Chief Delphi

Chief Delphi (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/index.php)
-   Technical Discussion (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=22)
-   -   Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone? (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=132214)

TheZorcane 06-01-2015 01:42

Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
Hey all,
Our mentors and I had a question. Altough it is hard to fit the Mecanum on the KOP chasis, we want to check this posability. I know we can fit it in with 4 CIMple boxes connected to the chasis, one for each wheel. We only saw one problem with that, Can the mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone? We are afraid that because the Mecanum has no friction with the floor, it will slip. It is the first time our team thought about the possability to build a Mecanum drive, and we have no information about it.


Thanks :)
Good luck! and see you in the competition!::ouch::

Mike Marandola 06-01-2015 01:47

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TheZorcane (Post 1422535)
Hey all,
Our mentors and I had a question. Altough it is hard to fit the Mecanum on the KOP chasis, we want to check this posability. I know we can fit it in with 4 CIMple boxes connected to the chasis, one for each wheel. We only saw one problem with that, Can the mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone? We are afraid that because the Mecanum has no friction with the floor, it will slip. It is the first time our team thought about the possability to build a Mecanum drive, and we have no information about it.


Thanks :)
Good luck! and see you in the competition!::ouch::

Mecanum wheels certainly do have friction. VEXpro states the CoF of their mec wheels are 1.0 (on carpet). You might be overestimating how slippery the HDPE ramp is. You also might be thinking the rollers will roll sideways when driving forward and back. They don't. Take a look at this whitepaper and many of Ether's recent posts to learn more about mecanum drive and its characteristics.

eddie12390 06-01-2015 09:53

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
In 2012, we were able to balance on the bridges made from the same material. They don't behave perfectly on the surface, but I think you're overestimating just how much of an effect it has.

Cyberphil 06-01-2015 10:06

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
Although the posts here are very helpful so far, and I agree with them, I seriously do not recommend building a drive train you have never even prototyped before. If you believe your team has the resources, time, and know-how to successfully build a new drive-train, by all means, take a stab at it. But if you don't have very strong programming, I recommend against it.

pfreivald 06-01-2015 10:48

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Cyberphil (Post 1422641)
Although the posts here are very helpful so far, and I agree with them, I seriously do not recommend building a drive train you have never even prototyped before. If you believe your team has the resources, time, and know-how to successfully build a new drive-train, by all means, take a stab at it. But if you don't have very strong programming, I recommend against it.

As a general rule I agree with this very much.

However, a mecanum drive with directly-driven wheels is incredibly simple to build, and the programming for teleop omnidirectional drive is pretty much built right into the libraries.

alopex_rex 06-01-2015 11:02

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
A team we share space with tried driving over HDPE with a mecanum drive. It could drive straight forward with no trouble, and strafing over it wasn't bad either. The main issue had nothing to do with friction: if the drive train went over diagonally, the bump lifted two of the wheels off of the ground, and they could only get off again by flailing around with the wheels.

mathking 06-01-2015 11:17

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
I will second pfreivald here. It is easy to build a mecanum drive and easy to program with the already available resources. As with any drive train, uneven surfaces can be a problem, but that is one that you can solve by practicing. Having the bump lift wheels off the ground can largely be dealt with by wheel size and/or where the wheel is mounted. My biggest concern with mecanum this year is actually that it tends to produce a bumpier ride than standard wheels, which might present a stability problem, depending on your mechanism for picking up and carrying totes/containers. That said it is one of the drive train choices we are prototyping now.

pfreivald 06-01-2015 11:37

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
Uneven surfaces aren't even the problem people seem to think. Worst comes to worse, the mecanum drive makes a passable tank drive over most terrain.

FrankJ 06-01-2015 11:54

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
We ran mecanums for rebound rumble & ariel ascent. It handled the bridge & running over piles of Frisbees. As any drive train, it requires driver practice & a thorough understanding of its strengths & weaknesses. In you plan to use them in this game, you need a realistic scoring ramp to practice with.

JesseK 06-01-2015 11:57

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by alopex_rex (Post 1422686)
A team we share space with tried driving over HDPE with a mecanum drive. It could drive straight forward with no trouble, and strafing over it wasn't bad either. The main issue had nothing to do with friction: if the drive train went over diagonally, the bump lifted two of the wheels off of the ground, and they could only get off again by flailing around with the wheels.

This is easily accounted for by modifying the strategy and match flow. I don't envision too many times where a Mecanum's diagonal strafe is terribly useful around the bumps in this game. Personally, I would stick with 90 degree angles as much as possible and completely forget field-centric drive.

The cool thing about Mecanums this year - in order to properly orient yourself to the totes that start on the field, just smash into them from an angle where you're already mostly aligned to them. They'll square you up pretty nicely :D. Then strafing to pickup totes works like a charm.

IceStorm 06-01-2015 12:01

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
I would say to go for it. Nice thing about mechanum is that if you run into problems you can always just switch them out for standard wheels of the same diameter and run that way. No need to make major mechanical changes.

Biggest thing I would say is to get your drivetrain built early and into the hands of the students. Driving practice is going to be more important than anything else if you want them to use it as anything more than a tank drive robot. We have ran mechanum for a few years now and the new kids tend to forget about the strafe and rotation abilities until after they have had a lot of practice with it.

IndySam 06-01-2015 13:47

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
My number one advise for any team considering mecanum for the first time is get a drive train done early, like by the end of week two. Get your drivers practicing by the end of week three.

If you can't get that done then switch to 6 wheel tank. You will be much happier.

We have done mecanum before and there is literally no substitute for practice. We already have an old bot in the programmers hands and should be driving next week.

TheZorcane 07-01-2015 05:07

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
Hey all, Thanks for your answer :)

We decided (As you said here) that we need more resources and time in order to try Mecanum for the first time. So we will probably go with omni-drive ( KOP with omni and two more wheels).


Thank you very much!!

Dominick Ferone 07-01-2015 13:16

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
I will say as being last year our teams rookie year, that mecanum is very doable. We had only met for 9 hours a week and execute a successful mecanum drive and hope to work out the bugs this year.
I have attached a file on programming mecanum, but now a days labview included a base code to help get started.
http://www.pobots.com/files/8213/5726/0394/mecanum.pdf

Dunngeon 07-01-2015 14:59

Re: Can Mecanum wheels pass the scoring zone?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Cyberphil (Post 1422641)
Although the posts here are very helpful so far, and I agree with them, I seriously do not recommend building a drive train you have never even prototyped before. If you believe your team has the resources, time, and know-how to successfully build a new drive-train, by all means, take a stab at it. But if you don't have very strong programming, I recommend against it.

We almost always design our drivebases that are trying new setups in season to accept two kinds of drive. One of our standards, and then the experimental drive. That way we can easily swap between them if needed.

The obvious exception to this is swerve.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:00.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi