Quote:
Originally Posted by Ian Curtis
We have not used that much of it in the past, but our pit neighbors in Seattle did. 1899 had a gorgeous plywood robot, and we plan on borrowing some of their construction techniques this season.
I've attached a few pictures I took at Seattle this year. For robot building they had cycled through a bunch of different kinds, but ultimately settled on this 5mm sanded ply, which is actually slightly thinner than 5mm. It is super cheap (under $15 for a 4x8 sheet). They sealed it as sheets, and then just put it in the laser cutter and got out puzzle pieces. In cutting the joints they didn't consider the kerf of the laser and the joints were definitely plenty tight.
Because the wood is so cheap, they built multiple iterations of their frame. I forget the exact number but it was at least five. Due to the puzzle-piece nature they also had some fun figuring out the best order to put it together. To hold it together they buy wood glue in 5 gallon buckets, and spent a sizable amount of money on Harbor Freight clamps. Anyone who went to their pit can attest that they had a lot of clamps.
If someone from 1899 is around feel free to correct me or send me a PM, because I've actually got a few more questions.
|
1899 member here. You got most of that correct, except the plywood we used was slightly over 5mm-5.2 to be exact. We originally used wood that was 5.1mm thick, but it had issues with voids and the filler used in them not being cut all the way through, while the final wood we ended up using did not have that problem. However, our CAD model still had slots for 5.1mm wood in many areas, and we never got around to changing them after switching to the 5.2mm wood, which is why the joints were tight. Also, I believe we built eight chassis, including the competition one, and a backup chassis we bagged with the robot in case the main one was irreparably damaged.