Quote:
Originally Posted by NorviewsVeteran
-when figuring where to put the battery, remember to drop the uncovered contacts directly on the metal frame. TWICE.
seriously though, kick it away with your RUBBER SOLED SHOE
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I'll second this, but a little more general.
Design, Wire and Maintain your robot so that shorts are not probable. Electrical layout should be the responsibility of both the mechanical/design teams and the electrical teams. Don't ever get into the us vs. them mentality. If you're mechanical and don't go out of your way to make electrical easier, you can't complain when it fails.
Your wire runs should be clean, organized, labeled and easy to differentiate between wires. If you have a short, or a motor not working somewhere, etc... you want to spend as little time possible finding what wire is hooked to what.
Electrical failures suck, they can cripple a mechanically perfect robot, and can be difficult to fix and diagnose.
Same goes for the relationship between mechanical/design and programmers. Make it as easy as possible for them... You are the SAME team afterall