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YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
You Make The Call (YMTC) is a series of situations where you can be the ref and make the call.
Redabot uses two different upper body mechanisms, Jumpy and Grabby. Jumpy is placed on Redabot when she wishes to jump on the bar and Grabby is installed when she wishes to pick up balls. Each mechanism uses one drill motor. Redabot passes inspection at 129.8 lbs with the base, Jumpy, and Grabby on the scale BUT only Grabby has a drill motor installed. Since only one mechanism is on Redabot at a time, the drill motor is swapped between Jumpy and Grabby. To save the pain of swapping out drill motors, Redabot decides to install her extra drill motor on Jumpy. Therefore, Redabot never needs to swap motors when installing Jumpy or Grabby onto the base. Based on the 2004 Robot Rules, YOU MAKE THE CALL! |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
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Wetzel |
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Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
Not so fast. It's also a spare part, which doesn't count against the limit.
That's a symptom of the real problem--a badly conceived rule. There's no universal way of determining whether their extra drill is a spare part, mounted on the mechanism for convenience (where it is legal) or a part of the mechanism (where it is illegal, due to weight). You could take the naïve approach, and say, "well, it's attached to the mechanism, so it mustn't be legal", but that comes down to a silly semantic argument as to when something is part of something else, and when it's a separate entity. Note that they (properly) pass the weigh-in, because they know that a mechanism or part need not be attached to the robot to be part of its official weight (e.g. the two function modules--which probably can't be attached at the same time). |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
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Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
I agree with Kevin. A spare part is for replacement only. Once you attach it to the arm or whatever it is now part of the robot. Once assembled the robot must still meet weight requirements.
We must make sure that we don't try to make the rules meet our way of thinking. Rules should state the obvious. In this case you weigh in what you are going to use. If you add to the assembly then you must reweigh with ALL parts. I see no problem if you switch motors around between assemblies as that is how you weighed in. |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
As an inspector under 2004 rules, I would have ruled this robot did not make weight. Under 2003 rules it would have. I personally feel that the maximum weight a robot will be competing at is the test weight for inspection as the 2003 rule stated. After all, the max weight and size of a robot when it is on the field is the the critical issue to a level playing field, not the parts that are left behind. You don't qualify for size with all attachments fitting in the size box, just the robot with each attachment so that no attachment is over the size limit.
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Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
I would have to say it would not pass the inspection. If it had the other drill motor installed I would say it would pass if it met the weight requirements. I think this is what FIRST was trying to avoid when saying all mechanisms must be counted in the weight. When looking at these rules we must look at the purpose of the rule rather than trying to dig in the wording to find the loophole.
-Aaron |
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Just out of curiosity, Aaron, since only one drill motor is installed at inspection-time, and it meets weight limits at that time, why wouldn't it pass the inspection? You state "I would have to say it would not pass the inspection", but there is nothing at inspection-time that would constitute an illegal part or mechanism. As for why I think that the rule is ill-conceived, look at it this way: if you had a quick-change collar on the Globe motor, it would make sense to make two--one for the robot and one for the spare motor. Is it being implied that such a collar is inherently illegal, unless you defeat its purpose by only waiting until you need it in order to install the collar on the motor? Also, I agree with Al's reasoning regarding the comparable example of robot sizing. I can definitely attest that I liked the 2003 rule better, but I don't think that the 2004 rule even covers the situation in question. |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
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With what you're saying, teams could easy add another 20 lbs to their robot by added backups for when something fails. "Well, we're at 128 lbs but ... that battery'll die sometime - we'd better make room for two, just in case!" "Alright, we're at 130 exactly. But I was thinking - that chip motor could give out. Instead of swapping the whole motor if it fails, let's just throw another on there now so we can move the wires and save ourselves some trouble!" Quote:
Bottomr line: If a team is going to add something of considerable weight (not a ziptie or an extra velcro tie), they should reweigh to make sure that they will pass inspection with the new part(s) on the robot. If the robot and all of its assemblies weigh more than 130 lbs at any time, it is in violiation of rule <R06>. |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
I also agree that the motor cannot be installed. Let us keep separate what are spare parts and what is part of the robot during inspection. Spare parts replace whatever was on the robot during inspection, adding parts is just that - adding parts.
While there is some controversy over this rule, I think it came out of similiar threads about teams that built complete arms for their robots in the past. I remember in 2001, while in que, seeing our alliance partner take off half their robot. I went over to see if they needed help with repairs but they were just changing the arm because of our strategy. |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
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Now if you want to get away from gracious professionalism then you could say that you were having a problem with the old motor so you replaced with a new. Then when changing back to the out function say that you fixed the problem and that it is now OK. That is were gracious professionalism comes in. Not everything can be monitored and/or enforced. We must rely somewhat on the honesty of the teams. By the look of it when looking at the poll there are about 30% the are willing to be dishonest. |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
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I agree with Al, the weight you play at is the weight you should weigh at. If you can play in more than one configuration, you must weight less than 130lbs in all configurations. Wetzel |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
Like Katie said, I think a part stops being a "spare" as soon as it's attached to your robot in some fashion. If that's not the case, I know I would love to have 50 lbs of ballast on our bot to increase traction in some games.
Also, I think the rule as it currently stands is intended to prevent teams from having a giant number of configurations. This emphasizes strategizing and engineering decisions anyways, so I can't see how it's a bad thing, but I think that's a discussion for an entirely different thread. |
Re: YMTC: Redabot weighs 129.8?
By the word of the rules, it's illegal. My personal opinion? I don't really care. It would save them a few minutes by not having to switch the motors if it was legal, but if the team planned a strategy that required something as major as removing and replacing an arm, I'm sure they could move the motor as well.
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