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Switching the Channel for Competition
We are coming up on having our local Media Day and I only have a switch to change the channel on the 2003 Controller. Has anyone come up with a way to change the channel for local competitions without having to connect to the offical Competition port?
Thanks in advance |
Re: Switching the Channel for Competition
without the competition port adapter all the OI run on the same channel - using the comp port adapter IS the way to change channels - why would you want another way?
all you need is one jumper on a DB15 - what could be simpler than that?! http://www.innovationfirst.com/FIRST...nout_Guide.PDF |
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That is what I was looking for. It looks like the same from last year. I will have to check. Again thanks. |
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We have craploads of dongles for the competition port. If you're referring to the UAH media day that we'll be at .... you're more than welcome to borrow one. :D
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Re: Switching the Channel for Competition
We wanted some blue LEDs flashing, so I jammed a paperclip in the right pins (I looked them up), played with the channal dipswitches, and got it set to 13. Now we have blue LEDs.
It's not that hard, just don't do anything dumb ;-). |
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I think you also have to set you team number to something other that zero?
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Where are the "sheets" for this kinda thing? I noticed the Chatsworth box had a LOT more stuff in it then mine does, and that kinda bugged me... I had been looking for like 30-60 mins for the pinout guide for the CPT port. Could someone please direct me twords the resources they used or other people used for their comp port things?
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pin 1 - VCC (note that IFI says that using this pin will void your warranty) pin 5 - Autonomous Enable pin 6 - Disable pin 8 - Ground pin 12 - Enable Channel Select |
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Whats VCC?
is that a thing that would be used in the actual competitions? Has someone fried their system yet using that port? :) |
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The reason IFI doesn't want people messing with this pin is because it is a direct connection to voltage and could fry the OI if you're not careful. That said, we've never ruined an OI -- one time we shorted some of the wrong pins on the competition port and it started going crazy but a power cycle fixed that problem. |
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Alright, I think I'm up for building a dongle for our team. But since I'd rather not fork over $1200 for a new OI, I figured I'd ask and make sure my wiring scheme would work. It's attached. (I'm sorry about the .bmp--my computer is a pain in the booty.)
Any tips for building one (other than to be careful and don't short anything out)? |
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It's really not difficult to make ... and even if you do screw up, chances are you wont completely fry your OI. I've accidentally shorted the wrong pins a few times, and we've never lost an OI. We had one start acting weird ... but a reboot fixed it right up. Good luck. :D |
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Re: Switching the Channel for Competition
Thanks for the input.
I noticed on my sketch that I just had 8 and 12 hooked together directly for channel access. IFI's has a switch to enable/disable this. Is there any advantage either way? And I'm just thinking out loud--if those are all the pins one needs to do autonomous and disabling and channel setting, how hard would it be to create a rudimentary arena controller? Just run the wires for four dongles to one central spot, perhaps add a timer to the disable circuit, and bada-bing! (I figure that even the channel -shouldn't- matter, since the RC checks for team number as well. Of course, it wouldn't hurt to give each robot their own channel in matches.) Now for my final question: where on earth do you get those DB15 connectors? I checked my local Radio Shack, then their site. No luck either place. <edit> And I'm just curious, since my team is always looking for easy sources of bling (is reminded of the team's initial idea to stick strobe lights in the metal 2x4s)...is there enough power going through these pins to send juice to an LED (or similar device) indicate that said pins are connected? </edit> Thanks again! |
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(checks digikey)
Good heavens, that's a lot of parts. Can anyone point me to a particular item number or some other method for the non-electrical genius? And I know I asked this before, but I've got a hunch it got overlooked: Is there an easy way to hook some sort of LED or similar object that indicates that a certain switch is on? Thanks again! |
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This is probably the normal method most teams use for LEDs on the OI. |
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A note on the switches...I was thinking, and while it's smart to have a nice, big, mash-the-red-button-to-stop-that-robot disable button, it isn't as good for autonomous mode, as then if you mash it, you'll probably be disabling the sucker anyways. So I figure that the disable switch will be alternate action (either DPDT, or perhaps two separate switches activated by the same button), and then the autonomous switch would be more light-switchy in activation. (I wired in the LED so that you can tell pretty easily whether or not the disable switch is activated without having to decipher the OI. Maybe I'll make it a buzzer, to make it really obvious. Saves having to troubleshoot the stupid stuff, I figure.) Although, given my tackling by our robot when it leapt into autonomous the last build night, I'm tempted to take a cue from our ROTC corps' F-16 simulator and make it like the nuclear consent switches--you know, lift the flap that holds it off, and THEN you get to flip the switch and launch the nukes. Or start autonomous mode. Your choice. Switch choices and ergonomics of the box aside, any comments on the updated wiring scheme? |
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i would suggest putting a resister in between the 9volt battery and the positive lead on the LED. Also since LED's are a diode, LED's have a distinct positive lead. Normally the longer lead coming from the LED is the positive lead.
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[edit] LEDs with integral resistors came in the robot kit, or Radio Shack carries them. As dez250 says you'll need a resistor in series or you'll burn out the LED rather quickly. |
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It is even possible to build a more complex system. The person who wrote the current official FIRST scoring software is an alum of Team 190, and while on the team he was working on making his own system that would interface with his scoring software. I don't think he finished it before he started working for FIRST, but it definately looked possible. |
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