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Driving Experience
I was wondering how much experience some other drivers/drive teams have in competition. Being a rookie driver this year I found driving a bit stressful but extremely fulfilling for the team after we won the SBPLI Regional with help from 572 and 870. Also if anyone has any good tips or just want to talk about your driving experiences.
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Re: Driving Experience
I've been on the playing field for three years, driving the last two of them. I advise dancing, and just having a good time. It's a game remeber.
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Re: Driving Experience
I have been on the team for 3 years, I started in 2003 as the arm driver, but when our arm made us top heavy we took it off and I then became the human player. 2004 I controlled the arm system, but drove the robot in 5-6 matches. This year my last year I controlled just the arm system. So it is up to me and the main driver Jon to train a new rookie driver that will be on the team for at least another 3 years.
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Re: Driving Experience
You know...I saw this thread and I was like "Hey I could say great things aboud Chris and Liz..." then I look at who started it and it's you! :mad:
Every team at some point or another will have to have "rookie" drivers, eventually the drivers graduate. But that's why we practice before the competition! And you've been doing great Chris! :) |
Re: Driving Experience
We havn't had a set structure for drivers and what not, just people sign up, we have tests, and the best people get it. This year there was a lack of people somehow. So our head machinist ended up driver, I became arm operator. We had another machinist be our coach. Human player was the one thing that we had plenty of volunteers for.
But of course on thursday, a lot of people complained about them wanting to drive but never getting the chance, so we got to the practice arena, let them have a go, and the most promising go in on a match on thursday. Well the match was totaly botched, so now we were "stuck" with being driver and arm operator. (we really didn't want to be driver or arm operator at first...) No driver "legacy" for us... |
Re: Driving Experience
I drove several years in high school.
My main pieces of advice: -Soft hands -Drive it like you stole it -Know the game inside and out -listen to your coach -communicate with the other team -7 in the goal, none on the floor* Driving is stressful but very rewarding, the 2 minutes of a match can whiz by at the speed of light, or they can be the longest 2 minutes of your life. *This is a reference to sweet repeat several years back. Only people on my team or people that have heard the story really get that piece of advice:) |
Re: Driving Experience
This is my 1st year driving at a competition but i have driven previous years robots since i joined the team. I find that on the field if you don't make it a big deal you are less stressful. I know last year i got really nervous at Midwest when i was the human player for a match because i made it such a huge deal. This year however I'm on the field as calm as can be because I know that even if we don't win I will still have fun. The most stressful times for me are just after the match waiting for the score. I guess it is just up to how you deal with it.
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Re: Driving Experience
Our drivers are both rookie drivers. It was hard because the first time they got to work together was at our first regional. After a day of practice matches, they were more confident and their confidence and ability improved after each match and now they're as good as any.
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Re: Driving Experience
Well this has been my first year as the main driver actually driving at the official competitions but I have driven since 2003 at the off season competitions. The best advice I can give is get as much driving time you can for practice, if that means driving around the shop with an old robot or if you are fortunate enough to have a practice bot it is good just to get time behind the sticks so it comes more naturally to you during a real match.
Mike M. |
Re: Driving Experience
Hi. Before I graduated I was the driver for our team for all 4 years during high school (120+ FIRST matches not including off-season events). Now I came back and we have two brand new drivers and I am now their "unofficial" official driving coach. Anyway, I know that your first year driving can be a very stressful experience, especially if your are a freshman and really don't know what in the world your doing. Anyway some good advice that I always tell our two drivers is to just PLAY YOUR GAME. If you go out there succeed in accomplishing your goals, whether personal or within the alliance, you succeeded. No matter what the score was and people will recognize you and your robot for that. Driving and operating the robot becomes easier with time, the more you drive the more comfortable you are with the robot, your second driver and your coach. Everything will soon run like a well oiled machine. Good luck and keep up the good work, cant be too bad if you already won a regional ;)
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Re: Driving Experience
I spent my freshman and sophomore years as the Operator (ie button/arm driver). I was the driver in my junior year (only went to Canadian Super Regional) and still have that position this year.
Driving requires first knowing how to use the robot without thinking about it whether you're going forwards or in reverse. It should be like walking - completely subconcious. Beyond that, it's being able to handle the pressure and to think clearly while listening to a coach who does his job scouting the field and an operator who has worked with you either in competition or in practice. It's a team effort. My drive team consists of me (4 years on field), Alex the Operator (3 years on field), and Shu the Coach (3 years on field). Nine seniors and two juniors are leaving the team after this year so I expect to have prospective drivers practice with this year's robot a lot both this school year and in the fall. An offseason competition would be a great help too in understanding the pressure and how to feel unconstrained by a time limit. Just some thoughts. |
Re: Driving Experience
as someone already mentioned, soft hands, and know your robot and its limits. there was a nice quote a long time ago tho,
a good driver will know the robots limits and a great driver's robot wont have limits . or sumthing of the sorts. i think, |
Re: Driving Experience
This is my Third year on the team and Second as the main driver. Last year i kinda got left with this position; however, now i enjoy the thrill and pressure. For rookie drivers: "Dont care about the results, just stick to what you do the best, DRIVE!". For me, when i drive, somehow the crowd is irrelevant. The 2 minutes pass very quickly and its hard for me to notice that i am in an arena, driving in front of 1000+ people.
Communication is that key. You four(2 drivers, coach, human player) should act as if you were a single person. The only part thats hard is the wait while waiting in line to play.i Have drove about 30 Matches so far. I plan to take that 50+ this year. Its a great honour for me to be the team Captain and main driver; i hope that i make my team proud. :) |
Re: Driving Experience
I agree soft on the sticks is a good idea and that is why we also programmed in a power gradiant into our controls, making our robot glide on the playing field. I was also wondering if anyone else does like me and has a hard time always seeing what everyone else is doing, although I have gotten significantly better since my first regional.
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Re: Driving Experience
Revolver, I think "tunnel vision" is something that most drivers encounter. That's what the coach is there for. In my opinion, the drivers should keep their eyes on the robot, and the coach should be able to watch the whole field and the other robots.
I was the operator for one season, but we (Jordan, the main driver, and I) drove in three preseason events and the whole OCCRA competition, which is something like 4 or 5 competitions. By the time the FIRST competition season came around, we knew what we were doing and managed to do a pretty good job. |
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