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-   -   pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=70758)

GUI 20-12-2008 18:32

pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 

Bertman 20-12-2008 18:35

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
You might want to consider dovetail joints and internal corner blocks instead of gussets. The cost is about the same and the cornet blocks are much stronger.

Good luck with it.

MrForbes 20-12-2008 19:28

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
We were discussing corner blocks, pretty easy to add them.

Gary and Steve and I spent an hour today at the fab shop and made this...



and the all important weight:


gorrilla 20-12-2008 19:32

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
have you checked to see how much flexing there is?

is that oak?

MrForbes 20-12-2008 19:35

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
Still waiting for the glue to dry completely....the sides and ends are 3/4 Birch plywood, the base and gussets are 7/32 normal cheap plywood. $20 of wood in this thing.

gorrilla 20-12-2008 20:37

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by squirrel (Post 785980)
Still waiting for the glue to dry completely....the sides and ends are 3/4 Birch plywood, the base and gussets are 7/32 normal cheap plywood. $20 of wood in this thing.


you could fiberglass it(at least the base and corners if not the whole thing)


although its messy, i like using fiberglass, you can take wood, and make it very strong, and stiff

CraigHickman 21-12-2008 02:00

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by gorrilla (Post 786028)
although its messy, i like using fiberglass, you can take wood, and make it very strong, and stiff

And brittle.

Bruceb 21-12-2008 09:58

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
If you intend to fiberglass anything and I mean anything I suggest you stay far away from the cheap polyester(automotive) resin and hardner and only use epoxy resins. Epoxy is a MUCH better adhesive than polyester resin. If properly prepaired it WILL NOT let go of most any material it gets on. I have built an entire 20 foot fishing boat from plywood and WEST system epoxy. I have been in some pretty ugly weather hopping 6 foot waves with it and I still haven't drowned. It is more expensive than polyester resin but you get what you pay for and you are not going to use a lot of it anyway. Don't cheap out here. Go to www.westsystem.com for all the information you will need. No, I am not affiliated with them but I am a true believer.
Bruce

gorrilla 21-12-2008 10:54

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by CraigHickman (Post 786087)
And brittle.


in my expeireance with it, fiberglass only becomes brittle if you dont mix the resin right, or wait to long to apply it,


they switched to epoxy resin in surfboards because, polyester resin dosent stick to the new type of foam most companies use.


you dont even have to use the fiberglass mat, you could just take a paintbrush and dip it in the resin and "paint" it around the corners and edges


we're getting off topic now.......

GUI 21-12-2008 11:33

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
In the past our chassis has been made of pultruded fiberglass and worked great, but it was a bit messy, and murdered drill bits and saw blades (we finally figured out that it should be cut with an abrasive blade in a chop saw, whic is veeeery messy). The idea for this chassis is to be cheap and easy to build. Wood has similar properties to the pultruded fiberglass, but is easier to work with, extremely cheap, and available locally.

MrForbes 21-12-2008 11:48

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
The wood chassis by itself seems to be plenty strong and stiff, and like I said before it took us an hour to build it, and cost $20 for the materials.

If you think it could use improvement, I suggest you build one yourself, and see where the weaknesses are, and let us know how to make it better! After all, it only costs $20 and an hour of labor. (yes, I'm making a big assumption, that you have the machinery necessary to build it....but that is mostly the same machinery that has been required to build bumpers the past two years)

Chris Fultz 21-12-2008 11:53

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
You might want to put on a "marketing hat" as you talk with people about this, or similar ideas -

Instead of a "Cheap Wood Frame", maybe a "Low Cost Wood Frame" or an "Inexpensive Wood Frame" or a "High Value Wood Frame".

The word "cheap" can imply junky, low value, and turn people away - when I think you really mean it is Low Cost..

MrForbes 21-12-2008 12:00

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
Good idea! "Quick, Affordable Wood Chassis" does sound much better.

gorrilla 21-12-2008 12:22

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by squirrel (Post 786130)
The wood chassis by itself seems to be plenty strong and stiff, and like I said before it took us an hour to build it, and cost $20 for the materials.

If you think it could use improvement, I suggest you build one yourself, and see where the weaknesses are, and let us know how to make it better! After all, it only costs $20 and an hour of labor. (yes, I'm making a big assumption, that you have the machinery necessary to build it....but that is mostly the same machinery that has been required to build bumpers the past two years)



could you tell us the dimensions?

ill see if i can get to home depot today or tomorrow

did you apply the glue then staple it?

luckily gorrilla glue is cheap

Rick TYler 21-12-2008 12:33

Re: pic: Another Cheap Wood Frame Idea
 
I've built three small boats and been a project manager for a Boy Scout project which built seven canoes -- all out of plywood/epoxy/fiberglass composite. I'm 100% with Bruce, if you decide you need fiberglass use epoxy resin, not polyester. If you want some solid advice and a good source of materials, check out the boat-building forum at bateau2.com. The folks there don't have much experience with robots (except me...) but what they know about strong, light, easy-to-make composites is pretty impressive.

As for materials science, there's a great article in "The Nature of Boats" by Dave Gerr on materials commonly used in small-boat building. The weakness of wood is that it is labor-intensive (not an issue in robots), eventually will rot (not an issue in robots) and has fairly low impact resistance (an issue for Battlebots, but probably not for us). According to Gerr, Douglas fir is stiffer than steel, aluminum or laid-up fiberglass for the same weight of materials.

Fiberglass does not add stiffness in a wood/fiberglass composite. Epoxy-saturated fiberglass is a great low-weight fastener for joints, and the epoxy seals the wood to reduce water penetration (not an issue for robots, unless we get the long-awaited aquatics game!). Fiberglass itself is not stiff -- the wood is the component in the lay-up that adds stiffness. The glass holds it all together, protects from weather, and adds some impact and abrasion resistance. There are additives for epoxy, like graphite powder, that can improve abrasion resistance.

Generally, I'd avoid Kevlar cloth (it fuzzes and is a pain to sand smooth), or carbon-fiber cloth (very hard to work with, fuzzes, and supernaturally expensive) (unless you make carbon-fiber poles as arm material, in which case I'd like you to send me pictures). Other cloths like Dynel are more for abrasion resistance than strength and will do nothing for a robot chassis than add weight.

A chassis made from 6mm okoume plywood with joints taped with 9-ounce fiberglass set in SystemThree or WEST epoxy would be amazingly strong and light. My sons and I built a 17'4" canoe with 4mm okoume, 6-ounce glass, and SystemThree epoxy that weighs less than 60 pounds without seats and hardwood trim. I think a robot base could be made that is less than 10 pounds.

One really important downside to composite materials (like a chassis) is that repairs during a tournament will be nearly impossible. Epoxy sets up in a chemical reaction that takes days for maximum strength. If you break a joint in a competition you can't just whack another piece of stock off with a hacksaw, drill holes in it, and bolt it into place.

With some planning you could get the same effect with careful material selection (okoume plywood is more expensive but a lot lighter than birch, for example) and glued corner blocks. Those gussets are big and heavy. Epoxy and glass might impress the judges, but wouldn't really add much value in a structure that doesn't have to stand up to weather and waves.

I wonder if FIRST would approve the use of wood in FTC?


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