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-   -   How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=140957)

GeeTwo 06-01-2016 19:47

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
There are five key elements:
  • Training, including regular refreshers and safety stand downs after close calls
  • Supervision, really close for the first few hours, backing off slowly
  • Verification, first by another student and again by a mentor
  • Mitigation, including safety glasses, fire extinguishers, and spill kits
  • Prayer, left as an exercise

techhelpbb 06-01-2016 19:57

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
I agree with everyone else:
Supervise all tool use and any event that carries risk.

If CNC tools are involved:

(D)emand the removal of all distractions when locating or doing setup.
(I)nsist on comments in G-code or clear mechanical drawings.
(R)emove the tool and execute the G-code clear of the work piece.
(T)est all examples with simulation when totally in doubt.
(E)stop should be where your hand is during a dry run.

Anyone that has coolant - eventually that's a different kind of dirty ;)

pnitin 07-01-2016 09:27

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
Here is one post on How to prevent electrical reverse polarity or connection mistakes on your FRC robot. It address specifically for power electrical.

http://www.mindsensors.com/blog/how-...our-frc-robot-

GreyingJay 07-01-2016 09:41

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
I actually have a story about mentor mistakes, electrical polarity, and "trust but verify".

My very first day as an FRC mentor, I was introduced to the head controls mentor and, looking for a job to give me, he handed me a package of addressable LED rope light he had just purchased from Adafruit, an Arduino board, a power supply, and said "here, take those two students and make this work".

I guided the students through a series of "what do you think we should do next?" exercises while learning the answers myself at the same time. OK, let's download the Arduino IDE software to a laptop. Let's Google for the spec sheets and sample wiring for these lights. Let's find some sample code. Let's get some jumper wires and a breadboard and wire something together. Let's double check everything before we turn it on. It looks good, let's turn it on...

Nothing. It just wasn't working. We checked it over again. Everything was wired just as it should be. Dead power supply maybe? Off to get a multimeter...

Lo and behold, the output voltage from the power supply was the reverse polarity from what was marked on the casing. The box said tip-positive but it was definitely sleeve-positive. A lot of "NO WAY!" and grumbling from myself and the head controls mentor.

So we reversed the power leads and AHA! Colourful flashing lights! Thankfully, the lights were reverse-polarity protected.

As I left that night, one of the parents came over and said "Hey, not bad for your first day!"

techhelpbb 07-01-2016 16:17

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by GreyingJay (Post 1517504)
Thankfully, the lights were reverse-polarity protected.

Usually if you put any diode backwards on a power supply insufficient to destroy it, it will simply not conduct any meaningful current. Even a light emitting diode (LED). Of all the things where you can do that - there's a great one you can usually not destroy something.

Now if those LEDs have some crazy microcontroller - then you'd have a problem.
Watched someone do that with LED modules for a large sign once.
At $500 a module I think blowing out the module controllers wasn't very fun.

On things I used to make that were low power I used to put a bridge rectifier in the DC power input. This insured that no matter the applied polarity the circuit always got the right polarity. Sure I lost some voltage doing that but when I found them hooked up backwards I would just say 'there's some part money well spent'.

rich2202 07-01-2016 16:55

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
The Dlink's are especially vulnerable. We have burned out more than our share of routers. Most of FIRST's equipment has reverse wiring fault protection. But, the Dlinks do not.

So, ANYTIME the wiring of the Dlink power cord is changed (even if it is just disconnected and reconnected), I make the students verify polarity and voltage with a volt meter before they can plug in a Dlink. The power cord is not color coded, so it is easy for the students to wire incorrectly.

Aur0r4 08-01-2016 21:23

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
One big one is gaining and maintaining the student's respect. This is a mixture of enforcing rules/behavior policies but also building rapport. Too much enforcing leads to students who behave in front of you but develop a common connection of not really liking you. Very unlikely to behave when you aren't around. Obviously being too soft and "fun" causes them to disobey rules right in front of you.

Don't be afraid to joke around with students.

The other big thing is letting them know that if they DO break something that they should feel comfortable telling you so the problem can be fixed. This goes back to my initial comment. If they are terrified of breaking something, they will only hide it when they do. We have all broken lots of things....usually professionals have epic stories of screwing up.

As long as something really, really dumb didn't cause it, I don't get worked up. They don't need a long lecture to know not to do that thing again. Especially if they have your respect, they'll feel the worst about letting you down.

And, then again, I've done plenty of really, really dumb things myself in my day...

geezloueez 11-01-2016 13:48

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
Thanks to everyone for all the great tips. I will be using lots of these suggestions. I'm especially thankful to know that sometimes the equipment has reverse wiring and I will make sure the students and I check the polarity of each piece.

Quote:

Originally Posted by pnitin (Post 1517496)
Here is one post on How to prevent electrical reverse polarity or connection mistakes on your FRC robot. It address specifically for power electrical.

http://www.mindsensors.com/blog/how-...our-frc-robot-

Great blog pnitin. I'm sure this practice will save us some money and probably a few headaches.

mindsensors.com 13-01-2016 08:48

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by pnitin (Post 1517496)
Here is one post on How to prevent electrical reverse polarity or connection mistakes on your FRC robot. It address specifically for power electrical.

http://www.mindsensors.com/blog/how-...our-frc-robot-

There is a follow up to pnitin's post on our website. Detailed instructions on how to solder the XT60 connector can be found here.

2544HCRC 14-01-2016 18:41

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
I like many of the suggestions on here. As a mentor might I just add a couple of other things not mentioned.

I tell kids that nobody plans mistakes, but they happen. Especially when people get tired. Which pretty much defines FRC. Double check, and watch where you are if something goes wrong. Drilling on your lap is not acceptable practice. Neither is drilling on someone elses lap. (both seen).

Sometimes you just need to walk away. To say our budget is tight is an understatement. Everything we buy is a choice between things we need. A couple of years ago I had a student wire a brand new camera backwards. Brand new... Just out of the box. We had saved for the camera and it was destroyed instantaneously. I just walked away. There just wasn't words. It has become legend.

Nothing is worth getting hurt. It's easy to start taking short cuts when time is tight. Don't. Disable and dissipate. Watch for stored energy. I had a kid reach through a drivetrain (chain) on a live robot. One of the few times I screamed at a kid, legend. It was truly fear and addreneline on my end.

Teach kids to measure. Close enough is not good enough. A marker is NOT a layout tool.

Good luck!

chubchub5577 14-01-2016 23:49

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
I am a Student on a team out of Kansas and last year I wired the new control system, told my mentor to check it, they said green light. Okay sweet! Plugged in the battery flipped the switch... Smelled smoke and my reaction was "Thats not my fault". (FYI It was my fault!) That day I learned to check that black wires are negative and red are positive I had the + and - switched on the PD board and fried the $200 board. I still get crap for it (But refuse to say it was all my fault my mentor checked my work!) I did learn though! :D

IronicDeadBird 15-01-2016 02:19

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Christopher149 (Post 1517196)
Electronics:

red to red, black to black, and make sure power input goes to the input side of motor controllers, not the output side

Could've sworn with wiring it was red goes to black you're okay jack red goes to yellow you're a dead fellow.... weird.

Anyway you can only avoid student mistakes for so long and that while mistakes in FIRST can be costly they are still a chance to learn. Mistakes in the work environment just suck and mean you should make sure your resume is up to date.
Anyway my preference when dealing with situations where people are going to have to be around hazardous equipment is simple. Take the information they need to be informed, and to be safe, and give it to them. It is also a condition too when it comes to heavier tools, if you aren't going to be safe you aren't going to get to use the stuff. Some safety that you might not think about but definitely are like the bane of my existence are allergies. Keep the work space you have clean. One of our Alumni happens to have a rather serious peanut allergy, and when he was on the team I remember so many times stopping people after seeing them eat and going "wash your hands." The more you know the small details on a team the more likely you are to prevent something from happening all together. Some students you need to tell to go on a break, or eat something, and don't be surprised if students tell you to do the same.

philso 15-01-2016 13:37

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by chubchub5577 (Post 1524018)
I am a Student on a team out of Kansas and last year I wired the new control system, told my mentor to check it, they said green light. Okay sweet! Plugged in the battery flipped the switch... Smelled smoke and my reaction was "Thats not my fault". (FYI It was my fault!) That day I learned to check that black wires are negative and red are positive I had the + and - switched on the PD board and fried the $200 board. I still get crap for it (But refuse to say it was all my fault my mentor checked my work!) I did learn though! :D

Ones chances of this sort of thing happening would be much, much lower if one adopted the attitude that when one is presenting ones work to be checked, that person is being challenged to find any errors because the work has been checked, double-checked and triple-checked and all errors found have been corrected. The other person should be there to confirm that the person doing the work has found all of their own errors, not to find the errors for the person doing the work.

Zagar 22-02-2016 08:36

Re: How Can I Avoid Student Mistakes
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Christopher149 (Post 1517196)
Electronics:

red to red, black to black, and make sure power input goes to the input side of motor controllers, not the output side

Agreed!! Unless of course you get a Talon that has the wrong color wiring on the controller. The GND had the red wire, and the V+ had the black wire. Luckily we caught it before it was ever hooked up...


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