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Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
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Anyways, the most sketch thing we've done is the mod to our AM14U2 kitbot for driver training. We attached two 2x4s as forks with this really interesting contraption for mounting the camera, but you still couldn't see the ball you were trying to pick up. We then proceeded to drive it through an obstacle course made out of chairs and other furniture. The best part was fastening the plywood top to the robot and then trying to frantically drill holes above the RoboRio to plug in the camera. Fun times. http://imgur.com/a/1vw1P |
2014 rookie year in aerial assist. Robot won't stay in correct configuration at match start. We used zip ties to hold the arm up and then used the autonomous to jerk the robot to a stop hard enough to break said zip ties. We also didn't have enough pneumatic guts to get the ball over the truss without a solid running start.
2015 recycle rush. Needed to spring load some clips that we're supposed to pick up totes by the handles during our second district competition. The only thing we had were hair ties from the girls on the team. Our running joke is that hair ties got us to Worlds. |
Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
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Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
We all have our "offensive" terms. It seems to be the adults who are posting about the offensive terms. Kids may shrug it off if not guided by adult sensibilities. My minority students use the term "n..ga" even though I try to stop them. Terms even mean different things to different people. Lets "chill" (I'm not trying to offend those from northern latitudes) on the whole topic and get back to the real question...
Our first season we used 150 lb zip ties to keep shafts from flexing. It worked great, but I wouldn't brag to my engineer friends... oh wait, yes I would, bc it worked! We also used a Lowes bucket (not to offend the HD crowd) on our Frizbee collector bin. |
Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
I was going to say "What is the most MacGyver'd thing you've seen on a robot?" but I have a feeling most of the posters on here wouldn't know what I was talking about ;)
A lot of stuff gets 'MacGyver'd' the last night of build or between matches when you just need to get something to work in a very short amount of time. Sometimes it works so well it gets left alone :yikes: Just remember even people who hold an A&P license now had to get a start somewhere, learning how to work on something when they were younger. When you look back someday at stuff you built in the beginning you'll wonder why you did that (really?! is that what I thought was good?!?! :eek: ) but at the time you were just proud you did that AND made it WORK at that time!!! Knowledge, and refinement, comes with experience :) |
Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
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The closest thing i think of is our net in 2014. Lack of materials made it hard, so we got some PVC and a net, attached it to some bolted down wood blocks, and Voila! We have a way to catch balls! Surprisingly enough, the net never fell out (it was not secured in any way except for being inside the wood a few inches) and was part of the reason we went to district champs (too bad we couldn't pay for it...) |
Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
We had to fix our intakes at an off season event one year and we discovered a shaft key had come out. While looking for said shaft key we found a rivet on the floor. I don't think I need to elaborate on this any more...
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Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
Sometimes people are just offended too easily. Sometimes offensively so.
For the record, in our neck of the woods we sometimes refer to this as "cajun engineering", in jest but not intended as an offense. Also for the record, the guy whose hands are in the picture that I posted as a "cajun compass" is not in fact a cajun, but I am at least 3/8 cajun myself, and I did not intend to be mean to either the man wielding the crawfish tray as a circle guide or to my own relatives. Nor do I believe any of them took it that way. Chill! |
Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
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Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
I was not able to witness the performance of the robot, but I remember in 2014 Aerial Assist, I looked down the end of the convention center and I saw a robot that featured a folding chair (with arm rests) as the catching mechanism.
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Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
Okay, okay, can we move past whether or not you think the title of the thread is offensive? We get it. You've all made your point. Now let's focus on the actual INTENT behind the words and what the thread was intended to be about?
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Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
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This year, I've seen a robot that held its intake in starting configuration with... wait for it... ...Painter's tape. Yep, folks, painter's tape, 1" wide and stretched long. I knew they needed a new piece when they were trying to find a spot to stick the two pieces they made every time they went out for a match together... |
Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
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Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
The following story is not the most kludgey thing we have ever done, but it is one of the most successful kludges we have ever pulled off.
This year at Mount Olive, we took the robot out of the bag and noticed the intake arm was spinning loose on the shaft. We looked a little closer and somewhere between final testing and bagging the robot, the 3/16" key had fallen out of the sprocket. After looking through everything we brought we discovered that the spare key stock had not been packed. After calming down, we cut the heads off of some #10 bolts and shoved them into the empty keyways and re-tightened the retaining set screws with loctite and they held for the entire event. |
Re: What is the most ghetto thing you've seen on a robot?
We had an interesting "fix" this past weekend. During a match the sensor for our defense manipulator broke off. This sensor tells the robot where the arm is so we can go under the low bar/portcullis in autonomous mode. With no spare sensor we hot glued a limit switch to the inside of our robot, used the unused wire from the limit switches pwm cable as a string, and fastened the other end to the arm. This depressed the switch when the arm was fully down. The funny thing is that it worked for the rest of the competition.
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