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Unread 16-01-2012, 22:35
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billbo911 billbo911 is offline
I prefer you give a perfect effort.
AKA: That's "Mr. Bill"
FRC #2073 (EagleForce)
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Re: CIM Motor Sacrifice

Quote:
Originally Posted by onecoolc View Post
Have any teams used two RS-550s in a CIM-U-LATOR in place of a CIM? If so, what were your results?

I've seen a lot of posts in this thread with grievances towards the RS-775 (and case shorts), so I'm wondering about experiences with the RS-550s, if anyone can share.
After testing our prototype shooter, powered by a single CIM, we decided to make a change. The CIM was more than sufficient for our plans, but we believe they are better suited for our drive train.

Based on the results of our testing, we made the following adjustments:
The single 340Watt CIM, driving 8" wheels, reduced 1.8:1 with chain sprockets will be replaced by 2 250Watt RS550s attached to a 5:1 reduction CIM-Sim from AndyMark. The output will either be direct driving the shooting wheels or go through a 1:1.8 chain sprocket increase. Either way will work out, but the 1:1.8 increase should have the motors running at about 50% power.

We plan on using and encoder and PID loop to maintain the desired RPM. Running the motors at 50% power will allow us plenty of overhead to control RPM during shots and when the battery starts to fade near the end of a match.
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CalGames 2009 Autonomous Champion Award winner
Sacramento 2010 Creativity in Design winner, Sacramento 2010 Quarter finalist
2011 Sacramento Finalist, 2011 Madtown Engineering Inspiration Award.
2012 Sacramento Semi-Finals, 2012 Sacramento Innovation in Control Award, 2012 SVR Judges Award.
2012 CalGames Autonomous Challenge Award winner ($$$).
2014 2X Rockwell Automation: Innovation in Control Award (CVR and SAC). Curie Division Gracious Professionalism Award.
2014 Capital City Classic Winner AND Runner Up. Madtown Throwdown: Runner up.
2015 Innovation in Control Award, Sacramento.
2016 Chezy Champs Finalist, 2016 MTTD Finalist
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