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-   -   Organization and BEST Robotics (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=38380)

santosh 29-05-2005 14:26

Organization and BEST Robotics
 
I know that a few of the FIRST Teams here also have a BEST robotics team, but I was curious as to how many FIRST Teams also have a BEST Robotics team.

Also, I was wondering what all you use this competition for. We use it to get our underclassmen accustomed to robotics. Some teams may use it to get warmed up before FIRST. What do you guys use the competition for if you have a BEST Robotics Team?

I searched for a thread like this but could not find one. Sorry if there is one like this.

Ryan M. 29-05-2005 18:17

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
What exactly is BEST robotics? I've never heard of it.

Andrew Schuetze 29-05-2005 18:23

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ryan M.
What exactly is BEST robotics? I've never heard of it.

BEST started maybe a year before or after FIRST and has similar goals. They both spawned from news of Woodie Flowers design competition and basically give a team a box of parts and a game to play, six weeks, mentors, ....

BEST is a low cost expereience for teams as currently the control system and motors are loaned to the school and most teams compete in the same town or one nearby for just a single day competition with machine check in the evening before the game.


http://www.bestinc.org/MVC/

santosh 29-05-2005 18:26

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
BEST stands for Boosting Engineering Science and Technology. I heard it was a spin-off of FIRST or something like that. Not sure. But it is a robotics competition with a very large amount of restrictions. The robots are only 2 ft cube and weigh 24 pounds maximum. They give you a tub full of parts and tell you to build a robot to complete the task. The catch is that you can only use what is given to you in the tube. In th tub is a lot of wood, some PVC pipe, bicycle tubing, screws and just small items like that. You get 4 motors and i think 3 servos and you control the robot using a Futaba radio controller. You are only allowed to use 4 channels on your robot. This year you ha to build a stationary robot that scooped up McDonalds play balls and place them in a tub along with some other oner tasks.

I beleive there are like 10 regionals for this competition. Most of the teams come from Texas. There is something like the chairmans award there also and there is championships held in Auburn Alabama very year.

Usually there is no building help from companies and there arent any sponsors usually for this competition because it is fre to participate in.

Andrew Schuetze 29-05-2005 18:29

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by santosh
I know that a few of the FIRST Teams here also have a BEST robotics team, but I was curious as to how many FIRST Teams also have a BEST Robotics team.

Also, I was wondering what all you use this competition for. We use it to get our underclassmen accustomed to robotics. Some teams may use it to get warmed up before FIRST. What do you guys use the competition for if you have a BEST Robotics Team?

I searched for a thread like this but could not find one. Sorry if there is one like this.

BEST has been a topic on the boards before and probably most recently as last August or so.

Team 499, Toltechs, are a district FIRST team and each of our high schools enters a seperate BEST team in the SA-BEST hub. Any chance to design and work strategy is usually good. Once you do FIRST, it gets a bit frustrating to deal with the small motors and historically limited drive train type linkages. The did add some timing belt and pulleys in recent years and are hinting at some new and improved KOP items this year. The BEST game also leaves out the programmers until the Infinity Kits become part of the package ;)


So, we use it to get the students engaged and draw our FIRST team members from this event since each school has a team and makes it easier for me, the district main sponsor, to identify students at the other campuses.

Cobage 29-05-2005 21:04

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
yeah, best is good for bringing up freshmen, but it's nowhere near the scale of first. If you want gears, you have to cut them yourself out of plastic. unless you have that fancy computer guided cutting equipment, it can get pretty tough. especially with a bandsaw.

LSevcik 29-05-2005 22:21

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Cobage
yeah, best is good for bringing up freshmen, but it's nowhere near the scale of first. If you want gears, you have to cut them yourself out of plastic. unless you have that fancy computer guided cutting equipment, it can get pretty tough. especially with a bandsaw.

Here's a little more clarification on BEST. Being a Regional Director for FIRST and a Hub Director, and also have worked with teams in both programs. There are 28 hubs (local competitions ) in the BEST competition. There are several in Texas but also in Philadelphia, Kansas, Oklahoma, Florida, Arkansas, Alabama and the program is growing. Teams compete in the local hub competition and must win their way to compete in a regional event. Currently there is a regional at Auburn University and at SMU in Dallas, Texas. A third regional is due to be added.

The attraction for the BEST program for many schools is that the program is free and the robot is totally manufactured by the students. Mentors for participating teams guide the students through the build process. The program is easily accessible for many schools as it doesn't require a machine shop. The program is good for those schools that can't afford to do FIRST but still want to be part of a robotics competition.

FIRST is a much larger program and offers many more challenges for students, mentors and one must have a corporate sponsor. BEST is a very good program to prepare students for FIRST.

Both programs have something to offer for students who want to be part of a robotics program. It's up to the schools as to what works for them.

Andrew Schuetze 29-05-2005 22:57

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by LSevcik
snip

Both programs have something to offer for students who want to be part of a robotics program. It's up to the schools as to what works for them.

Thanks for chiming in Lucia and making the point that there are pros and cons to both programs and it comes down to the school as to what is the correct choice for them. In Edgewood ISD, the correct choice is to compete in both. It is a great fall activity from which I can recruit team members from. It is a bit of a problem though as I then have to deal with a bit of school spirit and competitiveness spilling over into our district FIRST team which is a multi-school team. The three campuses in the district each have a BEST team but we combine for a single district FIRST team.

Other choices for schools to consider, BotBall from NASA, why not do the underwater robot thing as the great group from Phoenix did and beat MIT :yikes:

A long term goal for San Antonio, Texas is to develop the resources that Lucia and Lucien et al have done in Houston to create Houston robotics.org. They help teams in the BEST, FIRST, Botball plus FLL and even created a Lego challenge for elementary ages called EARLY.

The dollars have to be spread around much more widely but my sense is that an organization is likely to be more generous with the donations if it is going to a much larger and diverse group of students :) The pie gets bigger and there are more pieces to share....


APS

Kevin Sevcik 30-05-2005 21:18

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
To answer the original question of the thread, Team 57 actually has multiple BEST teams. We fundraise enough to buy extra kits and controls, and then we have multiple teams build robots and compete against each other. The winning sub-team represents the school at the actual competition. We use the BEST teams to recruit and prep rookies for FIRST and to keep our current FIRST students sharp.

Off the subject, BEST is quite definitely more restricted than FIRST. 2 foot cube, 24 lbs, limited materials, limited motors, limited channels. This makes it a rather large challenge. It's not easy doing things within those limitations, so it forces you to think creatively and be careful how you use your materials. You still see some really neat robots. One of the coolest robots I've ever seen was a BEST bot that drove around horizontally for part of the match, then used a cliff on the field to flip itself forward to help it deliver the balls it collected.

funggiss 02-09-2009 11:30

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
my team 1825 does both frc and best our team name is the same in both cases Metro Homeschool Robotics

we go to the fort smith hub

xitaqua 02-09-2009 12:07

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
BEST is also a good place to start for home school teams, specially since it is free for teams to participate, and for home school teams, it might be a challenge comming up with $6,000, specially from sponsors......

Does anyone know of a BEST hub in St. Louis ?

I seen a team in Ponca City, OK that has both FIRST/BEST, and they told me the same thing said before in this thread : Good to bring Freshment up to speed. It is mandatory for that team in OK for underclassmen to do BEST, before participating in FIRST from my understanding.....

Cheers,
Marcos.

JaneYoung 02-09-2009 16:27

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by xitaqua (Post 872590)
Does anyone know of a BEST hub in St. Louis ?

I seen a team in Ponca City, OK that has both FIRST/BEST, and they told me the same thing said before in this thread : Good to bring Freshment up to speed. It is mandatory for that team in OK for underclassmen to do BEST, before participating in FIRST from my understanding.....

Cheers,
Marcos.

Have you checked out the BEST website?

I'm including a link from the website that provides a map. It's a good visual.
http://www.bestinc.org/MVC/HubInfo/hub_map

LASA Robotics has participated in BEST for several years. If you would like to ask any questions, I'll be happy to answer - just send me a private message.

Jane

Pjohn1959 02-09-2009 16:52

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by xitaqua (Post 872590)
Does anyone know of a BEST hub in St. Louis ?.

The closest hub is the Music City hub in Nashville, Tenn.

Quote:

I seen a team in Ponca City, OK that has both FIRST/BEST, and they told me the same thing said before in this thread : Good to bring Freshment up to speed. It is mandatory for that team in OK for underclassmen to do BEST, before participating in FIRST from my understanding.....

Cheers,
Marcos.
Yes, team 476, the Wildcats, have been doing this successfully for many years...

Quote:

Originally Posted by JaneYoung (Post 872626)
LASA Robotics has participated in BEST for several years.
Jane

Only team I know of that has won a Chairman's Award and a State BEST Award. Congratulations

GarrettF2395 02-09-2009 17:37

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
My FRC team (2395 The Ninja Munkees) is actually 2 different homeschool teams (OKC Homeschool and COACH)
I'm on OKC Homeschool, other teams I know of that do FIRST are 1429 out of Galena Park TX. 932 of Tulsa OK. and 476 From Ponca OK.
All of us competed at the Frontier Trails Regional last year, as well as competing in the Oklahoma FRC Regional.

BEST teaches you things that you don't necessarily learn in FRC.
Specifically how to take very little and turn it into something you can compete with.
I'll give you an example. In FIRST, if you need a gear for a motor that raises your robots arm, you go to AndyMark, or another website, and order the part you need. In BEST if you need a gear, you have to look at your current resources and figure out what material you will use, wood, PVC, aluminum? Then you have to figure out how you will make it, and how to connect it to the motor.
Im not saying you can't learn these things in FRC, a lot of teams do.
But things like using very limited resources to the best of your ability, and very hands on construction are just a few ways FIRST and BEST Differ.
Also, even though BEST gets written off as easy sometimes, once you get to the regional level, it's fairly difficult to win.
My team competes in BEST for the same reasons we compete in FIRST.
To learn, to grow as a team, and to increase our experience in both engineering and building competitive robots.
I greatly encourage all FIRST teams to get involved with BEST somehow, its a great learning experience.

(Darn Paul beat me too it)

JaneYoung 02-09-2009 17:52

Re: Organization and BEST Robotics
 
Thank you for your kind words, Paul. :)

Garrett is right, BEST isn't easy but man, is it fun!


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