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#1
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Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
We are thinking of adding some drone lessons into our robotics curriculum for next year and starting to do our research. We are starting a robotics class within our school day and thought teaching STEM through drones would be an interesting approach to add to an FTC or VEX curriculum.
We are looking for anyone out there who is building them in a classroom setting or has any lessons available to share. Any suggestion, ideas, or thoughts are very welcome. Just thought I would ask the best source I know of for help. Thanks for all you do. |
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#2
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
What do you mean by drone?
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#3
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
Remotely controlled flying copters. .... Quadcopters
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#4
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
Bluejackets - if you are looking at building quadcopters in your robotics class, please PM me. Becker is looking at curriculum for our own robotics class and this came up in a recent discussion.
I know that you are going to be in Duluth next weekend - I will try to be there to meet up with you. Great to see C-I has a strong FRC team! |
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#5
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
I think they mean a monotonous musical note http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drone_%28music%29
But really, I'd assume quadcopters and hexacopter style drones. To get started and just gain a bit of experience why not pick up a Parrot AR Drone? Quite honestly you'd have a hard time building a reliable quadcopter for less money, and you can do a few hacks to this one to make it more programmable. http://dronehacks.com/ You might even want to include a unit on terminology and discuss how the term "drone" compares to the term "UAV" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unmanned_aerial_vehicle Both include fixed wing aircraft as well as rotary, and there is a lot of stuff you can do with the fixed wing planes as well. Personally I don't have a lot of experience with building rotary UAVs with students, but fixed wing aircraft can be reasonably priced. I did tethered electric airplanes with my junior students and radio controlled "foamies" with my seniors. Jason Jason |
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#6
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
We started an RC flyers club on campus, and are currently building a heavy lift hexicopter for our Video Productions class.
If I had it to do all over again I would have had them start much smaller, like a blackout, or one of the many arduino based quads...We also have a number of micro Hubsan x4s...$40 on amazon for training pilots. The hex has flown a few times...Suffered a major crash last week, (Got lost in the sun and flown into a tree and then fell onto a concrete walkway from about 40 feet up...)and due to lunar new years won't be fixed until late march, maybe April... I think part of my issue is with the fact that the kids were really working from scratch with very little support, and they didn't/weren't able to do their research properly which has led to some issues. Here is a link to the shopping list for the hex that we built. After the last crash we will have spent about 2K on the project through a grant. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1...it?usp=sharing Edoga |
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#7
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
If you are teaching best to get the terminology down for the students...
A drone can be any unmanned, remotely/autonomously guided vehicle, in the air on land on or under water. A UAV is always an airborne vehicle (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) A Quadcopter is a helicopter with 4 rotors. It might be unmanned, it might be manned So teaching DRONES would include air, land and water unmanned remotely/autonomously controlled vehicles... I think you are really talking about teaching "UAV Drones that are specifically unmanned Quadcopters." Last edited by Boltman : 22-02-2015 at 09:49. |
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#8
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
I love this idea, as I have been personally building both recreational and commercial (making money by filming for real estate) and I know it is a great way to learn and is also very fun. I would recommend giving www.hobbyking.com a look as they should have everything you need to get started, with very inexpensive parts that are quite good. I would highly recommend their KK2.1.5 board, which is very stable and only $30. Be sure to have the kids learn on a flight simulator first, as these things are not the easiest to fly without gps equipment which costs an awful amount of money. Also, there is a vast database of knowledge on forums like rcgroups.com and also on flitetest.com's articles, which have far more information than I could ever suggest on a CD post. Good luck, and above all, Happy Flying!
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#9
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
Sweet, this is an awesome idea. I have been trying to get somthing like this started. I have gotten to the point were i might be helping some people build some quad copters for hobby hobby/fun. But would lave to start a class or something.
What size/type are you planning on building? Are you planning on doing something with FPV or just line of sight flying? |
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#10
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
I am absolutely infatuated with quad copters, I own a Hubsan x4 and hopefully can upgrade to something along the lines of a DJI Phantom in the future. This would be a brilliant idea to implement in the classroom. Also, when pitching the curriculum to the school, I would recommend trying to avoid the word "drone" as it tends to have a negative connotation among those who are ill-informed of their multi-purpose and solely focus on their militaristic uses.
My strongest recommendation would be to buy one or two of the WL v911 single rotor helicopters because similar to most intermediate quad copters, it's 4 channels. (Throttle, Pitch, Roll, and Yaw) Also, the v911 is fairly durable in my experience, which means you can afford to have several mistakes. Hence, if you can master flying the v911, most if not all 4 channel quads should be an absolute breeze to handle. Moral of the story; start cheap and work your way up, my friend's uncle bought a 300 dollar quad (AR Drone) and flew it right into a lake ![]() |
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#11
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
I'm actually taking a seminar at the University of Minnesota this semester that involves building and modifying a quadcopter for a competition. It's run by the professor who runs the Community College Quadcopter Competition. We're using a Parallax ELEV-8 V2, which is a relatively high-grade DIY quadcopter. It's been very interesting and I've learned a lot, but there are quite a few kinks to work out, and I'd highly recommend that the teacher has experience troubleshooting wireless transmitters and standard electrical stuff (though this isn't as much of an issue if that teacher is also a FIRST mentor).
If you want to see what my class consists of, you can check out the course page here (apologies for the Aerospace department website still being stuck in the 90's). Feel free to email me if you'd like a student's perspective. In my opinion there's nothing we're doing (time or skill wise) that couldn't be done by high school students meeting in a daily or block class. Another thing: I'd highly recommend training the students with cheap "toy" quadcopters before letting them fly anything large. Also mandated rotor protection will save you a lot of pain. EDIT: It's come to my attention that the link to the course page isn't accessible to non-UMN students. If you'd like to see a syllabus or course schedule, PM me instead. Last edited by cadandcookies : 22-02-2015 at 22:12. |
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#12
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
Using model aircraft for commercial purposes is currently against FAA regulations. There are proposed regulations that just came out to allow commercial use, but those aren't approved yet.
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#13
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
Quote:
Disclaimer: this post is the result of my research. If i am wrong somebody please correct me. |
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#14
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
Quote:
http://www.faa.gov/news/updates/?newsId=76240 https://www.faa.gov/uas/faq/ The AMA only governs hobby aircraft. |
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#15
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Re: Teaching DRONES In a robotics class
Quote:
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