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#1
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Boulder inconsistency issue
Throughout most of build season we tested with only one boulder and tuned everything based off that one boulder, but as soon as we got a new one we noticed that it shot completely differently. We resolved to simply be a low goal shooter for our first regional, but now I want to look at the high goal again. I was thinking of increasing the compression (we're at 1.5" IIRC), but we were using bags for most of our testing and more compression would stall the motors on intake. Since switching to 775pros, we have not tried more compression. Does anyone have any other suggestions?
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#2
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
Gearbox? I think we're running 30:1s (don't quote me on that) on single bag motors with a ton of compression and we have no pickup issues at all
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#3
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
We're running them with versaplanetaries 1:1 just for the ease of mounting. Are you shooting in the high goal with that much reduction?
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#4
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
Just for reference, two 775Pros at 3:1 reduction is more than enough to make high goal shots. Tuning your compression, ball feeding, and geometry is often the harder problem. A lot of teams are doing well with 3 inches of compression.
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#5
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
I don't think we have any 3:1 stages. Would a 775pro with a CIM-ile on each side work?
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#6
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
Try it. Welcome to prototyping.
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#7
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
We had some luck using mini CIMs. I think you'll have the ball inconsistence issue regard less of which motor you're using. I know a used ball have a different trajectory compare to a brand new ball. I think you really need to take some time to find the sweet spot for your shooter. Don't go for the long shot. Dial in your shot at the base of the castle, that should give you a few more points per cycle. Good luck prototyping and enjoy the process.
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#8
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
Thats what 4592 is running. we found 2 inches of compression was enough to shoot high goals from the low bar although I would not be surprised if 3-4 inches of compression would be more ideal. We currently run 3 4x7/8 colson wheels per side at 3370 RPM for most ranges. Also, the mechanism pushing the ball into the shooter wheels had a large effect on accuracy. Switching from pushing the ball by hand to a pneumatic indexer altered our RPM by about 200 to get the same shot.
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#9
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
there's still time to join #TeamPneumatapult
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#10
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
#TeamPneumatapult for life.
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#11
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
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#12
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
Quote:
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#13
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
The short version:
If you look at a wheeled shooter as a simple ideal system, the only things that really come into play are: 1. Shooter moment of inertia. 2. Normal force on the ball. 3. Shooter wrap. The first matters because the ball is generally in contact with the wheels for such a short period that the motor and control system really can't react to it. By the time your system sees a decrease in velocity and tries to account for it by increasing motor power, the ball is gone. That's why some teams use heavy shooter wheels or add flywheels. The second item matters because the only thing that moves the ball is the wheel-to-ball friction. As the balls get more used, they become much softer. This decreases normal force on the ball, and decreases the friction force that moves the ball. You need to have enough force on the ball that the ball surface speed matches the wheel speed before it leaves the shooter. I.e. - wheel slip on the ball is bad because it will result in inconsistent distances. This was an important lesson that came out of 2012. Shooter wrap matters because the longer the ball is in contact with the wheels, the more time it has to accelerate to the same speed as the wheels. 60 degrees versus 120 degrees may not seem like much visibly, but it is substantially more time that the wheels have to accelerate the ball so they arrive at the same speed. This was a lesson we learned from 2013. In-line small wheel shooters needed multiple wheels to match what a wrap-around single wheel shooter could do. This was actually a combination of all 3 of the issues listed above, but testing proved that wrap greatly helped on the slippery frisbee surface. Use your old ball, and tune your shooter. Then put a new ball through it. The new ball will fly much further because it will be less squishy and have more normal force (more friction). Start increasing your compression. Eventually you will reach the cross-over point where the two are shooting the same. Of course - there are a couple additional points. It takes some brute force to do this. Either a high initial RPM, a flywheel, shooter power, or all three. Consistently introducing the ball to the shooter in the same place each time is important. Last edited by Tom Line : 30-03-2016 at 01:01. |
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#14
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
Our shooter sees little to none or no variation between brand new and used balls. All shoot just as easily and are very accurate. The consistent shot has made our robot very competitive. The ball will alsways go in the same place 97% of the time and even when it does very it's only off by a few inches at most. We are using 2 775 pros for our shooter with 2 sets of 4 inch wheels. We are likely adding another 775 pro to aid in intake and make spin up time faster.
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#15
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Re: Boulder inconsistency issue
We ran into a similar issue. The boulders on the field were significantly firmer than the ones we got in the KOP even before they were used.
Our shooter's holding mechanism relies on compression and stall torque. The main flywheels create such a strong vacuum when they spin up that they physically suck the boulder out the intake unless we run the intake in reverse, stalling the motor to hold the boulder in place. Because the boulders were much, much firmer, the MiniCIM direct couple that is our intake was not strong enough to hold the boulder in place, causing the shots to fire prematurely before the wheels got up to speed, resulting in poor shots. In our case, it was a fairly easy fix. We adjusted the spacing on the intake's wheels to be further out, reaching further on the circumference of the boulder and therefore not causing as much compression, allowing us to stall the boulder into place. Image for reference |
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