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Re: pic: Are these legal?
What about just painting the connector? Blue, purple, green, whatever if that is important to you?
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Re: pic: Are these legal?
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Re: pic: Are these legal?
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I don't see an issue with modifying the connector to mate with another connector. This isn't reducing it's protection from a short or its current carrying capacity of the connector itself. It's like saying a car isn't safe in a crash because you took the dice off the mirror. They aren't integral to the function of the device. |
Re: pic: Are these legal?
Somebody correct me if I'm wrong, but I could have sworn it was legal to make an adapter that goes from, say, a red SB50 to a SB100 and have it be part of your robot. Could the same thing work for blue to red SB50s, or am I mistaken?
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Re: pic: Are these legal?
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The intent of R66 is to prevent the intentional modification of electrical components to maintain some reasonable level of safety. I am all for innovation, but there are some guidelines and rules we all need to stay within. Plus, if you make it to the finals and you need to borrow a 'spare parts' battery, it will have a SB50. You won't be able to connect. |
Re: pic: Are these legal?
"The SB50 connector series is keyed by color."
"Plus, if you make it to the finals and you need to borrow a 'spare parts' battery, it will have a SB50. You won't be able to connect." It will be either a black or gray connector and it won't fit the blue one. This would be the biggest reason to not use the blue connector. The color keyed SB50's is a nice feature if you know you'll never need to mate with a different color. We did a project with them, color coded cause it was cool and then got burned when we couldn't swap around. Decided to make "color adapters" and then decided to go black/gray all around with a strip of colored tape on the connector and cable. |
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