Quote:
Originally Posted by Ether
I claim the following happens:
- Up to a certain point, both robots push with exactly the same force. There is no 71% factor involved.
- If the motors are sufficiently powerful, a point will be reached where the wheels start to slip. RobotA, with the mecanum wheels, will reach this point before RobotB, with the standard wheels.
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Consider a wheel with rollers free to spin on the same axis as the main axle. It doesn't matter how grippy the material is for the rollers, these wheels can't apply a force no matter how hard they drive or how fast they spin.
Consider a wheel with rollers free to spin on an axis perpendicular to the main axle (traditional trick/omni wheels). It doesn't matter how hard they drive, they'll have the same coefficient of friction as wheels without the roller but made with the same material.
Mecanum wheels are in the middle - they spin on a 45.
If you take a mecanum wheel and spin it, you'll find that it pushes you on a 45. Its hard to describe the feel until you actually do it.
No matter which way the wheels spin, they're fighting each other.
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