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Re: Experience With 6 Cim Drive train
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe G.
1687 ran 6 CIMs single speed last year, at 14.5 fps, riding on colsons with a linear tread pattern, playing some real tough defense all year long. At our first event, we tripped the breaker once in our final match, at our second, a couple more times. After that, we looked for ways to eliminate breaker trips for our offseason events. Retrofit shifters were designed, but for various reasons, couldn't be manufactured in time. Instead, we made several minor mechanical, electrical, and software tweaks to reduce current draw: - Doubled the number of air tanks on the robot, reducing required compressor runtime
- Systematically tested every pressure switch we own to find the one with the best combination of high cutoff pressure and low startup pressure, again reducing required compresser runtime
- Switched our intake extension, our largest source of air use, to single acting pistons
- Upped wire gauge in several places in the robot, reducing losses due to wire resistance
- Coded our drivetrain to automatically drop to 4 CIMs when running our shooter winch or intake motors, with the driver given a trigger to override this in high-pressure situations
- Added a trigger for our driver to shut off the compressor regardless of pressure during pushing matches
- Added ramping to drivetrain which limited sudden accelerations and abrupt direction changes slightly
Did not trip the breaker after this. However, we do plan to use shifters in the future, or gear lower if the game does not call for the speeds we geared for this season.
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Had essentially this exact same experience with a 6CIM SS geared for that speed. Instead of the measures described here, though, we simply changed our gearing to ~11fps. No more breaker problems after that.
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Member, FRC Team 449: 2007-2010
Drive Mechanics Lead, FRC Team 449: 2009-2010
Alumnus/Technical Mentor, FRC Team 449: 2010-Present
Lead Technical Mentor, FRC Team 4464: 2012-2015
Technical Mentor, FRC Team 5830: 2015-2016
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