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Extending above 60"
I'm really looking forward to seeing a bit of a rock-paper-scissors game play out this year. It seems to me that a full court shooter sitting in its loading zone that can drain their alliance's frisbee supply into the top goal is going to dominate this game most of the time in qualifiers. But in elimination matches, they're going to get shut down if an opposing robot has the ability to extend their robot high enough to block those shots. If there's enough defense out there, then climbing looks good by comparison since it's hard to defend against.
So my question is, are there robots out there that have this capability to extend upwards for defensive purposes? It's a risk to build something like that, but I think those robots are going to get snapped up in alliance selections this year. |
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Speaking from a team with (potentially) a full court shooter, I can see these types of defense bots being quite annoying. We could easily get shut down by a bot just sitting in-front of us, with a shield raised. But I could also see us potentially breaking a robot, just from our Frisbee speed/impact force.
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We can get up high. Our most recent blog post has pictures of our robot and practice/prototype robot fully extended.
http://3847.blogspot.com/ We had the idea of blocking full court shooters pretty early on. The horns at the top of the lift get to 83.75". The robot is as stable as the robot I worked on in 2011 for Logomotion. It would tip if we accelerated full throttle (6 CIMS) at full height but not if a we were just pushed in the bumper zone. We also have bumpers plus 20 more pounds of weight to add to the frame. |
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1629 GaCo has the ability to extend to 84" to block shots.
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We've noticed that many (most?) bots have their shooters pretty low. Our bot does not extend but it is 60" high and we think we will be able to interfere with a number of shooters.
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It is incredibly hard to break a robot. I'd guess that a 1/32nd polycarb shield, swiss cheesed, and attached to thin angle, could hold against a 100mph frisbee shot no problem.
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Break the robot? We did the ultimate test, not on purpose mind you. I'm trying to get my marketing team to let me post the video of our bot climbing to level 3, dumping the colored disks, then falling from above the top of pyrimid. The next video shows the bot being righted and going off to shoot more disks! We drank our own Koolaid and followed the Robot Delivery Life Cycle.
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We thought this from the beginning.
We went with a shooter/climber combo that would let us 1) Shoot cross court 2) Climb 30 pts and 3) Play defense. The climber extends to the max height in order to block shots. Couple this with our mecanum drive, and its hard for anyone to get around our D. |
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