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FRC 2010 Team Update #5
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Re: FRC 2010 Team Update #5
Daww, i cant pick up an E-stopped robot to earn ELEVATED or SUSPENDED points for it? GDC, you're no fun.
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Re: FRC 2010 Team Update #5
Red card for "inappropriate use of the E-stop"? Wow, that will be fun to argue with refs about. There's a software problem and it can't drive, so we e-stop, but it's not obvious, so we get a red card?
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Re: FRC 2010 Team Update #5
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Re: FRC 2010 Team Update #5
The changes to <S03> and <G27> have eliminated some fun strategies. However, these changes do make sense considering it's called an "Emergency Stop".
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I dunno, I can just see this being an issue at least once. |
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That aside, I'm pretty strongly opposed to the changes to <S03> and <G27>. I have e-stopped our robot in the past when there wasn't an impending safety issue. Once, the battery in our Chicklet ran low, causing it to send out random commands, and causing the robot to start chewing itself up. In retrospect, unplugging all the controls would have had the same effect, but we couldn't make that diagnosis during the match, and it was a lot quicker to just disable the robot. In another case, the robot took a major impact, a 6-gauge wire came loose, and we lost power. Hitting the e-stop deactivated the hurricane light over our driver station, giving the other alliance a signal that they didn't need to run into us any more. These are not safety issues, but I feel that we're well within our rights to protect our robot as best we can when things go awry. I fully agree with Chuck that a non-responsive robot is a potential safety issue, even if it isn't apparent to an outsider. Remember the 8.3V glitch from 2006? If you were watching the Operator Interface, you could tell that the robot was about to flip out. I believe that my drivers and I are the people most qualified to determine if our robot is potentially unsafe, and I really resent that now I'm going to hesitate before I e-stop, even if there's an absolute safety hazard, so I can think about whether the head ref will see it the same way I do. That's not safe. If this rule stays on the books until the competition, I'll likely instruct my drivers to yank the Ethernet cable out of the Classmate in emergency situations, safety-related or not; no rule prohibits it, and I'm expecting that FMS would react as if you e-stopped. GDC, please reconsider. |
Re: FRC 2010 Team Update #5
I like the addition of being able to control a ball with a mechanism that goes above the bumper zone
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Before the 20 second final period starts, you drive your robot to the position they need to be in and you block the tower (even touching their tower) and press e-stop. If they can't move you, you now stopped them from getting 8 points and because you are e-stopped, you can't get any penalties... Well...not anymore... |
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I'm not convinced that this needed to be fixed. It's not the cleanest tactic, but it's clever and not a game-breaker. I'm not convinced that it couldn't have been fixed without touching <S03>. Instead, further change <G27> to void the clause when it is being used as part of an intentional defensive strategy. I'm not convinced that it's been fixed as-is. The same effect is still very achievable without violating <G34> and <G35>, particularly since the defender is protected by <G13>. |
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