![]() |
Withholding most of your robot? Read this
The rules change this year to allow 45lb of the robot to be withheld has some teams thinking about keeping most of the robot out of the bag.
Is your team thinking about this? There are a couple rules you should read and consider: First, read rule R1, which defines ROBOT. http://frc-manual.usfirst.org/viewItem/3#4 Then read rule R18, which specified what and how much can be withheld from the bag: http://frc-manual.usfirst.org/viewItem/8#5.3 Then read the rules on Bag and Tag: http://frc-manual.usfirst.org/viewItem/8#5.3 Now think about this. You are at the entrance to your event, talking to a robot inspector about what is in the bag and what is in your 45lb box. Can you justify it against the rules above? In particular, can you argue that what's in the bag meets the intent of R1? |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Yes I can, and the intent of R1 is at the digression of the one who builds the robot. A box on wheels in the bag is enough to meet the constraints of R1.
I'll say this much though, As a student member in the past when I was on another team we never withheld much at all. If anything. This year with the almost full week of classes and robotics that we've missed because of the most devastating ice storm in South Carolina since the 1980's....we'll be taking full advantage of the withholding with my rookie team. |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
This concern was fully resolved by Team Update 2014-02-11:
Quote:
|
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Just to say it, We had kept the mother board including crio out last year and there was a good bit of trouble over it.
|
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
R14:
Quote:
I was one of the most vocal people pointing out this issue a week or two ago (At the time, the wording was such that you had to bag something that met the definition of a ROBOT). The GDC added the clarification in update 2-11 that made it legal to withhold and combination of parts (including a whole robot), so long as that combination is under 45 lbs. |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
For the past 6 years, we have built twins (competition bot and practice bot). We always bag (or ship) the drive base, and withhold whatever the manipulator is (or at least whatever parts fit within the withholding allowance). The reason is to save money. Most of the expensive or hard to machine parts end up on the manipulator. Not having to build two of them is a plus for us since we are not that well funded.
I don't have a problem with this, as I believe that it is within the spirit of, and in fact, is the purpose of, the withholding allowance. |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Why even have stop build day? It doesn't stop experienced teams who waste money and resources building 2 robots, and as evidenced by the logic behind this thread and other "withhold the entire robot" posts, most people are experienced at finding the loop holes on the date.
It was fine when we had to ship. It's useless now. |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Quote:
|
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Quote:
The only thing that is unique this year is that it was upped to 45 lbs. |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Quote:
I mean we're working on its twin for the weeks up to regional. All FIRST is doing is making us spend twice as much money to stay competitive. |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Quote:
FIRST needs a stop build day because there are still teams out there that have to ship their robot to their competition. Simply put, they live too far away from an existing regional to make transportation for a robot practical. Is it fair for those teams to loose out on one or more weeks of working on their robot? |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Quote:
I know it isn't 100% fair that teams with more money can be more successful, but in order to implement "balancing" you essentially end up capping the amount that can be donated to a team. If a larger sponsor or larger team is able to support the additional cost, and inspire students in the process, I don't see a reason to artificially limit teams for the sake of fairness. There are already a number of "KOP" style competitions that cater to those seeking a pure technical challenge where the goal is to build the best product you can out of a very limited number of parts, with limited input from adults. They fill a role, but the intent is different than the mission of FIRST. Steven |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Quote:
My team has the time, knowledge, budget, build space, and manpower to build two robots and we use every last drop of our resources to make it happen. By the end of the build season we have earned that second robot. A practice robot is not an unfair advantage as many seem to think. |
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Withholding most of your robot? Read this
I have always viewed this as more of a 10K race kind of thing. Lots of competitors, but few with a real chance of winning the top spot. While competing & winning is important. It really is not the most important thing. You need to define success in terms of your own team. If you feel otherwise, you are certainly welcome to your opinion.
On the other side of this bag & tag thing. You can bag the uncompleted heavier elements of your robot & withhold the pieces that need the most work to make the most of your 45 lbs. |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:39. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi