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Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
If you are a team that has used both, which one did you like better? What are the major differences between the two? Is swerve drive any harder to control?
Just give me your overall experience with the two drive system. Thanks, John |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
Overall, swerve drive has much better control, but is very challenging to design and program. Mecanum is easier to program, but doesn't give you the same power. I would say swerve drive is better, but only if your team can use it to its fullest potential
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Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
I've used neither, but I can draw on enough of my experience to tell you that Mek drivetrains don't hold a candle to swerve in terms of speed, traction, efficiency, agility, etc.
This is of course assuming that you have the necessary resources to properly build and implement a swerve drive over the course of the season, and that you have enough of those resources to ensure that building a swerve drivetrain won't hurt the rest of your development. Keep in mind how many teams have won championships on swerve drives; it's a small number. |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
I would do neither... Swerve is best if you have the team set up for it (good mechanical, great software, practice space, good drivers), mecanum is theoretically "easier swerve" but being vulnerable to pushing defense is not worth the gains of going sideways. I would do tank drive.
If I absolutely had to pick one, I would pick swerve and be sure to have a wide base robot so it could tank steer just in case we never figured out the code. |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
A quick note: you probably should have used the search function, it seems like this debate comes up every other week. At any rate...
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That said, as I noted above, this debate happens all the time and it basically boils down to this: Both mecanum and swerve: -aren't worth the effort most of the time, especially since most teams can't even build a decent tank drive -heavy! -complicated -difficult and time consuming to implement -have numerous points of failure due to the extra complexity, although it can be true that their failures are less severe/impactful than a tank drive failing depending on the implementation Mecanum: -easier to program (pretty sure they have this in the library nowadays) -easier to design (pretty standard) -as noted above, generally inferior in every way to swerve, although I have seen some implementations that are just "sometimes inferior, sometimes on-par" as opposed to "always inferior" Swerve: -very difficult to program for full control if you're going with independent modules, although getting a basic crab drive up and running is simple -harder to design, lots of different implementations and things to worry about -Theoretically as fast and powerful as a tank drive but with far superior maneuverability I've personally programmed and driven a swerve drive with four independent swerve modules, though I've only driven against mecanum robots. |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
Both mecanum and swerve drive depend a lot on the implementation and especially on programming. We haven't used swerve but have used mecanum on most of our robots. Until this year we had to consciously switch modes with a button press so we didn't really take advantage to them fully. This year I implemented a field oriented drive system that has amazing maneuverability.
I know I am very biased towards mecanums, but I believe that their advantage of maneuverability outweighs their disadvantages and they can be very useful for teams (like ours) who don't have the resources to build effective swerve systems. |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
I'm going to take a different approach to this and say that you are actually asking the wrong question. Rather than asking which is objectively better, you should be asking which drive is worth the risk vs. reward.
I think nearly everyone will tell you that swerve is going to perform better than mecanum in nearly every situation, assuming you can build and program it well. And I'm not just talking about precision here, using proper materials, being willing to hunt down ghosts in the code, and ensuring that your drivers have a huge amount of practice time is necessary to not lose control of the robot. I have never been on a team that used one in competition, but have experimented with them in the off season. If your encoders telling you wheel position start to slip you end up with wheels at all angles. And thus, your robot may very well end up trying to drive itself in 4 different directions at once. That being said, with enough practice at it, building a reliable swerve drive can be done as long as you can precision machine the parts for it. |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
I've seen veteran teams (my old team, for instance) use swerve drive trains and sit an entire match out for something stupid related to swerve drive trains (such as the wheels not aligned properly at the start of the match).
If you want a holonomic drive, and you haven't been tuning a swerve drive train for the past 4 years, go with mecanum. A word of wisdom: before you pick a drive train, pick a strategy on how you want to play the game. Then, build that drive train as quickly as you can during the build season and let your drivers practice all the way until the end, build a second if you have to and practice before the competition. Doesn't matter what you use if you can't drive it. |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
As some one who has design, built, driven both of the two drives.
Swerve if done right is something that is amazing. It is something amazing to see it drive for the first time. Little lone ours is so much more reactive then the mecanum. I have by far learned the most when building out swerve then i have about anything else in robotics.Our swerve even though it is easily 50%-100% faster then last years mecanum drive can still plow it around all day long. We had dome mecanum several times and after learning to drive on of those, our swerve is driven in exactly the same way so it was not that much getting use to. I still do not know if i would chose to do swerve again. We spend 100s of hours just making the parts. That time could have been spend making a good manipulator. The swerve this year is our teams greatest strength and our greatest weakness. Its all about risk V reward. Even though on the field a swerve should always trump a mecanum. |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
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As a note about Championship-winning teams with swerve drives, the most recent Championship winner with swerve drive was Team 16 in 2012. |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
Swerve is a huge resource draw that takes years to develop. Even if it is really awesome to design and work with. Mecanum loses far too much power to make up for its benefits. You can always easily come back to the logic that swerves, 6wd, 8wd, butterfly, ect have made it to Einstien, but never a mecanum wheel. In my opinion 95% of teams are better off just buying or manufacturing a west coast drive and practicing the hell out of it. Just my two cents though.
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Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
Another thing to keep in mind is your strategy for playing each game. To give an example, our team excelled last year with a 6-wheel tank drive because our strategy was cycling, and our drivers got very good at this. Speed was much more important than maneuverability for us, so it wouldn't have made sense to spend more time on a more complicated drive train. This year though, the heavy defense makes strategy a little different. The argument could definitely be made for maneuverability over speed in this game. In any case, your game play strategy should always determine your robot's design, not the other way around.
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Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
We have done both but we keep coming back to a basic strong shifting six wheel drive. It is really a resource allocation issue.
I will say that a performing swerve is a wonderful demo robot... It consistently amazes everyone in how it can do what it does. If you embark on swerve I would encourage you to make it a summer / fall project with no expectations of using it for that year's game. Refine your idea and your programming... do prototyping.... work out your bugs and put it in your arsenal of mechanisms you have refined. It does come down to resources though... if you have a machine shop you can rely on, your own or a sponsor's, good student designers and good mentor designers for them to work with and the financial resources to do the prototyping by all means go for it. I liken a swerve drive to the Queen on the chessboard... A good one is hard to beat... its two weaknesses are reliability because of the complexity and software AND the relative difficulty of making a shifting one. It can be done but it is tough.... It could be a great achievement for your team though, and something for your students to come together with and be proud of .... That, alone is a good reason to do anything.... The workhorse of premier drivetrains is the six wheel drop center shifting drive base. I guess it would be the Rook of the chessboard...or the Bishop... A well driven one can be devastating in offense and defense..... and they are relatively easy to maintain and keep in the game. We did a mechanum drive once....... once.... (Does that make it the Knight of the chessboard?....lol not really ... if it could jump over other robots maybe...) your mileage can certainly vary..... Most of all find something your students can be inspired by participating in the design and fabrication.... |
Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
Also on a risk-reward perspective, if mecanum stops working out, you can swap the wheels for traction and/or omnis with hopefully minimal problems. Swerve is generally "go big or go home", IMO.
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Re: Swerve Drive vs Mecanum Wheel drive?
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2008 didn't lend itself to mecanum drive trains (successful robots were geared 18fps+ with 2 stage transmissions). 2009 mecanum wheels were illegal, 2010 a large segment of the teams automatically ruled them out ("can't traverse the bump!"), similarly with 2012 ("can't balance on the bridge!"). Even now they're still taboo due to all the misinformation floating around. In my opinion, "never made it to Einstein" has no place in this discussion because it ignores the wheel's history, as well as game designs and strategies. Until there is a year in which a large segment (say 20% or more of teams) in the FRC population uses mecanum wheels, I'm going to give no credit to that statement. After all, 100% of the robots on Einstein in 2009 had hard plastic wheels for their drive train. |
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