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Lifting mecanisms
My team is looking at a winch with some sort of telescoping mecanism to get a hook up to the top of the platform.
does this sound logical? and do any other teams have ideas for lifting their bots up on the tower? |
Re: Lifting mecanisms
Sounds reasonable.
I'd like to encourage teams this year to go back and look at the last two times there's been hanging: 2004 and 2000. And, a tip from someone who built a robot to play the 2004 game, make sure that you can get your hook out of places you don't want it and then still hang, if you can. (Examples: the floor, another robot's lightening holes (actually happened once in 2004), the bar itself, the ball return, a tower pole...) |
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Personally, I have none at the moment. I have gone from pneumatics, to scissor lifts. I'm still considering the best way. -Rion |
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I've seen some other fast ways too. (P.S. We have another CIM motor available this year, for a total of 5 maximum.) |
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(I seemed to have over looked the extra CIM... :yikes: ) -Rion PS. Is that a typo or did I over look the weight change limit? |
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And the extra CIM happens to be located in <R52-D>. |
Re: Lifting mecanisms
150lb would be the number to use this year with full weight bot + 20lb bumper allowance + ~10 lb battery
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Ah see, there is my problem. I am on <R08> at the moment. I am not an extremely fast reader... -Rion |
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Re: Lifting mecanisms
well my dad mentioned the winch on the front of a 4 wheeler to be possible, we would have to adapt it to a cim motor but it should be able to lift like 500 lbs
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You could also use a worm gear.
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And to echo what Eric said, make sure youe hooks are secure on your robot. A lot of teams lost their hooks before they made it to the bar from collisions. |
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To bring a little more "training" to the discussion... you just have to look at the maximum power of your motors to determine the absolute fastest you can get a robot up.
Power = Work / Time Work = Force * Distance so Power = Force * Distance / Time or Power = Force * Speeeeeeeed The CIM motors max out at 343W = 252 lbf*ft/s So the fastest an optimally geared CIM will lift a bot is about 1.5 ft/s. Or you lift in about a second. Mind, this assume you're instantly at the max power point, no friction losses, spherical chickens, the works. But, lifting your robot 20" in, say, 5 seconds is easily doable if you gear it right. The gearing it right being key. Max power occurs at 1/2 stall torque. But I'd really aim for 1/4 - 1/3 stall torque for your full load, for safety and losses and all that. |
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