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Re: Searching for sensors
Quote:
Originally Posted by Andrew Schreiber
I should have been more clear, I dont like them for sensing position of a system that has slip. My issue with them was that our drive system had this knack for accelerating quickly and the wheels slipped occasionally...
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I know this is a little off topic, but I still believe it is useful information.
We experienced the exact same issue last season. Our solution was to add a very simple function that would limit the acceleration/deceleration. It was tunable for each to allow for better response. This allowed for maximum acceleration without slippage. With a little tuning, it performed quite well. We were able position the robot during autonomous mode quite accurately.
The slipping issue would have been there as well if we used encoders instead of GTS's. The same solution will work for either sensor. The biggest issue with GTS's vs. encoders is that GTS's, in general, really do not give you direction. You need to derive that from some other source, like the drive signal (PWM) for instance.
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CalGames 2009 Autonomous Champion Award winner
Sacramento 2010 Creativity in Design winner, Sacramento 2010 Quarter finalist
2011 Sacramento Finalist, 2011 Madtown Engineering Inspiration Award.
2012 Sacramento Semi-Finals, 2012 Sacramento Innovation in Control Award, 2012 SVR Judges Award.
2012 CalGames Autonomous Challenge Award winner ($$$).
2014 2X Rockwell Automation: Innovation in Control Award (CVR and SAC). Curie Division Gracious Professionalism Award.
2014 Capital City Classic Winner AND Runner Up. Madtown Throwdown: Runner up.
2015 Innovation in Control Award, Sacramento.
2016 Chezy Champs Finalist, 2016 MTTD Finalist
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