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Unread 18-05-2007, 12:43
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Re: pic: Modular Test Bed Project

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hachiban VIII View Post
Seems good... But that looks like a lot of work for a prototype project.

Have you considered just making the frame out of 80/20 and mounting some sliding pillow-blocks on the grooves? Something like that would allow for nearly any combination of wheels/treads/meccanums, and would require significantly less work.

80/20 is really the way to go in terms of prototyping.
Well, I'm pretty confident of the team's ability to build a reliable drivetrain -- we've been doing it well for a few years now. Instead, what we're really prototyping are methods and processes for speeding along the production of the drive and making it as easy to assemble, repair and replace as possible. The 2007 drivetrain, ignoring shipping delays, was assembled in less than a week and this drivetrain, again assuming all material on hand, is designed to be fabricated and assembled in about 12 hours. I'm trying to bring that number down even lower.

Quote:
Originally Posted by AdamHeard View Post
Is the 5 wheel per side an example of it's modularity or is it an actual idea you guys had.

It's an interesting combination of traction wheels and omni's; I wonder what performance differences it has over what you've done the last two years... and If its worth the weight.


Hachiban; They seem to be designing this as a practice project so maybe they want it to be as similar to their build season as possible. I'm sure she'll fill us in soon though.
The 10WD was borne out of poking and prodding of some of the folks on our team. We're quite happy with our performance of our 2007 robot, obviously, but one of the regrets I have is that it was so slow. The extra pushing oomph helped us out, of course, but it might have been nice to be able to move faster. We're looking at two-speed gearboxes as the solution and thus needed to do something to put the available power from them to the carpet.

After toying with a 10WD chassis for awhile, we began to realize that it was certainly overkill for most circumstances -- and that's when the idea of modularity came up. I'm having some trouble making a two-speed transmission as small as I'd like while maintaining the ability to mount it to any wheel of any diameter, however.

In the end, we probably will build something a bit less elaborate than this. We're looking at a simpler 6WD arrangement, since that's what we're most likely to use in the future, and instead focusing a lot of our time on integrating feedback loops into the drive and other components so as to build a test platform for the software and electrical folks. That area needs more work than mechanical reliability does -- though that's not to say that they've done a bad job in the past, just that I haven't given them the time and tools they've needed.
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