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Polycarbonate/Plexiglass Ruling
I was looking through the game manual for this year's competition and I couldn't find anything about the amount of polycarbonate/plexiglass you are allowed to use
Is there a rule on how much you can use? If so, how much? |
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edit: ^^^ also the $4000 robot budget limit, and the $400/part limit |
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A solid block of polycarbonate would cost less than an equivalent block of 7075 aluminum, I think. We can ask Poohbear.
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Ok learn from our mistakes!! DO NOT use Plexiglass as an electronics board! We had ours made of Plexiglass last year, and by the end of our third time on the field, it was falling apart. By the time eliminations came around, we were on the field with an electronics board held together mostly by duct tape. Poly carbonate is definitely the better choice.
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Also, since nobody explicitly stated what will go wrong: Lexan basically doesn't shatter. They use specific compositions of it for bulletproof "glass" for this reason. You can even cold-bend the stuff (though I wouldn't generally recommend it) and depending on the use it can be fine. Acrylic on the other hand... well, drop it or hit it with something or try to bend it and see what happens. It shatters. Something into sharp shards. A quite undesirable characteristic for robots. So, polycarbonate, Lexan, or Makrolon are generally good for robot use. Acrylic, Plexiglas, Acrylite, Lucite or Perspex = bad news. To reiterate everyone else: Make sure what you are using is polycarbonate and not acrylic or it may very well literally shatter your dreams. |
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According to midwest steel supply, a 24"x24"x2" plate of 7075 regularly costs $440 and weighs in at 116lbs. |
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To restate what others have already said.
Plexiglass is a brand name of acrylic. Lexan is a brand name of polycarbonate. They both have their advantages, but acrylic is brittle compared to polycarbonate.. You should avoid using for shields and structural partc. It is nice for fish tanks if we ever have a water game. One easy test to tell acrylic from poly. Hit a piece hard against a table top. If it cracks or shatters it is probably acrylic. Wear your safety glasses. So in the robot world. Lexan=polycarbonate=good. Plexiglass=acrylic=bad. |
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