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Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
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It must be that many people are using compressors for the first time and just skimmed over the rules. Some however just want to cause controversy so they are shaking the cage to see what happens. |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
Guys,
While this often gets into a safety discussion, that is only part of the issue. In the preamble of the robot rules you will find this reference... "In addition, another intent of these rules is to have all energy sources and active actuation systems on the ROBOT (e.g. batteries, compressors, motors, servos, cylinders, and their controllers) drawn from a well-defined set of options. This is to ensure that all Teams have access to the same actuation resources, and to ensure that the Inspectors are able to accurately assess the legality of a given part." |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
As Al says, safety is only one of the reasons behind it--but to be honest, it would be unreasonable of the FRC community to expect the GDC to explain the reasoning behind every rule they make. (Especially but not limited to the fact that people will then use that reasoning as a starting point for an argument.)
What matters here is that there is an unambiguous and clear rule that teams need to follow, and that attempts to end-around that (or any other) rule is unacceptable. |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
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Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
Just a note that is legal to replace the battery used to charge with a fully charged one after precharging per Q88.
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Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
Okay, I am convinced it's not worth doing at the competition. However, in the spirit of learning the intention behind the rules, I would still like to understand why. I understand it's about safety. But would somebody tell me why is my proposed setup not equivalent to the onboard setup? It has the same model pressure switch that will cut off compressor power. It's using the same compressor model and spike as the onboard system. The only difference is the missing cRIO. Regarding the Emergency stop feature, there is a master power switch. We can using a giant red button for it. Again, I will not do this for the competition but at the shop when we are building the robot, there is always a need for the build team to test the pneumatic system while the electronics is being worked on in parallel. We have a modular design so each subsystem can be built and tested separately. This setup will benefit that scenario. The students have been just powering an external compressor with a battery and I always don't like it. If I understand the safety concern, we will be able to build a safe testing setup.
We have many test setup in our shop to make life easier for the build team. For example, we have a PWM generator feeding a Talon so we can test motors without the cRIO. So the pneumatic test setup is equivalent to that. |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
Using a system with a pressure switch that will control a relay whether it is a spike or simple 12v relay with a properly calibrated blow off valve would be safe in general, despite not being legal for use at an event.
The safety concern I would have is that if people are working on the rest of the robot while the pneumatics are pressurized there are potential safety issues. Power may inadvertently be applied to a solenoid causing an actuation that could harm someone who's hand or head was in or near a robot. A tool that slips or is dropped could potentially cause one of the plastic tanks to explode ect. It is for that reason that it is highly recommended that work only occurs on the robot when the power is off and the pressure has been relived from the pneumatics. |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
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(The more fundamental difference is that your proposed setup won't work. :p The Spike control input is a 5 volt signal.) |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
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In any system where an E-stop is required you want one which kills all functionality which could cause harm/damage. Having mulitple mutually exclusive E-stop buttons as would be the case in your setup defeats the purpose of the E-stop. Regards, Kevin |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
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I'd rule it legal on that basis, absent a Q&A to the contrary. |
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Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
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Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
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1> Are the 2 setups equivalent? No they are not ... then next few answers will demonstrate why. 2> Same model pressure switch --- the pressure switches are set to 120PSI. There is no telling (IE Proof) that the offboard pressure switch is set to the same setpoint as the onboard one. Should it not be set, the pressure could reach almost 150PSI 3> The wiring on the pressure switch is rated for less than 3 amps. The compressor runs at ~ 8 amps with a startup over 20 amps. This alone should suggest you should not do this. When it comes to pneumatics, I'll err on the side of caution every time (and I've worked with it for ~15 years). |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
I have worked with pneumatics for 26 years and I want to make 2 points.
1) The compressors on the robots will go far higher then 120 psi. That is why FIRST wants the compressor controlled by the cRIO. 2) It would be time consuming to make the inspectors have evaluate each unique none standard control system. I still have dent in a leg from a broken air line 24 years ago and that was at 110 psi. |
Re: Pre-charing pneumatic air tank
I think that some of the rules for the pneumatics are a little weird. All the "incidents" mentioned have not been due to over pressurization. The relief valve takes care of that.
I don't get why they think that the cRIO control is going to be a super safe solution. They're relying on programming and wiring done by inexperienced high school kids. This question is for inspectors. Which of the following would be illegal? -Connecting the compressor to a drill battery -Connecting the compressor to a robot battery with breaker -Programming the robot to run the compressor an additional 10 seconds after the pressure switch says its full to fill all the way to 125 psi because the pressure switch stops at 115 psi. -Programming the robot in auto to run the compressor non stop and let excess pressure vent through the relief valve -Having a button on the computer that runs the compressor when held, used to charge a system at 95 psi to 115 psi before a match starts -Having a button on the computer that runs the compressor when held, used to charge the system until the relief valve starts releasing air -shorting out the pressure switch to run compressor |
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