View Single Post
  #9   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 13-01-2013, 13:48
Ninja_Bait's Avatar
Ninja_Bait Ninja_Bait is offline
Former Prez of Making Things Go
AKA: Jake Potter
FRC #0694 (StuyPulse)
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: New York
Posts: 650
Ninja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond reputeNinja_Bait has a reputation beyond repute
Re: 2 wheels vs 1 wheel in a linear shooter

Quote:
Originally Posted by ctccromer View Post
Just out of curiosity, has anyone tried using two wheels with one on each side of the shooter? My team prototyped the common build with 2 wheels on the same side, but I'm curious how the other 2 wheel build would work
Frisbees, in general, work by spinning, so having wheels on only one side is just a more elegant and efficient way of imparting spin.

Here's another reason why two wheels is theoretically better than one: Let's say you spin your one wheeled shooter up to a set speed. When the Frisbee contacts it, momentum will be lost, so the Frisbee will leave at less than half the original set speed. The motor can compensate by accelerating the wheel back to its original speed, but more likely than not, the Frisbee will already be gone by then. Two wheels allows you to "sacrifice" the first wheel's momentum so that you don't have as much of a momentum loss at the final wheel.

This is also why a curved track or a belt on a linear track is nice for hurling discs because there is a long period of contact during which the flywheel/Frisbee system recovers any lost momentum.

Of course, I may be unintentionally exaggerating - I have no idea whether the loss of momentum is actually consequential, since I haven't done any of the math.
__________________
You can't fix something that isn't broken... but you can always break things that aren't fixed!