![]() |
[FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Not so long ago, Team Unlimited was given an opportunity to meet with some senior members of the FTC leadership. We got to talk with them for a few hours about the program, kits, etc. Below are our notes in Q&A form.
------- Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
-------- I hope you all like this! Regards, ~Patrick Pilvines, Head Engineer Team Unlimited, FTC #1 I will provide a link to our site ((http://eaglevex.syraweb.org)) to the offical page, when we get all the photos processed. |
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Sweet thanks for the info GDO and team unlimited :D
|
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Great! Thanks for info.
|
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Very awesome information. Thanks:)
|
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
If anyone has specific question, you can MSN, AIM, or PM me. I'm almost always on :p.
And glad that you all found this interesting. |
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Quote:
HOWEVER, designers will have to remember that the interfaces between LEGO parts and other LEGO parts are frequently held together by nothing more than a little friction. For that reason the LEGO appendages tended to fall off of those LEGO parts that were screwed into the aluminum framing. Blake |
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Quote:
One one hand you have a kit that only contains ten aluminum spur gears and a few LEGO gears. And on the other you have a kit which 95% of FTC teams already own which has spur gears, bevel gears, rack and pinion gears, worm gears, differential gears, roller chain and sprockets, tank treads, and a variety of regular and omni wheels. I was holding out hope that all mechanical parts of the Vex kits would be legal in the new FTC game. (Actually, that would have been the only reason for me to give any measure of support to the new FTC kits.) As of now, it appears that is not very likely. And, quite possibly just as, if not more so, important is that the majority of the thousands of dollars of investments by each of the few hundred FTC teams are now worthless for continuing in FTC. A $1500 investment in Vex over two or three seasons may seem trivial to some, but when some of these teams run on an annual budget of less than $1000/year it IS a big deal. So much for the "affordable" robotics competition. People used to complain about the lack of diversity in the Vex FVC/FTC competition robots. Now just imagine what it will be like when nearly all of the fun and interesting mechanical stuff in the kits is gone. :-/ |
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Quote:
I'm not sure why FIRST has turned into Anti-IFI , it seems very unprofessional. |
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Quote:
|
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
The question will be, will the parts rules be announced before or after registration deadlines?
|
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
I think we'll know the rules when the kits are shipped.
|
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Quote:
Other folks - Communicate with the FTC honcho at FIRST HQ and with your APs - Give them your suggestions. Posting suggestions in a CD forum is interesting but it is not the same thing as directly communicating with the people who want to hear (directly) from you. About reusing the Vex Gears. I agree that their current diversity is a good thing. However, off the top of my head, I'm not visualizing any simple way to connect them to the shafts and other mounting points of the new FTC kits. Absent posessing a magical interface adapter; now that the drop-Vex die has been cast, I'm thinking that FTC would be better off just designing and creating a similarly diverse set of parts from scratch (no matter how much money teams have put into buying the Vex gears). An adapter is likely to be very dissatisfying. So, I don't recommend betting on being able to integrate Vex gears or many other Vex parts into the new FTC kits. Blake PS: On the surface, spec'ing and producing crown/bevel gears, worm gears/wheels, etc. sounds pretty darn easy. By now, doesn't the world have a few centuries of experience at doing that??? As a naive customer I'm a little perplexed by the time it took IFI/Vex to offer them, and by FIRST not even announcing plans to supply them at some specific future date. Maybe someone can fill us in on what would stand in the way, other than business red tape and one-time start-up delays. |
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Quote:
EDIT: We fund and mentor all teams in district and many in the county. And we run a full robotics curriculum in the classes (That's the reason for so many). |
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
I'm no longer involved in FTC directly and haven't been for a year but it seems as if all FIRST has accomplished is a MASSIVE step backwards in terms of robot construction. There also seems to be a a step forward in computation in control but to me it can't justify the lack of mechanical parts. I know that when my team did FTC (it was FVC then) we didn't have much of a need for very complex programming as much as we had a need for complex mechanisms.
I think the best part about VEX that this system is lacking is the fact that it wasn't made for a robotics competition. It was made to be an educational tool so it was subject to competitors which gave IFI the drive and necessity to constantly improve the kit. With this new kit it's going to be a hodgepodge of commercially available (Sensors and NXT controller/legos) and one off components like gears and metal so some products may be improved over time but then others may not. |
Re: [FTC]: Team Unlimited's Visit at FIRST HQ
Quote:
Scrounge up a few extra dollars and spend a little time to put together some quick and dirty (low-cost and low pressure = focus on the fun) robots for the VRC. Heck, maybe even hold a just-for-fun local tournament at the home of whomever has the biggest basement or garage. Seriously, formal VRC is pretty inexpensive and local Vex tournaments can dirt cheap; plus you have the parts you need. Complement your formal plans to compete in FTC with a more relaxed side activity of quickly building some squarebots on steroids with a simple appendage or two, and just have a good time on a couple of low-pressure weekends. I'll bet you a very nice dinner that if you step away from FTC (or VRC) to do a weekend of VRC (or FTC), that when you turn your focus back onto your FTC (or VRC) challenges you will have a fresh outlook and will have 2 or 3 new ideas pop into your head(s). In much the same way that diversity is good in ecologies, it is good for sharpening problem-solving skills too. Blake |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:47. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi