Quote:
Originally Posted by Just a Mom
We had bright yellow painted numbers on our bumpers because we had a nice mom who was happy to work with two students to do the numbering. The problem turned out to be that they were over 1/2 inch wide but not 3/4 inch wide. You also can't have two colors so we couldn't just make them wider with a sharpie. The mom felt so bad that she drove an hour to the school got the paint, drove an hour back and made the numbers bigger. Hope she still volunteers next year. I know the rules are clear but no one caught the mistake.
Another team put on numbers from the hardware store. They were black and white and really easy to read. You can't have two colors so they had to take the numbers off, cut off all the white and put the numbers back on. At least the numbers were black so they could make them wider with a sharpie. Without the contrast it was hard to see them on the blue but they met the rules.
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I thought some of the bumper rules were too strictly enforced this year. Yes, I know the rules are very specific, but some of the things that were being enforced provided no advantage to the team that goofed them. One rule that got us was having the bumper flush with the exterior vertex of the robot. We added a 2" x 2" x 1/8" reinforcing plate to the outside of the frame on the front corners of our robot (we cracked a gusset after a hard landing), and the polycarb attached to the frame also covered the plates. The inspector said that since the polycarb was spaced out another 1/8" over the plates that defined our exterior vertex, so as it was the bumpers needed to move out another 1/8". The solution was simple, we just cut the polycarb that was covering the plates, but it just seemed like such a nitpicky thing.