Quote:
Originally Posted by GeeTwo
The primary determining factor of the center of rotation is the center of gravity. Both traction and omni wheels tend to move the center of rotation towards their axles due to frictional forces as the wheels do not move along the floor at the same speed as they rotate. Having more friction, traction wheels do this better than omnis.
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You'll now have to explain from that why a robot with traction wheels only at one end and omnis everywhere else (at the other end only, or at the other end and in the middle) rotates around near the traction-wheel end, regardless of center of gravity location.
I've seen that phenomenon way too often. A good robot designer can put the center of rotation right where he/she wants it, for a variety of reasons (like aiming easily, or keeping a stack from moving as violently). One old trick is to put the omnis on opposite corners of the robot (494, 2006) to keep the center of rotation in the middle of the robot.
The short version is that the center of rotation will move towards the traction wheels and away from the omni wheels. The reason would be that the force resisting turning is now much smaller at that end (traction wheels have massive resistance to going sideways, particularly compared to omnis), so it will turn very very easily. This will put the majority of the force acting around a point that is in the middle of the forces generated by the traction wheels. Not all of it by any means, but enough of it.
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