Quote:
Originally Posted by EricH
There've been discussions on this in the past, and I have to say, the above incident types are serious and more common than you might think. 330 took a forklift tine through the front of the crate with the robot inside. The tine missed the robot by being at the level of the wood block used to secure the robot. This is through some aluminum sheet stock that isn't exactly foil...
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I worked for an overnight express company (Airborne Express, now defunct) for two years at night loading freight. I've seen things a lot more expensive and harder to repair/replace than a FRC bot run thru with a forklift, dropped, crushed, etc. Sometimes due to the incompetence of the people on the dock, sometimes due to the incompetence of the people that packed it.
All I can say is make sure the crate is solid, make sure the robot is fastened down securely inside (yes, I've heard stories of teams just putting the bot in the box...), and hope for the best. If you can afford it, insurance doesn't hurt.
We did all that last year, and still had half a dozen broken welds on the robot when we opened the crate in WI. One reason I hate welding on robots, that's tough to fix at the event.
In short, pack it well, and hope for the best. They go thru a lot of hands between the time they are picked up on ship day and when you see them again. Some spend a lot of miles in the back of a truck. Where they ride in that truck can make a big difference in the abuse they see.