![]() |
254 Shockwave questions
My team is currently looking at building a t-shirt cannon, and no surprise we are looking at arguably the greatest of them of all. From their build blog, we have gained much valuable information, but we still have a few questions?
Thanks. |
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
We roll our T-shirts by simply folding the sleeves/edges up to the collar and then rolling from the collar down to bottom edge. We typically use 1-2 rubber bands to hold the shirts together. While this is not the most compact way to roll a shirt, they end of pretty small and also don't fly like bullets, making them a lot safer to shoot.
We tried to have such a large shot capacity purely for ease of maintenance. We will typically go to 2 or more outreach events with Shockwave before we have to take it back to a scuba shop for re-filling. The large block in the back that holds the globe motor and a pneumatic cylinder for rotating/indexing was the most complex part on the robot. However, we found that a rotating barrel is simpler is better at managing the indexing of the shirts that a linear magazine. There is no special sealant between the block and the barrels. The block simply has a conical-shaped output that lets the air through a polycarbonate plate that the back of the turret slides nearly flush against. Hope that helps! |
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
Quote:
|
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
You can look at shooting sponsor t-shirts. For team 4004, Buffalo Wild Wings in our area gives us free shirts for promotion, so we shoot them off with team shirts.
|
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
Our football team booster club provides us Tee shirts from their sponsors. They also give us a small stipend. It is kinda of neat that the football jocks help sponsor the geeky robot team. :)
A lot different than way back when I was in high school. |
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
Quote:
|
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
What is done with the second stage of the regulator? And how is the first stage modified to fill a reservoir tank?
|
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
There are two regulators. One regulator is mounted on the scuba tank itself, which regulates the ~3000 psi air down to around 150psi. That air is used to fill the secondary scuba tank which the main shooting valve is hooked up to. The secondary regulator is used only for the pneumatic functions of the cannon, which is primarily just the indexing mechanism.
When the scuba tank is depleted, it gets removed and filled at a local scuba shop. We do not have the capability to fill the scuba tank at our school or lab. High pressure compressors are extremely expensive. |
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
What valve do you use for the firing?
I figure you're not using a PVC sprinkler valve like most people use. |
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
Quote:
http://team254.com/shockwave Hope this helps! |
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
Quote:
Oh wait, that ws Championship and a different incredibly awesome poof bot. On a side note, anychance of a 2014 gatlin style corndog launcher at IRI? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aW-ljrm7a6g Sticks removed for safety of course.... |
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
Would it be particularly difficult to control a MAC solenoid valve using the cRIO? I've looked at them before, but they seem pretty advanced.
|
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
Quote:
|
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
any chance of a part number for that mac valve?
|
Re: 254 Shockwave questions
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 15:03. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi