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#1
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Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
Team 1114 is proud to release our engineering notebooks from the past two seasons. You may have seen hard copies of the documents in our pits at Championships, and now we've put them online for everyone to see:
Simbot Evolution - Engineering Notebook Simbot B.A. Baracus - Engineering Notebook These documents provide specific details on our various mechanisms and subsystems, as well as some insight into the prototyping and development process that lead to the final versions. They serve as a natural complement to our recently released CAD archives. If you have questions about these notebooks, you can post them here, or you can contact our team using the form at http://www.simbotics.org/about/contact |
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#2
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
What paint-on urethane did you guys use for the intake roller? Did it ever have to be reapplied?
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#3
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
Quote:
We used the 50A. The rollers were replaced at various points in the season, but not necessarily because of wear. One of our pit crew members can probably give a better response, but in general we've had very little issue with wear when it comes to the paint on urethane. |
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#4
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
All this love for the mechanical side of things. No code for us programmers?
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#5
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
Or a good picture inside to see the electronics?
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#6
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
I'm with him... We are hungry for inside details...
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#7
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
Thanks for posting, especially the 2013 notebook. Your climber absolutely astounded me when I first saw it, it was such an out of the box solution to such a difficult engineering challenge.
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#8
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
NEMO here looking for insights on how you create the notebook, not the robot
--How do you capture the details during build season - frequency of updates, form (google drive, evernote, paper and pencil) --Who is responsible for capture during season --Who does the post production --Etc. It's a thing of beauty, and the robots are too. |
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#9
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
Awesome stuff, thanks for posting this! There's a ton of useful info in these!
DP |
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#10
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
The notebooks contain some specific details we used to program the robot. Such as how controlled the claw and how our auto is/was ran (hot goal).
Also we do specify what type of sensors are used for controlling the robot. Like what we used to control the position of the claw. Showing a picture of an "electronics board" would be difficult. At least for this year, the electronics weren't designated to a board, theres some of them on the belly pan, some on the back of the super structure of the claw, and in other parts of the robot. We put them where they are accessible and where there is room for them. It's not messy though, we make sure the students learn and understand how to properly wire and organize the wires to keep it all neat. However it's not like we put the Crio in the very front and the side car on the top of the claw. It's organized in a logical way. Edit: Another thing we do is try to keep the wires for the electrical as short as possible to improve efficiency. The shorter the wire the less resistance there is in it, making the robot more efficient. For example, we kept most of the VEX Pro Victor 888's on the super structure for the claw, close to the drive motors, and close to the claw motors. That way we would be more efficient while driving, moving the claw, and while shooting. Last edited by akoscielski3 : 24-07-2014 at 12:07. Reason: adding information |
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#11
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
Quote:
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#12
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
Care to comment on the effectiveness of the drop down omni wheels in negating the T-bone defense? Did the drivers actually use them? Were they worth the trouble?
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#13
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
Quote:
At the end of build season, our robot was about 10lbs underweight, so we added some steel blocks to the base plate to help lower our CoG and bring us up to 120lbs. The goalie stick weighed about 5lbs, so we took out some of the steel blocks when we added it. Quote:
Unfortunately our robot's CoG ended up being toward the back, meaning that most of the weight was on the omni wheels instead of our traction wheels, which meant we didn't have much traction when trying to spin out of a t-bone. As a result, that weren't very effective for us, and we rarely used them. I believe there is potential for them to be more effective, so we may try to use them again in the future. |
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#14
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
How much weight do you have in gearboxes? And how much does your robot weigh now after competition with you arm for blocking and everything else you added?
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#15
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Re: Team 1114: Engineering Notebooks
every year you guys impress me I always try to think what would simbotics do unfortunately our solution aren't always the same
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