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WITH HOLDING
so I had a robot inspector tell me that ALL identical replacement parts fall under your 30lbs with holding allowance is this a new rule? i have never came across this before
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Anything that is fabricated (even a gearbox that you assembled) counts to your 30lbs.
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Review R14 and R17 - if it isn't COTS and it isn't bagged, it should be included in your WITHHOLDING ALLOWANCE.
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This has been stated before, and I do not agree with that interpretation. If you buy a gearbox, and it arrives in the un-assembled state, and you assemble it according to the directions, it is still a COTS item. If you count assemble as a "modification", then you can't use any gearboxes from a previous years' robot, as it was fabricated prior to the season. I know some teams buy shifting transmissions (expensive) and use them for several years. I believe this is within the spirit of the rules. If you are going to point out that you could disassemble and then re-assemble the gearbox to make it legal, then I have to say that is just dumb. I don't believe that the GDC wants teams to perform mindless tasks that have no benefit to the kids. Suppose I bought the gearbox, then paid a third party to assmeble it. Is it then COTS by your definition? It is certainly something that is available to any team, so it meets that definition. Again, I don't believe that the GDC wants teams to go through such meaningless activities. If your interpretation was correct, then I would expect to see a business pop up that offers assembled gearboxes for sale so teams could bring them to an event. Someone could set up a website, allow teams to order, say, a versaplanetary from him, he could then order it from Vex, assemble it, and ship it to the team as a COTS item, for a markup. Again, I don't think that is what FIRST wants. If an item is bought in an un-assembled state, and subsequently assembled to the directions (so it ends up in the state intended by the manufacturer), then it is still COTS. |
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Looking at the definitions of COTS, COMPONENT, MECHANISM, an FABRICATED ITEM. Its a little confusing because the definition of MECHANISM references COTS, and vice versa.
COMPONENT – any part in its most basic configuration, which cannot be disassembled without damaging or destroying the part or altering its fundamental function. Yes, you can disassemble without damaging the gearbox, but you can't do so without altering its fundamental function-- transmitting power from an input shaft to an output shaft and changing the RPM & torque. So an assembled gear box is a COMPONENT. COTS: a “Commercial, Off-The-Shelf” COMPONENT or MECHANISM, in its unaltered, unmodified state. A COTS item must be a standard (i.e. not custom order) part commonly available from the VENDOR, available from a non-Team source, and available to all Teams for purchase. Items that are no longer commercially available but are functionally equivalent to the original condition as delivered from the VENDOR are considered COTS and may be used. Note: "A COTS item must be a standard ... part ..." (Note singular PART). If the individual gear box pieces are each a COTS part, then each gear, standoff, screw, plate, grease pack, etc. must be commonly available from the vendor, individually. This argues for assembled gear box being COTS. MECHANISM – a COTS or custom assembly of COMPONENTS that provide specific functionality on the ROBOT. A MECHANISM can be disassembled (and then reassembled) into individual COMPONENTS without damage to the parts. I read the first clause as "A COTS assembly or custom assembly of COMPONENTS. The gear box is a COTS assembly at worst (if you don't believe its a single COMPONENT) and not custom, assuming it is assembled per vendor instructions. We said above that the gear box is a COMPONENT, so it is not a MECHANISM because it is not an assembly of components. FABRICATED ITEMS – any COMPONENT or MECHANISM that has been altered, built, cast, constructed, concocted, created, cut, heat treated, machined, manufactured, modified, painted, produced, surface coated, or conjured partially or completely into the final form in which it will be used on the ROBOT. There are lots of verbs here, including 'conjured' but one conspicuously missing verb is 'assembled' even though assembly and disassembly was used in defining COMPONENT and MECHANISM. When you buy a bookcase at IKEA, do you then 'build' it, or 'assemble' it? Would you say, "Hey, look at this IKEA book case I built" Or would you say "Look at this bookcase I bought (and assembled)" Some teams build their own gear boxes, but we don't use that description for teams that use a kit gear box. Having said all that, I've never used this argument in the past, and our team specifically disassembled a gear box and brought it to our regional as a spare due to our 30lbs exhausted. I've just now looked at these terms more closely and noticed some of these nuances. I have no idea if I'm right, though. |
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This is a little bit of a rabbit hole. You disassemble a banebox or vex planetary gear box, grease it, put it back together, Is it no longer COTs item? Attach a cots motor to it. That makes it an assembly? What if the same assembly is available for purchase (COTS)? While most inspectors will pass small violations (pinion pressed on a motor) obviously there is a limit IE assembling a COTs chassis is for beyond this.
This is an area I wish the GDC would clarify in future years. |
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My 2 cents is that I don't care if a team pre-assembles a kit chassis before build season because I think the kit chassis is a disadvantage anyway. |
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I've never hassled a team for having a pre-assembled gear box before. Teams that have come in overweight I've often had take off motors and/or gear boxes (including separating the motor and gear box) in order to make weight with everything else. The time a team invests in making weight for their withholding is a good lesson for them moving forward (while instituting a "time penalty" to make things fair with respect to everyone else at the event), and it's rare I see the same team make the mistake two seasons in a row.
That said, when it comes to my own team, I don't let them just use an old gearbox that was assembled in a previous season as-is. They need to take the gearbox apart, clean it up (old grease isn't necessarily a good thing, it can get full of contaminants and other stuff!), check to make sure none of the gears are worn down significantly, and then finally re-grease and re-assemble. There's a lot a student can learn about how a gearbox works doing this that they otherwise wouldn't see! |
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Believe me, I will be delighted if pre-assembly of COTS kits becomes legal. You can bet we will leverage this to the max, if it becomes legal. What troubles me is that it sounds like some teams have already decided the rule isn't to their liking and have chosen to sidestep it. If I ordered a heathkit shortwave radio, and assembled it per the manufacturers instructions, could I return the fully assembled radio to heathkit and expect a refund? Of course not. I have changed the kit from the state it was in when I purchased it. Could I purchase a VEXpro gearbox, assemble it, use it for a year, then return it? Of course not. It's no longer in the COTS state. Could I purchase a VEXpro gearbox as a spare, and return it to VEX, unassembled, after competition season ended, if I didn't need it? That wouldn't be kind to VEX, but if I returned it in its COTS state, they would probably accept the return. |
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Section 4.1: "Many rules in this section reference Commercial-Off-The-Shelf (COTS) items. A COTS item must be a standard (i.e. not custom order) part commonly available from a VENDOR for all Teams for purchase. To be a COTS item, the COMPONENT or MECHANISM must be in an unaltered, unmodified state." The key words in the definition being UNALTERED and UNMODIFIED. From the Glossary: "COTS – a “Commercial, Off-The-Shelf” COMPONENT or MECHANISM, in its unaltered, unmodified state. A COTS item must be a standard (i.e. not custom order) part commonly available from the VENDOR, available from a non-Team source, and available to all Teams for purchase. Items that are no longer commercially available but are functionally equivalent to the original condition as delivered from the VENDOR are considered COTS and may be used." |
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Applying simple logic: anything that does not meet the definition of "COTS" is "NON-COTS" |
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