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Hydraulics?
Can we use hydraulics with our robot?
If so, what are the limitations on that as well. Thank you. |
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Hydraulics have not been permitted in FRC or FTC. Only pneumatics.
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Unfortunately motors are the only electronic actuators allowed in the past, no solenoids.
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The closest things allowed to hydraulics is sealed gas shocks. Can you imagine a venue pulling up the carpet only to find their basketball court/hockey rink is now stained with hydraulic oil? And the slipping and sliding going on in the pit....
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Hydraulics use liquid to transfer power. The liquid doesn't have to be oil, does it?
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Aside from hydraulic components eating up the weight limit, the mess factor (present regardless of liquid), and the problem of another 5 pages in the already-massive rulebook (and 50 posts asking about them on CD)...Well, I don't see a problem other than those few. Actually, come to think of it, if you replace "liquid" with "fluid", pneumatics are hydraulics.:p:D |
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Hydraulics offer precise control. I think it's something worth looking into....but it wasn't my idea. The reservoir in most hydraulic systems is not pressurized. |
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hydraulics also sound heavy, liquids aren't light.
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- less system weight - reduced fire hazard - less installation labor - higher dispatch reliability - health monitoring and on-condition maintenance |
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Hydraulics don't need to be large and heavy. They don't necessarily have to be powered by huge pumps and have big heavy hoses.
Think about how a small cylinder like those on drum breaks can stop a 3000lb car. Do a little research before making bold claims. |
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I think it's interesting that teams are allowed to compete with some dangerous and failure-prone electromechanical mechanisms year after year, but for some reason the thought of a hydraulically actuated device is thrown right out the window for safety reasons. I understand the oil-on-field issue, but if we're using something that's field-safe like water, is there actually a serious risk? (reference some 2008 catapult robots when making your comparison. :p ) |
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With all of the water game hints, you've got to be ready for it some day! |
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In last year's rules for example, would it have been permissible to concoct your own hydraulic setup? Or was there something disallowing that?
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Oh, I guess it depends on the definition of "is" :rolleyes:
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-Dave |
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In 2006, in particular, FIRST pushed hard for safety, both in terms of ball speed (they tested it against a limit) and in terms of mechanism design. They instructed the inspectors to require significant shielding of rotating machinery on shooting mechanisms. This standard was a bit more restrictive than teams had been used to, and there were a few teams, 188 included, that got tripped up by it. There may have been a Q&A response about it, but perhaps the most prominent documentation of such a standard was the (official but non-binding) inspection checklist, which read "Safety and Wedges: No sharp protrusions or edges, no entanglement risks, no wedge-shaped robot bases that may potentially affect other robots, shooter mechanisms (if used) must be shielded (3/4” dowel test)". This was also discussed at length among inspectors, and the directive was to draw upon industrial practices for guarding of machinery. So, returning to your original point, this was an attempt to avoid the possibility of serious injury (pinch points in shooters), and yet it was unhappily received by the teams, who were too disappointed at the onerous interpretation to care that FIRST was trying something new to promote more safety across the board. I don't hold this up as an example of great policy—after all, there are very few opportunities for a person to make contact with a robot (protrusions excepted) during a match—but I do think that FIRST probably deserves credit for trying to be safety-conscious when it comes to mechanism design. And incidentally, let me reiterate that the hydraulic ban is not mainly a safety concern—it's a cleanup concern. It's the pneumatics rules that are primarily safety-driven—and they're conservative to a fault. |
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