|
Re: Contrary to popular opinion..."wedge" robots are out
The motivation for Team 980's wedge last year was strictly to avoid being pushed around or rammed. We considered this to be a "defensive" feature on our robot.
In this thread, it seems some of the posts consider aggressive pushing or attacking other robots as defensive play. We did not use our wedge to gain advantage when pushing another robot. Our wedge was a "passive" form of protection to discourage other robots from pushing us when we had a tetra hanging from our extended arm - a vulnerable, top-heavy configuration for us.
In the Championships, we got DQ'd twice during the quarterfinals (but still won!), because we tipped opposing robots. In both cases, we made contact high on the other robots, causing them to fall. We didn't tip them with our wedge.
__________________
"There's never enough time to do it right, but always time to do it over."
2003 AZ: Semifinals, Motorola Quality; SoCal: Q-finals, Xerox Creativity; IRI: Q-finals
2004 AZ: Semifinals, GM Industrial Design; SoCal: Winners, Leadership in Controls; Championship: Galileo #2 seed, Q-finals; IRI: Champions
2005 AZ: #1 Seed, Xerox Creativity; SoCal: Finalist, RadioShack Controls; SVR: Winners, Delphi "Driving Tomorrow's Technologies"; Championship: Archimedes Semifinals; IRI: Finalist
2007 LA: Finalist; San Diego: Q-finals; CalGames: Finalist || 2008 San Diego: Q-finals; LA: Winners; CalGames: Finalist || 2009 LA: Semifinals; Las Vegas: Q-finals; IRI: #1 Seed, Finalist
2010 AZ: Motorola Quality; LA: Finalist || 2011 SD: Q-finals; LA: Q-finals || 2013 LA: Xerox Creativity, WFFA, Dean's List Finalist || 2014 IE: Q-finals, LA: Finalist, Dean's List Finalist
2016 Ventura: Q-finals, WFFA, Engineering Inspiration
|