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Robot Numbering, Attractive Solutions?
I've seen some discussion on Facebook about teams struggling to make the required numbers look somewhat attractive.
We're not even at that stage in build season, but we'll probably end up with a freshman going crazy with paint and some polycarb. What are your solutions? If you're ahead enough to actually have this finished, pictures would be appreciated! |
Re: Robot Numbering, Attractive Solutions?
The student in charge of our decor and theming has drawn up a half dozen design options, including some really unique possibilities. License plates, among others. We will have his design finalized in illustrator, and printed on vinyl.
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Re: Robot Numbering, Attractive Solutions?
Just as a point of reference:
You are allowed to have more numbers than required, go crazy with those extras. But... The GDC specifically stated a color scheme and size. You will need to meet those. As one of the Texas teams found out, even a license plate (which, in Texas, ARE black on white) might not be legal. Even simply reversing the color scheme won't fly, per the GDC. I'm guessing that "attractive" is about a zero/ten on their list of "criteria we want these numbers to meet" and "standard" is about 11/10. |
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How about something like this?
Too legible? :eek: |
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We're considering (or at least I am) printing "857" in "our" font on paper, and doing some kind of lamination to make a stiff number, and then attaching that somehow. |
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The most important thing is to pass inspection of course. Without violating the relevant rules, teams can still make the numbers interesting and creative. |
Re: Robot Numbering, Attractive Solutions?
White Acrylic withe a cut out of the numbers, and then glued on top of a sheet of black acrylic; that or cut the numbers out of black acrylic and glue them in the outlines of the white acrylic. Both of these methods should be legal since the stroke will be black on a white background.
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Re: Robot Numbering, Attractive Solutions?
I know some people are going to take this thread as an opportunity to be cute about how it's a standard and if you don't like it, you know where to put it, etc., but understand there are teams who have built Hall of Fame resumes that include impeccable branding standards to establish their identity across their robot, apparel, and other elements of their team. Students and their advisors take pride in the work they do developing these standards. I do understand that the creators of the rule wanted a standard, but I think it's ok to call it a bad standard, not allowing the smallest of latitudes in way of white on black (which I would argue could be more visible).
It's at the point where some teams will opt to have these numbers easily concealable/removable and make their number logos that they spent time developing to create a unique and highly visible identity larger than the placards. I know this is highly subjective, and I hope a Hall of Fame team with great identity standards can prove me wrong here, but even the bumpers at their worst didn't look this bad. |
Re: Robot Numbering, Attractive Solutions?
I'm not part of our style crew, but I did overhear something about integrating the number with the sponsor panel on one side and with our logo and colors (outside the rectangle) on the other three sides. We'll probably end up posting these on the outer panels of the drive chassis, in about the same place that they would be if we had bumpers. W also plan to have RGB lighting above and/or below this area so we can show alliance colors, game phase, and so forth.
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The numbering rules of years past really were more than sufficient and did not need change. I don't know how to say this in a graciously professional way, but I blame the teams who always somehow managed to make crappy numbers that you couldn't read as a reason for the new change. These teams who cannot figure out how to display their own number properly are teams that really ought to be participating in VEX instead. You know who they are. There's a handful at every event. Let this be a lesson to all of us: If you allow your fellow competitors to get away with poor quality work, and we'll all be mandated to implement "solutions" that are better than these teams' poor quality work, but worse than the top teams' high-quality work. It really reflects poorly on the teams that have been doing it a while that we have newer teams that struggle with these rather mundane tasks. It says that we don't do enough as mentors, which I'll admit, we don't. If you haven't figured it out by now, I'm not a fan of the black on white color scheme. I prefer quite the opposite, and have never had any trouble seeing it, from over 100 feet away. But, I'll get over the numbers eventually, and I'm thankful bumpers are gone. |
Re: Robot Numbering, Attractive Solutions?
One option is to follow the racecar numbering scheme.
One example: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...mber_117).jpeg Another: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...ssan_Front.jpg Or, if you like a more retro style: http://bringatrailer.com/wp-content/...ar_Front_1.jpg And of course we can't forget: http://rawautos.com/wp-content/uploa.../09/Herbie.jpg :) |
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I've had the idea that simple black numbers with a white outline on polycarb (possibly smoked) would be an effective and good-looking solution.
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Too expensive in that it's pricey enough for some blowhard to shoot the idea down, but renting out a lamination system is minor expense for a regional or a region/state district system that prints off a surprising amount of stuff at an event. |
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One of these days, we might all get paper numbers before the race that we attach to our robot with safety pins. At least the refs and scouts could then easily tell which runners are which. It would be a minor expense to have a full set of numbers printed on card stock for each regional. |
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