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pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
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Re: pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
Nice catch! This will undoubtedly come up during strategy discussions today...
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Re: pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
You can get a tad more room than this, assuming the effective wheelbase of your robot is longer than the ramp. But it's an excellent point, I'm glad you posted this! I bet there are teams that didn't catch this.
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Re: pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
Glad someone highlighted this! On 1519 we just realized this last night... I hadn't tried to quantify the minimum (14.15"), but we did notice that a robot 15.9" on the leading edge won't fit. It needs to be shorter at the front, and as Mr Forbes noted, the longer your wheelbase the taller you can be (but still probably only around 15" or so at the leading edge).
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Re: pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
I should add a disclaimer that I made this sketch pretty quickly based on the dimensions provided in the game manual. It may be that the actual construction of the field elements results in slightly different geometry.
Don't build a robot that's 14.14" tall because of my picture. :) |
Re: pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
And for those teams that are kind of new at this....beware that the fields don't always measure exactly what the drawings say they should. It's a good idea to add some extra clearance for something like this. Maybe the 14" number is what you should be shooting for, even if you have a rather long robot. Think about what happens when you go down the other side, too.
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Re: pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
It's in the picture, but it's worth highlighting that the bar is not centered on the ramp. As a result, the maximum height will vary depending on which side you're approaching it from.
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...and also that the neutral zone would be on its left side in this picture. |
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Glad this was brought up and shared with a picture. This was a factor we were considering with our short bot idea yesterday.
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Re: pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
Or keep the ends of the robot a little bit shorter than the middle.
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Warning- MS Paint incoming: ![]() |
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hey, looking at measurements in solidworks, you seem to be off.
in reality the field elements are 13.73" measured the same way:ahh: :ahh: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B4...G5rM1Q0YlNCYmc |
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Thanks for this! It really helped us visualize what's needed for a low bar robot.
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In any case, that discrepancy is why I added a disclaimer in this thread saying that y'all shouldn't take my word for it and should check things out yourselves. |
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Coming from the backside is even worse. If you're not flat before you get to that bar, you're going to have to be something like 3" shorter yet. so that end of your robot will have to be 11" or maybe even 10". The real answer to all this, of course, is to make up an inventor sketch of a side view of the low bar and your chassis and layout. And then run your chassis through with wheels tangent to the correct surfaces, and see what happens. |
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Thanks for posting this. This was a fact some teams were able to catch very early, but unfortunately we all know we are going to get to events and see a 15.9" tall robot with a strategy designed around a nontrivial utilization of the low bar.
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I know it must be do-able but the challenge is fitting a firing mechanism in that space, to shoot in the high goal.
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Unless your drive base is the exact length of the defense ramps your robot isn't going to be on a 13.5 degree angle.
I suggest all teams put in their robot in a sketch and run it through like it was actually driving through the low bar. The height of that bar isn't as low as people are making it out to be if your drive is designed correctly. |
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I realized this problem right away, but appear to have gotten the orientation of the low bar backward--I thought the bar was closer to the Courtyard, rather than to the Neutral Zone. Thanks, Madison!
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All the Field models were provided by FIRST and imported into SOLIDWORKS.
AndyMark and VEX Robotics models were designed originally in SOLIDWORKS and provided by these manufactures directly to us to create our KOP. Industrial suppliers such as SMC BIMBA FESTO also have validated models on 3DContentCentral. You should always verify models. Good engineering practice. Marie. |
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Re: pic: Effective Aperture of Low Bar Defense
it's worth drawing up for your own wheelbase... 6 or 8 wheel bots likely have 24-36" wheelbases, so they never sit on the ramp at the ramp angle, so their effective aperture is not quite as bad as shown....
also, the aperture isn't symmetrical. It's a weird obstacle for sure. It will be interesting to see how people hang up on it. It has a lot of potential to completely jam some bots for the duration. |
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