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#1
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"Out of the box designs"
Ever thought of some wacky, strange idea for tackling last (or any) year's game? Some weird robot design idea that is too stupid to build, but would be hilarious to see? Share it here. I will start:
For Ultimate Ascent I though of an defensive bot. I would call it Fan-Bot. Here is the idea: Create a robot with a base as long and thin as allowable (48"x8" I think). Put a minimal drive-train on it (maybe 4 miniCIMs), and enough support to keep it from tipping over (deploy-able training wheels?). Powered by a every CIM you have (and maybe more) you have a huge fan with a diameter similar to the robot's length (roughly 46"). Gear it to achieve maximum rpm (pushing air requires a lot of torque), and shape it to get maximum fan-out. Direct the wind upwards via a polycarbonate wall into narrow, wide, high velocity stream that points straight up. Park under the opponents goal, using the travel time and autonomous to "spool up" the fan. Blow every disk shot over the 'bot upwards, sliding from left to right along the alliance wall to block a 2 point or 3 point goal. If the stream is fast enough, the updraft would easily reroute most robot's disks into the wall above the goal, due to the aerodynamic properties of a Frisbee. Your turn! |
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#2
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
Though not as powerful as you might like, check out 869's robot from 2013.
http://www.thebluealliance.com/match/2013mrcmp_qm86 |
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#3
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
From my former team: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...d.php?t=111559
First comment actually guessed it pretty much exactily right. |
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#4
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
This year we had a crazy idea of doing a "Momentum Climb" We would just have a drivebase that was very fast and powerful with a hook on the top and bottom of the robot. Towards the end of the match we would drive strait at the pyramid hook and swing on then the lower hook would grab the second bar and swing us to the top hook.
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#5
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
See this thread. That is all I will say for now.
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#7
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
The robot height rule applies only during the duration of the match, so right as the match ends, have a pneumatic cylinder pull a pin that releases a really tall arm that dumps four colored discs in the top of you pyramid goal.
Would this actually be legal? If it is, then you get 2/3 of a thirty point climb with almost no effort (compared to building a climber) |
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#8
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
Quote:
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#9
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
a 2 pin system would work then. 1 gets automatically pulled 10 seconds before the match ends by code(double solenoid so there is no default). The other one would be the single solenoid one that get's pulled right after the game ends
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#10
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
Quote:
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#11
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
Quote:
First, the definition of scored requires the disc to be in the goal at the end of the match, which is elsewhere to be defined as when the clock hits 0 +5 seconds for stuff to stop moving. Second, never does mean never. I'm going to argue that your "when the match ends" includes the +5 second stoppage time if I lose the match, and certainly violates the "never" in R03-C. I'll also call for a disable (G05) and an alliance DQ for a robot that was illegal (T06). And I'll request that T07 be invoked to keep you off the field until such device was taken off. Now, if you wanted to do something similar, try modding your disc shooter so that it can also drain shots into the pyramid goals with a special speed or angle or both. I think someone actually did this. You could also try doing something that slams up to 83" and tries to push all the discs out in a nice arc on stopping, but I think that would be harder. |
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#12
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
Quote:
It looks like climbing is the only thing that gets the extra five seconds, not discs. |
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#13
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
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You're right about not getting a foul for being too tall. The penalty for violating a robot rule is a disable (for this situation, not an issue) and/or a red card (to the alliance!) depending on whether or not you didn't pass inspection and/or shouldn't have passed inspection. No point penalty--but a DQ hurts you worse than most point penalties. Now, here's where I think we differ: The robot rules say "never" over 84". Not the match rules, the robot rules--which apply at inspection AND during a match (and if you're breaking them elsewhere, like right after the match, the inspectors will be looking for you to show that you cannot break them on the field--oops, too late). If you break the robot rules in a match, the least you can expect is a disable; if it's something that should have been illegal by inspection, and you're on the field, red card to the alliance. If some folks wanted to get really persnickety, you triggered the action to go over 84" during the match (and THAT you can't argue--you released the pin before the timer hit zero) and thus attempted to go over 84" during the match, and thus attempted to violate the rule during the match--you just happened to complete it during the "come to rest" time. (Not to mention any accidental deploys.) It's a thin defense that you didn't actually complete it. (I think most refs would call you on it--and the head ref's ruling is final.) Of course, now that you've mentioned it... anyone want to take a stab at how the GDC might manage rule something like this illegal next year, using either existing or new rules? Anyways, I don't know about y'all, but I wouldn't take the risk of no points for myself and my alliance partners if the loophole doesn't actually exist. (Now, utilizing other systems on the robot to target the pyramid goal and drop a couple of shots up there without climbing, that's another story--because I don't come close to breaking any rules.) |
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#14
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
It's interesting because this is what I initially believed too:
"A DISC is considered SCORED in an ALLIANCE’S GOAL if any part of the DISC has crossed through the opening of the GOAL, is in the GOAL at the end of the MATCH, and is not in contact with any ROBOT from that ALLIANCE." -3.1.5.1 For a disk to be scored it HAS to be in the goal at the end of the match. This is interesting wording because it is extremely hard to judge this. In addition scoring was always confirmed based on disk in the goal even after the match ended. As far as I know the scoring system all season did not match the rule. |
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#15
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Re: "Out of the box designs"
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