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Re: what was the best shooting mechanism for 2016?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kevin Leonard
I've been thinking about this thread again, and I decided to analyze IRI this time as a sampling of the best teams in the world ought to produce the best shooters as well, right?
IRI had: - 26 Single Flywheel Shooters
- 21 Catapults
- 11 Double Flywheel Shooters
- 2 Linear Punches
- 9 Robots without a high goal shooter
- And 1619's shooter, which I'm not quite sure how to classify, but it used a lot of wheels. If someone from 1619 would comment, that would be cool.
Of those teams, in eliminations were 32 teams as follows: - 14 Single Flywheel Shooters
- 7 Catapults
- 4 Double Flywheel Shooters
- 2 Linear Punches
- 3 Robots with no high goal shooting
- 1619
*snip*
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Really interesting writeup. Could you post the lists of which teams use which shooting mechanisms? I'd like to take it one step further and see how far the various mechanisms made it in elims.
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2016-present, Mentor, FRC 2791 - Shaker Robotics
2016: Tech Valley SF (5236, 2791, 3624) and Quality Award, Finger Lakes SF (5254, 2791, 2383), Battlecry@WPI Winner (195, 2791, 501), Robot Rumble Winner (2791, 195, 6463)
2016-present, Mentor, FRC 1257 - Parallel Universe
2016: Mount Olive Winner (1257, 5624, 1676), Bridgewater-Raritan Finalist (1257, 25, 3340, 555) and Gracious Professionalism Award, MAR CMP Winner (225, 341, 1257), Archimedes SF (4003, 4564, 5842, 1257), IRI Invite
2012-2015, Student, FRC 1257 - Parallel Universe
2015: Mount Olive QF (1257, 1811, 1923) and Industrial Safety Award, North Brunswick Finalist (11, 193, 1257) and Team Spirit and Industrial Safety Awards
2014: Clifton Winner (1626, 869, 1257), MAR CMP QF (1257, 293, 303)
2013: TCNJ Industrial Safety Award
2012: Mount Olive QF (204, 303, 1257)
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