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Unread 05-03-2008, 16:14
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Syncopation Syncopation is offline
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FRC #0932 (Memorial Circuit Chargers)
Team Role: Programmer
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Rookie Year: 2006
Location: Tulsa, OK
Posts: 34
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Re: pic: Beachbot 2008

Amazing design and execution guys - I've seen what you've done in the past, and you might have even outclassed yourselves. Awesome robot, hope you do well!

One question (and this was the main problem for a number of robots at week 1 regionals - or maybe just St. Louis), but from the video, it looks like when you hit the overpass with the arm and let go of the trackball with the hand, you're in a position to be "clotheslined". Any ideas on avoiding this?

217 (the ever-powerful ThunderChickens) impressed everyone with their "slam dunks": they (from what I saw) could disengage their arm so that the force from hitting the overpass flipped the arm backwards so they could drive under the overpass safely (a dog gear or something like that was my guess - never got the chance to ask them myself). Probably not much help for you, since it doesn't look like you guys can rotate the arm past vertical to the back, but just a thought. Might want to watch out for that.

Anyway, you guys have a great design (I never would have thought of two arms organized like that) and best of luck to you in your regionals and championship!

[I apologize for the novel here, just a thoughtdump more than anything.]
__________________
Team 932:
2008 Oklahoma City Xerox Creativity Award
2008 Oklahoma City Autodesk Visualization Award
2008 St. Louis Chairman's Award winner
Home of the 2008 St. Louis Woodie Flowers mentor
2007 Kansas City Engineering Inspiration winner
2006 Lone Star Regional Finalist alliance member

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A mathmatician, a physicist, and an engineer were all given a red rubber ball and told to find the volume.
The mathmatician carefully measured the diameter and evaluated a triple integral.
The physicist filled a beaker with water, put the ball in the water, and measured the total displacement.
The engineer looked up the model and serial numbers in his red-rubber-ball table.
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