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Jaguars failing
So, does anybody know if the jaguars were improved or are we going to have the same extremly high failure rate this year?
Bruce |
Re: Jaguars failing
Bruce, there are a number of posts discussing the failure rate of the jaguar.
For instance, here: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...fai lure+rate In that post they discuss a total of 88 jags to date. When you consider that close to 4000 jags were shipped to teams just in the kit of parts, I'd wager the failure rate including all jags sold is well below 1%. I think I would argue with your "extremely high" statement. There will be a new black jaguar that has been discussed repeatedly both on this forum and the usfirst.org official beta forums that has some modifications to improve the durability further. |
Re: Jaguars failing
hey
this from the first team of Australia we would like to know anything vaubleable info on the Jaguar motor thank you 3132 :D |
Re: Jaguars failing
Interesting note on the failure rate. We lost 3 ourselves and everybody I talked to at the Milwaukee regional lost at least one.
Bruce |
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I think the reason people think the failure rate is higher is because failed Jags came bunched together in the same kits. My team got the "good batch" last year. |
Re: Jaguars failing
Tom,
Can you give us a good way to know if the Jaguars have the latest software updates? The KOP box says rev A on it, does that imply a certain level of software or hardware revision? |
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As for hardware revisions, they are either black or gray plastics. All gray jags are the same hardware inside. |
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And speaking of negligence, in the top two causes of failure, one was negligence... and that was removing the screws from the jaguar power terminals which leaves metal shavings inside the case. The new black jag does not use retaining screws since people are going to remove them even if it will cause a failure. |
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Re: Jaguars failing
That figure of 88, EVEN if its accurate as to the number of units that LM/TI received back still doesnt really tell us anything.
There are LOTS of teams, i'm sure, who just had one blow up and never thought to contact LM/TI. I know 1075 used 6 jags on our 2009 bot, and we had no fewer than 2 jags fail on us. Both in the same way, a plume of smoke and upon closer inspection, toasted FETs. We're very careful about filings getting into speed controllers, over the years we toasted a few Victors... including an entire robot's worth of electronics when the ground clip fell off the robot during welding. Ever since then welding is done without electronics on the bot. My count says 2/8, thats a 25% failure rate. There seems to be no shortage of the well known names around here with similar numbers. That sort of leads me to believe that the numbers are bigger than it would seem from what LM/TI tells us. |
Re: Jaguars failing
FACT: The number of failed Jaguars is higher than what TI has reported. This is not attributable to malice; they simply are not psychic. I am at a loss as to why any team would choose to not tell LM/TI of a failure; why not get a free replacement?
FACT: The grey Jaguar has/had(?) a failure mode that silently disables one direction of motor control. Jaguar failures that include emitting smoke are user induced. Please note that clustered failures are much more likely to be indicative of the user than of the design. I did a lot of tech support last season, and almost all of the cases of multiple failures were user error. Most of these cases also featured the fabled line of "I've been doing FIRST for X years, of course I didn't read the documentation!" Actual Example: Quote:
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Re: Jaguars failing
oh. I forgot to mention that when I opened the case to look at the damage to the jags we toasted, there was NO noticable chunks, flecks, or specks, of metal shavings inside.
I'm very reluctant to just accept that all magic-smoke-emitting failure modes are user-error-induced. I think its rather likely that either (and this does sort of qualify as user error i suppose) a loose or otherwise high resistance connection is causing the jags to enter some weird failure mode. Alternately, it has been suggested that the loads induced by running a motor full forward and jamming it to full reverse very quickly can reach huge numbers. I expect that some of the toasted FET failure modes could be caused by this happening in a fashion that the fault-detect circuit couldn't detect fast enough. I can't say carte-blanche that it wasn't our fault they blew, but IMO they blew for other reasons. I know the precautions we take. |
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Ultimately, there's at least some teams who had issues with the Jags and are not comfortable with them. Citing the data (which may or may not be an accurate reflection of reality) over and over is not doing much to help the perception problem. I keep seeing threads like this where teams say they had issues (sometimes multiple), and the response is always the same: someone cites the data that claims to show a "low" failure rate, then suggests that the team must have screwed up. I understand that that is what most people at NI and TI must be thinking, but I don't think it's helping the perception problem. |
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