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Otaku 03-01-2009 18:49

robot design question
 
so, we're trying to figure out if it's legal to design the bot so part of the trailer would be within the robot's dimensions, kind of like something between a fork. Can't find anything in the rules. Help?

ExarKun666 03-01-2009 18:54

Re: robot design question
 
<R18> To attach the TRAILER to the ROBOT, TEAMS must use a Trailer Hitch constructed from
materials provided in the 2009 Kit Of Parts. Details on the construction of the Trailer Hitch
are provided in Drawing “GE-09040.”

There it is, so if your design includes that then I don't think it's a violation.

Otaku 03-01-2009 18:57

Re: robot design question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by ExarKun666 (Post 789969)
<R18> To attach the TRAILER to the ROBOT, TEAMS must use a Trailer Hitch constructed from
materials provided in the 2009 Kit Of Parts. Details on the construction of the Trailer Hitch
are provided in Drawing “GE-09040.”

There it is, so if your design includes that then I don't think it's a violation.

what we had thought up was something like a [ shape, with the trailer hitch in the middle of the vertical section in between the 'prongs'.

ExarKun666 03-01-2009 18:57

Re: robot design question
 
Just found this too:

Quote:

D. The Trailer Hitch must be located on an outer edge of the ROBOT structure such that it may
easily connect with the tongue of the TRAILER (attached to the TRAILER).
E. The Trailer Hitch must be placed such that, as the TRAILER swings from side to side, the
first contact between the TRAILER and ROBOT is BUMPER-to-BUMPER and not TRAILER-
tongue-to-BUMPER (to prevent placing excessive stress upon, and possibly damaging, the
TRAILER tongue). See Figure 8-6.
This is all under <R18> so look at that once more, if there are no violations in your design I say it's all good.

Otaku 03-01-2009 19:00

Re: robot design question
 
<r18> section D says outer edge, technically the inside of a bracket would be inside edge, thus illegal.

oh well.

ExarKun666 03-01-2009 19:01

Re: robot design question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Otaku (Post 789973)
what we had thought up was something like a [ shape, with the trailer hitch in the middle of the vertical section in between the 'prongs'.

Well if it's up vertically and attached, will that allow it to swing side to side, because it has to do that.

Oh w8 look at this:

Quote:

B. The Trailer Hitch must be rigidly attached to a fixed location on the ROBOT, with the long
dimension of the Trailer Hitch horizontal
and the opening of the C-channel facing away from
the ROBOT. The horizontal center line of the Trailer Hitch must be 2-13/16 inches above
the floor.
If you are planning a vertical fork it won't work

Otaku 03-01-2009 19:03

Re: robot design question
 
i'll try and get a 3d image of what i'm talking about.

dmlawrence 03-01-2009 19:28

Re: robot design question
 
The dimensions of the trailer with bumpers range from approximately 34" (distance between midpoints of opposite sides) to 39" (distance between opposite corners). This would make it near-impossible to fit within a U-shape, as each side of the U could only be 2 inches wide.

Also note that the trailer tongue protrudes about 10" from the trailer, so you would not be able to achieve a tight fit.

JesseK 03-01-2009 19:34

Re: robot design question
 
Quote:

B. The Trailer Hitch must be rigidly attached to a fixed location on the ROBOT, with the long
dimension of the Trailer Hitch horizontal and the opening of the C-channel facing away from
the ROBOT. The horizontal center line of the Trailer Hitch must be 2-13/16 inches above
the floor.
Also note that you may not move the hitch mount after the match has started.

Otaku 04-01-2009 01:03

Re: robot design question
 


image is top view, and not to scale completely, but you get the general idea.

The question is "Is this legal?". In so far as what constitutes an "outside" edge. The rule's not completely unambiguious about this. Can parts of the robot "wrap around" the trailer so to speak? Would we be allowed to make a design that limits the lateral movement, through the placement of the hitch alone and no other modifications, of the trailer, assuming that trailer to robot contact is still going to be bumper-to-bumper?

EDIT: also, this design won't ever see field time, I kinda wanna keep the real one hidden, so just imagine that the trailer isn't as engulfed as it is here. The same questions apply, though.

Katie_UPS 04-01-2009 02:24

Re: robot design question
 
I've been doodling that all day with a scale and dimentions, and with the size restrictions, its possible, but hard. If you do, as you sketched, you're in the clear, but there is a rule about the trailed bumper and your robot 's contact, its clearly stated in <R18>.

Otaku 04-01-2009 02:41

Re: robot design question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Katie_UPS (Post 790631)
I've been doodling that all day with a scale and dimentions, and with the size restrictions, its possible, but hard. If you do, as you sketched, you're in the clear, but there is a rule about the trailed bumper and your robot 's contact, its clearly stated in <R18>.

So long as the trailer only contacts the robot bumper to bumper, it's legal, then.

Alright.

Iceman1330 04-01-2009 02:43

Re: robot design question
 
I think what you are talking about is this. (16"x36" contact base)






The red areas are the "blocking spaces where balls can't be thrown. All measurements are ballpark (within 1-2" accurate, Proof of Concept)

The robot fits in the "box" and hugs at least half of the trailer. Weight issues might be a problem, but if you make the shroud light enough and place the batteries and heavy stuff in front you might be OK.

Racer26 04-01-2009 03:04

Re: robot design question
 
A neat design, nice drafting in the short time since kickoff.

My $0.02 is that with such a design, and the way it effectively eats your entire size envelope, you cant hopper up the balls to bring them to your human players more effectively, and you can't really fit a launcher in there either, meaning two key ways of scoring are severely hindered... not sure if its a net gain or not.

EDIT: also, the CoG being off center like that could make you easily tippable/have problems with moving on this already difficult to move on surface.

Furthermore, strategies like this will just make the human players go for your teammates goals, since they're wide open they're more likely to score there, rendering the protection they give more or less redundant.

GaryVoshol 04-01-2009 08:16

Re: robot design question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Iceman1330 (Post 790637)
I think what you are talking about is this. (16"x36" contact base)

//images deleted//

The red areas are the "blocking spaces where balls can't be thrown. All measurements are ballpark (within 1-2" accurate, Proof of Concept)

The robot fits in the "box" and hugs at least half of the trailer. Weight issues might be a problem, but if you make the shroud light enough and place the batteries and heavy stuff in front you might be OK.

Are those short segments adjacent to the trailer proper 6" minimum lengths? (You count the plywood, not the foam.)

Is 2/3 of the BUMPER PERIMETER enclosed by bumpers? I think so, if the short pieces are at least 6".

BUMPER PERIMETER is defined by the outermost corners of the robot. The "outer" location for the trailer hitch is not defined.


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