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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
I've seen a few human players smack the tote with the chute door by slamming it down on the back end of the tote as it goes through, and it kind of lifts the front end of the tote enough for it to land right.
Edit: yeah, same method as previous post ^ |
Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
My team just won the Western Canada Regional yesterday. During practice match we tried all sort of techniques playing with the chute door and the angle we put the tote in to get the tote to fall properly with no success. 50% of time it will end up wrong: upside down , side ways, vertical, you name it. We also make sure that we have the head ref's blessing about "dragging" the totes with the door. We end up abandoning manipulating with the chute door. Instead we open our robot's arm fully and run the robot arm against the wall so that when the tote come down it will bump into the robot first and we got it perfect every time for the whole competition. I talk to my team about building a ramp at the competition but once we found the technique we did not build a ramp. I'm not sure if this experience will help the original poster or not though.
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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
I know you want human only method but for teams in Worlds wanting their fork robots to do this , here is what worked for us.
We could stack two out of chute door by placing our bot (pneumatic fork) in front of chute door to guide first tote with out single side pneumatic fork create a one platform and second tote stacks automatically ...similar to ramp efficiency. We could create one tote platform go get RC and come back for auto stack second and carry two tote noodled RC to a four stack..using same method to build for stack when using HP. Robot needs to guide first tote out and create the one tote platform for second tote. |
Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
I also think not all chutes are build the same. In our regional totes fed thru the red alliance right chute usually lands better than the left chute if fed thru with no special technique.
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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
Our human player ( Cameron) has done 100% at some Districts of the totes landing flat. Other teams have filmed him with slow motion cameras to see how he does it. I told the other teams to ask Cameron for some lessons no secrets in FIRST. Now we will tell you Cameron taps the last 10-15% of the tote as it is leaving the chute with the door. If you want lessons you must come to the Northwest. You can go to http://pnwfirst.org/
we are at District 4 , District 7 and Championship. Cameron is on team 4061. Good luck. |
Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
The human player from 548 actually gave my team pointers on how to do it at our first event. He gently taps the back edge of the tote. A gentle tap usually does the job but without practice the likeliness of missing the tote is very high. 548's human player does it so flawlessly because he has been practicing for a while now. After my teams ramp failed us at Troy we decided to try out his method and we more than doubled our tote scoring abilities.
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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
Something that our human player has extensively practiced is letting the tote slide halfway through the chute then bringing the door on top of the tote slowing it down, then letting the tote go. We found that since the totes weren't going so fast they tended to land right side up.
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Re: Getting the Totes Right Side Up from the Chute Door
Many posts are indicating the same thing we do - rather than "multi-quote" them all - I just wanted to add:
The sharp but gentle tap on the back side of the tote with the chute door is what we've done, and I would venture to guess that we're 100% when this is done right. The times the tote has landed improperly were because of one of the two following faults: If you tap too hard or too long, you slow the tote too much and it lands on end....if you miss entirely and do not tap at all, it comes out erratically and will likely end up on it's side. SO... Quick tap and lift (we've found that using both hands on opposite handles of the door is the best control) on the back portion of the tote...not so much to slow it down, as to "control" it's departure from the chute...is the key. And "yes" to both - "practice, practice, practice" and "all chutes react differently". Our "practice field" style chute that we got from our kickoff field works perfectly, landing totes flat with no intervention at all...it had us at a major disadvantage in our first event, expecting the same results in competition that we had in the garage. |
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