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6 wheel swerves
Does anyone know anything about 6 wheel swerves? Has it been done?
Is it possible to do a 6 wheel drop center swerve? Where the center 2 wheels are dropped the normal 1/8 of an inch, enabling easier turning with the same swerve capabilities? Is that bad? Do you not need it to turn easier? Any pics/vids would be great! Gonna go look at CD Media some more and see what I get. ::rtm:: Thanks! |
Re: 6 wheel swerves
I believe 1625's 2010 robot was a 6 wheel swerve. Heres a vid: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7sXWhHfULs
Wouldnt it just be easier to program the robot for turning in a "wide" orientation? |
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Team 1625 built a 6WD swerve in 2010. It ended up playing on Einstein.
If you search through Aren Hill's recent posts, he's got some solid information and pictures out there. Or PM directly if he doesn't post in this thread. I believe that 1625's 6WD swerve is the first and only 6WD Swerve. Good picture in this post: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...7&postcount=21 |
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Like everyone has stated, 1625 has done it. (I believe that they are the only ones so far.)
Here are some pics that I got from CD-Media. I'm sure that 1625 has many more on their website. http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/35824 http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/35087 http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/35854 Also, here is a great whitepaper that 1625 published about their swerve drives throughout the teams history. http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/2578 |
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1625 also posted this paper that references the 6 wheel drive swerve.
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/2578 |
Re: 6 wheel swerves
Thanks all! Just finished watching their video on youtube from 2010. Seems nice. The only real implementation I can see is extra pushing power in all directions, which is in itself useful, depending on the robot.
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If you want to know more about that message Dillon Carey, he's the one who made the thing
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This seems to be caused, at least in part, by the way rough-top tread interfaces with carpet. |
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^ What Dustin said.
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234 has not posted the Data online, as it is their choice. But Chris graciously sent me the info and test setup they used to determine traction differences. They compared 4",6", and 8" wheels, 1" and 2" wide. 4x2 wheels won out by a very significant margin
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If all goes well, I will have some data soon on the relation between pushing force and contact patch once we complete testing with our prototype chassis. |
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From my race car experience (both designing, setting up, and driving) I have learned that polymers' coefficient of friction is related to their contact pressure. A larger contact area therefore leads to a higher coefficient of friction. They way it was explained to me is that as a polymer, i.e. roughtop or a tire tread, is pushed onto a surface small parts of the two surfaces become interlocked. As normal force between the two surfaces increases, the two surfaces interlock less and less per unit normal force. At some point the polymer/material interfaces are completely saturated and there is not much more grip to be had. |
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Quick aside -- if 234's data is true then wider treads also make turning more difficult due to extra skid traction (if implemented across all 6 wheels).
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The main plus to the 6wd swerve was maneuverability. Our team has done a few 4 wheel "swerves" (people call different wheel configurations different names, so I will just group them all under the term "swerve"). We had always done 4 wheel swerves before, but didn't have the programming capability to create a swerve with independent steering and power for each module. without doing this a four wheel swerve will almost always lack the ability to rotate about itself well. (a notable exception is 1717's steering configuration) In order to get past this dilemma without using programming, we decided to solve it mechanically, with the 6wd swerve. |
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For any math-oriented students who might be curious, here's1 the inverse kinematics for 6-wheel swerve. I can't imagine any team actually wanting to build one like that, but who knows :-) 1look for "swerveN.pdf" near bottom of list |
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I can verify that 4X2 won out in our setup as well. -Brando |
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Did you use a flat plate of tread of varying sizes or use actual wheels and some kind of load cell? Did you do both? It probably doesn't matter for the final result, I'm just curious how much of that increase is due to straight up surface area or if you get "bonus traction" due to the changing radius and interactions of the wheel/carpet interface under different loads. |
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No offense to 234/125, but until I can see the testing set-up, parameters, and data first hand I reserve my right to be skeptical.
Additionally, I'd like to see if they evaluated a greater quantity of wheels compared to wheel diameter. While I don't doubt there would be a correlation there, I'm curious if it's a 1:1 relationship. After all, this point did originate with having 6WD swerves providing more "pushing power." |
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Ok. Now a new question for those who have used swerve:
Wild swerve, Revolution swerve, or custom swerve? |
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However if you are not confident that you can make one then go with the revolution kit. |
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While this is our first year trying swerve, I would suggest staying away from a custom setup if you are new to swerve drives. If you try it make sure you have plenty of time to get it all up and working.
We are trying to create a custom swerve drive and it has taken quite a while to design and build what we have so far (not quite done yet). Wild swerve is a little cheaper than revolutionary and both take less time than a custom setup to design because they are already designed. |
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That is indeed your right, and I too would be skeptical if the situations were reversed. Until we have our testing results in a more organized format, we're going to withhold them. If I am understanding your second question, are you asking if we tested more than 1 wheel at a time? About the testing setup- the wheels are mounted on a pivot arm, weight is applied at the end of the arm thus giving a standard "normal" force to any wheel placed in the rig. A torque wrench was utilized, and torque was applied to each wheel (each wheel being affixed to a shaft). We then recorded the torque each wheel experienced right up until it slipped. Pretty simple. -Brando |
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The torque wrench utilized a ~5" extension so that the physical handle of it hung off the edge of the table. We then had an aluminum block that had a pocket cut out of the top to accept the extension on the torque wrench. A top piece would then screw into the block to captivate the torque wrench extension. The entire torque wrench assembly would then be self-standing even when disconnected from the wheel testing rig. Due to various size wheels, we used this block in combination with a series of spacers to keep the extension on the torque wrench fully supported for all wheel sizes. |
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Do you have a picture of the fixture? |
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The block is supporting the extension of the torque wrench, not the handle itself. The handle remains free to rotate as it would normally. The aluminum block is not acting as a clamp, more of a bushing. A loose enough fit that the wrench can spin, but snug enough to provide support to the extension. The block ensures the torque wrench is in the same position every time, and also ensures that the torque load is being exerted as axially as possible to the wheel. PS: Maybe we should consider resurrecting/starting another thread as we've pretty much hijacked this one. |
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I got it now. Thanks. |
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