the rulebook. |
Re: URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
You should have a manual on hand so you can discuss the issue with the referees and clarify just which rules they think you're breaking and how. In my opinion, you're not breaking the rules (unless you're articulating the bumpers/bumper mounts themselves, in which case you are).
The relevant rules are as follows: Quote:
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Re: URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
We competed with over an inch of suspension travel and didn't have an issue. Leaving the bumper zone should only be a problem if the robot is designed to, say, tilt backwards, to the point if it were set on a flat floor the bumpers would be outside the bumper zone. Tilting during the match is alright as long as the robot will stand upright flat on the floor.
At least, that's the consensus my team came to after a very lengthy discussion. We ended up with "paradiagonal" bumpers, sloping upward from the bow to the stern as a result :) |
Re: URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
We got a ruling from the officials (still again I don't know if it was inspectors or referees).
We are allowed to compete but if at any time the refs believe that we are using the "raised" bumpers to our advantage they will give us a technical foul. (basically to do damage to other robots, field, sabotage etc) Reading between the lines, I think they probably have doubt with the ruling but in the spirit of FIRST are letting us compete. Something to get clarified by Q&A if we get to Championships. Thanks for the quick responses. |
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Re: URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
There is no rule that says you can't use your bumpers to your advantage. If you want to use them to get on top of the barrier, you can. Of course, anything used to damage the field is illegal, so don't use them for that. If they try to tech foul you for 'gaining advantage' from your bumpers, ask them under what rule they are giving it to you under. If they have any doubt in the legality of the bumpers, they should make you comply, not modify the rules to allow potentially illegal bumpers.
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Re: URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
The Blue Box Under R01-2 might help.
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Do you have a picture of your robot's drive train? You might be able to do something simple like add a piece of surgical tubing to one of the free floating members to make it less likely to move during stopping and starting. Done right, it shouldn't/wouldn't make a difference in your barrier crossing ability but this is design dependent. |
Re: URGET RULE QUESTION: Bumper Zone
To avoid any confusion, I believe that the robot in question has a drivetrain such that it can actively change its "ride height" and thus its bumper height; it's not just suspension travel. If indeed this allows the robot to place its bumpers outside the Bumper Zone, I don't think it should be competing, but that's just me...
EDIT: I saw one or two such drivetrains at the St. Louis Regional, and I saw this team, but I'm not sure if they went together. It'd be great if the OP could describe their robot a little more completely... |
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If part of your robot follows the bumper, and part of your robot follows the floor, with respect to which reference point(s) on the robot is the articulation supposed to be measured? (Incidentally, if a connection allows motion, it's "articulated"—preventing the motion doesn't overcome that condition, at least if "articulated" is meant to be adjectival. The other interpretation of "articulated" is in the sense of the past tense of a verb. I don't know which interpretations FIRST had in mind.) |
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The bumper rules call for 2-10 inches on a flat floor; this includes sitting on the ramps. During transition (over the bumps, onto the ramp) we're allowed to have the bumpers not be totally within that zone, per a Q&A. The question is what happens when they are travelling on the flat floor (not in transition). We started trying to figure out if that would be a violation. It's not; there appears to be no penalty for a robot with bumpers out of the zone while on the field. However, there is the damage to other robots rule (G27). This is what they could get called on. There was some discussion about since they *know* their bumpers could hit another robot to high, any contact would be willful. I don't believe that's where we ended up. Bottom line: you passed inspection, and we warned you about possible penalties. If you want further explanation you need to talk to the head ref; it's now out of the inspectors' hands. btw, the "ruling" you got was from inspectors. We were all wearing the yellow hats, and not striped shirts..... :) |
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I read that as, if it's a high hit, no penalty unless it's either deliberate or damaging, and it makes it to or into the Frame Perimeter. You hit the bumpers at all, especially on the outside, all bets are off as to whether deliberate can be called; it's very possible to make the case that you didn't intend to, especially with the wide bumper zone this year and the potential ramifications of hitting a high bumper with a low bumper or vice versa. That just leaves damaging--and I hope that people actually build their robots to take a hit these days (back in my day... well, let's just say that bumpers were optional or non-existent until after I graduated high school, and leave it at that). That's the ref's nightmare right there--you have to be reasonably certain that it's deliberate contact to or inside the frame perimeter before you call that foul. But, if an opposing robot decides to try to force the issue by hitting while this design is in acceleration, then that robot now has to deal with the risks of [G27], not because of the robot design currently under discussion, but because they're trying to force a foul and possibly committing one in the process... |
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