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2 Motors is Faster?!
Okay, so I think we all saw the demo where Dean and Dave race a 2 motor robot against a 4 motor robot and they reach the finish at the same time.
Having taken my fair share of physics I do not for the life of me understand how this is possible. More force should equal greater acceleration, for the same mass. Correct? They will reach the same speed, but the 4 motor bot will accelerate faster. So did they reach the end at the same time simply because the 2-motor bot's lightness made up for its lack of power? :confused: After several transmission/motor swaps in '08 our team pretty much convinced ourselves that 4 motors was ALWAYS the way to go. |
Re: 2 Motors is Faster?!
If torque is greater than traction/FoF, then the wheels will skid reducing your ability to apply your forward force to the ground.
2 motors have less torque than a 4 motor setup, so the wheels skidded less |
Re: 2 Motors is Faster?!
They accelerated at the same rate because acceleration is a function of mass and force. If both bots were maximum weight, the mass and the force of friction provided by the wheels would be the same. Since the motors provided more force than the friction of the wheels, either robot could only apply, at most, the frictional force of the wheels. This is different than in previous years where the frictional force of the wheels was greater than the output possible with the motors, a situation where the motor output was the limiting factor (and more motors = more force, assuming identical motors). The difference is that this year the limiting factor is friction, while previously it has been motor power.
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Re: 2 Motors is Faster?!
I see... That makes sense...
Two FP's for drive and four CIMS driving a beastly manipulator... :) |
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High speed and low torque is the way to go. Try using some encoders in a special way as to create your own ABS. Might just work out better than you plan. Try it out.
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Re: 2 Motors is Faster?!
I think it wouldn't be too difficult to figure out if the robot is slipping. If you have encoders and an accelerometer you could compare the measured acceleration to the expected acceleraion at the measured output speed. If the measured acceleration is significantly less than what is expected, you would simply reduce the power to the motors. Does this sound like a good system (I haven't messed with any of the sensors in the kit, but this is what I assume would be the simplest solution).
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Going from CoFs of 1.4 to 0.1 makes a huge difference :) |
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48:1 is a bit of reduction, but if you use the AM planetary adapters then you could use the Toughbox and get a ratio close to that, though I suspect you would want to get gears for the toughbox for less reduction, maybe the 8:1 set, to eliminate the need for a funky sprocket ratio.
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Re: 2 Motors is Faster?!
I see no reason to use four CIM motors in a drive train this year.
There isn't really a way in which a team would be torque-limited this year (unless you use the Mabuchi motor); you will be entirely traction-limited. Using four CIMs on the drive is just wasting hundreds of Watts of power. |
Re: 2 Motors is Faster?!
Another thing answering your question;
In this game traction is everything. And you want the most traction. So with the two wheel bases, they both are relitively the same weight (I know weight is added for extra motors and wheels, but I'm talking on a very general level). So with four wheels, if the weight was 100, each wheel carried 25 pounds (ok, so I know this is a little off, and I don't have enough physics background to properly explain this, but once I'm done, this should make sense), but on the two wheel, each wheel carried 50 pounds, which created more friction which gave it more... power (if thats the right word....) EDIT: No one really explained that to you, and thats why the two-wheeled went faster (or as my mentors explained)... |
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I should have specified that that was an "In My Opinion" thing. |
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