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roboticsnoob808 19-06-2015 04:45

First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Hello all,

First and foremost, I would like to make clear that I have very limited knowledge when it comes to electronics and robotics, however, I would love to change that ASAP. I've always had a deep passion and interest for electronics and robotics, and I would really like expand my knowledge and begin to hobby, at the very least.

I am currently grouped with a team of aspiring engineers to create a portable, mobile (on/off road), and solar powered desalinization unit to provide clean drinkable water. I am in charge of building the chassis for the mobile unit. After doing a little research online and a recent visit to a local high school robotic team's shop, I have truly been inspired, and my interest in electronics and robotics has reached a new high. I hope I will be able to impress myself as well as well as my peers, instructors, and the crowd during presentation time.

Although many of my team members have expressed their concerns and doubts, I am convinced that I will construct a motorized, robotic chassis, and I will have a blast in the process! The frame of my chassis cannot exceed 24"x36" and I would like the chassis to be able withhold and efficiently transport at least 200 lbs. of material. Again, I am very raw when it comes to this, but my first thoughts would be to construct a 4/6 wheel, skid steer chassis able to operate on and off-road (light terrain). The chassis will eventually have to house and transport a portable water desalinization plant, and solar panel tracking unit. Still waiting on specifications from the other teams. This is currently where I am at, but I am looking to improve on the thought, design, and fabrication of this project with haste.

I have been recently referred to this forum and I am simply here to seek knowledge to help me with the process. I am NOT pleading for someone to design a chassis for me. If anyone has links to help guide me through this process or if anyone would be kind enough to talk with me, mentor me, and guide me throughout my process I would be elated. Any and all advice will be greatly appreciated.

I hope to hear from you all, and thanks in advance!!

-Teh Noob

GeeTwo 19-06-2015 08:10

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
There are plenty of whitepapers and such on CD about robot drive system design. As you look at them, be aware that your vehicle will need to support a heavier payload (200 pounds vs a game piece or two), and that FRC robots are designed for a flat floor and carpet as the primary surface, with an occasional well-defined platform, ramp, or bump. The 6-wheel skid steer most typically used in FRC has the center wheels dropped about 1/8", which is enough to shorten the wheelbase for turning - on a flat surface. Off-road, this will not be the case, and you would often find that you are unable to turn.

I also did not notice anything indicating that you were in competition with another similar device, so speed is probably not as important as getting there reliably.

I would therefore think more in terms of a pickup truck than an FRC robot in looking for candidate drive trains. I would consider rear-wheel drive, with front-wheel linkage steering. Steering might be powered through a lead screw, and the rear wheel drive system might feature a limited slip differential (better performance) or separate drive trains (simpler).

Edits:
Definitely use a larger battery than we do in FRC (18 A hr). A big deep-cycle marine battery is probably the ticket.

You'll need a suspension. Leaf springs look simpler and more reliable than coil springs and shocks, but I haven't designed with either.

Don't forget to seal the gearboxes and motors against mud!

ebarker 19-06-2015 08:24

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Have you seen this trailer for the movie Slingshot ?

http://www.slingshotdoc.com/

roboticsnoob808 19-06-2015 10:31

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by GeeTwo (Post 1487304)
There are plenty of whitepapers and such on CD about robot drive system design. As you look at them, be aware that your vehicle will need to support a heavier payload (200 pounds vs a game piece or two), and that FRC robots are designed for a flat floor and carpet as the primary surface, with an occasional well-defined platform, ramp, or bump. The 6-wheel skid steer most typically used in FRC has the center wheels dropped about 1/8", which is enough to shorten the wheelbase for turning - on a flat surface. Off-road, this will not be the case, and you would often find that you are unable to turn.

I also did not notice anything indicating that you were in competition with another similar device, so speed is probably not as important as getting there reliably.

I would therefore think more in terms of a pickup truck than an FRC robot in looking for candidate drive trains. I would consider rear-wheel drive, with front-wheel linkage steering. Steering might be powered through a lead screw, and the rear wheel drive system might feature a limited slip differential (better performance) or separate drive trains (simpler).

Edits:
Definitely use a larger battery than we do in FRC (18 A hr). A big deep-cycle marine battery is probably the ticket.

You'll need a suspension. Leaf springs look simpler and more reliable than coil springs and shocks, but I haven't designed with either.

Don't forget to seal the gearboxes and motors against mud!

Thank you so much for the response, GeeTwo!!

This is not a competition, and reliability is definitely more important than speed. I am noting all your suggestions and will be implementing them into my design. I will definitely keep you posted on the process and outcome.

Thanks again!!

roboticsnoob808 19-06-2015 10:38

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by ebarker (Post 1487305)
Have you seen this trailer for the movie Slingshot ?

http://www.slingshotdoc.com/

I have not seen the trailer, nor have I ever heard of the movie, but it seems like and very inspirational and knowledgeable documentary. I hope to watch, and learn from it as soon as it is available to the public.

Thank you, Ed Barker!!

AdamHeard 19-06-2015 12:50

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Is this a comercial venture or educational?

roboticsnoob808 19-06-2015 13:07

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by AdamHeard (Post 1487322)
Is this a comercial venture or educational?

Educational

TikiTech 19-06-2015 15:52

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
This sounds like a great project!

Please contact me at your convenience.

I am in the same state.. but on da Big Island and would love to help..

What you are planning to do can easily be done with FRC based knowledge and parts. I will send you a PM with my contact information.

Looking forward to helping with this, you could even run some tests out here!
We have lots of extremely sunny lava shorelines, not a lot of sand shores over here.
My team would love to help and also have a lot of experience with underwater robotics.
Which will be very useful in working on designing a drive base that will have interactions with water.

Sounds like a great amount of fun and learning will exist with this project.

Aloha!

roboticsnoob808 19-06-2015 21:49

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TikiTech (Post 1487342)
This sounds like a great project!

Please contact me at your convenience.

I am in the same state.. but on da Big Island and would love to help..

What you are planning to do can easily be done with FRC based knowledge and parts. I will send you a PM with my contact information.

Looking forward to helping with this, you could even run some tests out here!
We have lots of extremely sunny lava shorelines, not a lot of sand shores over here.
My team would love to help and also have a lot of experience with underwater robotics.
Which will be very useful in working on designing a drive base that will have interactions with water.

Sounds like a great amount of fun and learning will exist with this project.

Aloha!

TYVM, Tiki Tech!!... email sent.

TikiTech 22-06-2015 15:58

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Excellent!

I have sent you a reply.

Looking forward to this project with you.

Lots of questions. take your time.....


:)

Aloha!

waialua359 22-06-2015 18:43

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by roboticsnoob808 (Post 1487324)
Educational

What school are you associated with? if any? Or was this just a random robotics shop you visited.

-Glenn
Team 359

roboticsnoob808 23-06-2015 03:22

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by waialua359 (Post 1487643)
What school are you associated with? if any? Or was this just a random robotics shop you visited.

-Glenn
Team 359

Hi, Glen!

Our engineering group is out of HCC, and through our mentor, we've had access to Farrington High School's Robotic Shop, Team 2504.

DaveL 23-06-2015 05:07

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Hi Glenn:
You have what sounds like an interesting project.

Like others have said your device will be different from our competition in that it will be outside and on uneven terrain. Those are 2 huge requirements.

Like all new projects, I would start by defining relevant requirements.
For example:
- How tight a turn will your robot be expected to take?
- What is the obstacle height needed to traverse?
- How far will it need to travel?
- Payload weight and size?
- Ride quality or how smooth does the ride need to be?
- How firm is the ground or how much wheel / track surface area is needed to support you fully loaded bot?

I agree with Geetwo about a simple truck style steering. But based on your requirements you might find that you will need something closer to a 4 wheel powered monster truck or something closer to a Mars Robot. I would look at model RC trucks for inspiration.
http://www.hobbytron.com/RCTrucks.html#
http://robogames.net/rules/magellan.php

I've found that its helpful to record all of your team's assumptions, goals, requirements and design decisions as these can later be used to answer the question of why was this approach taken. If one of the team's assumptions change, you can back up, change the related requirements and go forward with a better design. This info can also be very helpful for developing a presentation after the project has been completed.

Best of luck. Let us know what you come up with and how it works.

roboticsnoob808 23-06-2015 05:31

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by DaveL (Post 1487689)
Hi Glenn:
You have what sounds like an interesting project.

Like others have said your device will be different from our competition in that it will be outside and on uneven terrain. Those are 2 huge requirements.

Like all new projects, I would start by defining relevant requirements.
For example:
- How tight a turn will your robot be expected to take?
- What is the obstacle height needed to traverse?
- How far will it need to travel?
- Payload weight and size?
- Ride quality or how smooth does the ride need to be?
- How firm is the ground or how much wheel / track surface area is needed to support you fully loaded bot?

I agree with Geetwo about a simple truck style steering. But based on your requirements you might find that you will need something closer to a 4 wheel powered monster truck or something closer to a Mars Robot. I would look at model RC trucks for inspiration.
http://www.hobbytron.com/RCTrucks.html#
http://robogames.net/rules/magellan.php

I've found that its helpful to record all of your team's assumptions, goals, requirements and design decisions as these can later be used to answer the question of why was this approach taken. If one of the team's assumptions change, you can back up, change the related requirements and go forward with a better design. This info can also be very helpful for developing a presentation after the project has been completed.

Best of luck. Let us know what you come up with and how it works.

TYVM, DaveL!!

Any and all advice is greatly appreciated and I will definitely take into consideration the above listed information in regards to our requirements. And thanks for the helpful links!!

IKE 23-06-2015 10:52

Re: First time build, seeking knowledge and advice...
 
So, I do not know that I would recommend suspension and a lot of complication.

With such a small wheel-base, CG will be important, and in general, you should be able to drive around most troublesome ground.

I would suggest looking at self propelled lawnmowers for possible architectures and thoughts on structure.
http://www.blackanddecker.com/produc...mower/spcm1936

A concern I have is actually footprint vs. weight vs. soil (terramechanics). Think about it from a bike tire standpoint. A lot of mountain bikes operate with roughly 30 PSI tires and thus ground pressure around 30 psi. This is fine for paved, gravel road and hard pack, but soft sand and/or dirt or mud can be difficult.
Comparatively, many tractors or off road machinery tend to operate below 15 PSI for ground pressure. If you are trying to traverse Mud, you may need to go as low as 11 PSI ground pressure.
Thus for 200 pounds, you would need about 18 inches of srface area in contact with the ground.
To get down to these low levels, you typically need either balloon tires or tracks.
IE a 4 wheel solution would need over 4 in^2 per tire. 6 wheel would be 3 in^2 per tire.

A 6WD chassis with these wheels:
http://www.andymark.com/product-p/am-0970.htm
would be pretty reasonable to implement. They even have a base chassis at that website as well as adapters that should be close to meeting your needs. Similar to this one:
http://www.andymark.com/product-p/am-2289.htm

I think you could make either of these concepts work relatively well. If you are OK with a person manipulating controls, I personally would start with the self propelled mower and double the width of the wheels as well as ad more robust axle attachments to handle the 200 lbs vs the 90 lbs it was initially design for.
With it being a walk behind, the human would also add stabalizing properties when maneuvering which I suspect will be critical (with a base of 24x26, you center of gravity will need to be below about 12" of height assuming it is relatively centered. This is pretty low for anything that heavy, and also often with solar installations, a little height is very helpful towards avoiding shadows).


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