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#1
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As a new member, I am looking for a basic robot layout that has all of the major components physically laid out. For example if a robot is 3 "stories" tall what goes in each floor. I am not looking for someone to do my design work - just a starting point which can be "cobbled together" then modified for specific design traits. Picture galleries are nice but the pictures are too small and its difficult to see all of the components.
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#2
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Re: Basic Robot Layout
You need to be a little more specific. Are you looking for advice on electrical layout, mechanical or both? Are you asking about this year's FRC robot or robots in general?
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#3
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Re: Basic Robot Layout
Generally speaking the primary consideration for physical layout is center of gravity and stability. You want the robot to be as stable as possible, which means:
1. having the most massive components twords the center and the bottom (battery, motors drivetrain...) and 2. having your wheel base as wide as your design limitations allow. The electrical control system is usually in one location with power and control signals running where they need to go. Some people put the motor controllers right next to the motors, and others put them all in one spot and run the motor wires out from there. The actuators (arms, grippers...) are designed according to the functions they are required to perform, but the same general rule applies: try to keep the heavy parts low and towards the center of the robot. |
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#4
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Re: Basic Robot Layout
Quote:
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#5
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Re: Basic Robot Layout
Quote:
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#6
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Re: Basic Robot Layout
on a car 'wheel base' refers to the distance between the front and back wheels. Luke picked up on that. What I really meant is your wheels want to ALL be as far apart as possible.
Robots dont always have 4 wheels - they may have 2 or 6 or 1. A wide stance is what you want for stability. |
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#7
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Re: Basic Robot Layout
Oh ok, I just always referred to wheel base as how wide they are. But Yea Luke is right then.
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#8
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Re: Basic Robot Layout
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With this in mind, the Reader's Digest condensed version of our bot (yes, we're a 2nd year team with limited resources but I think the boilerplate will be pretty popular) is the following: the front of the robot gathers the balls, middle shoots for the ctr goal, and rear scores in the corners. Keys to the game we've found: speed, mobility, robustness, simplicity. |
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#9
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Re: Basic Robot Layout
Quote:
I am looking for physical layout of electrical components. There was a website which had the basic components laid out and by hovering the mouse they were identified. of course thanks to spyware i trashed my favorites and lost the site. ![]() |
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