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#1
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Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
At the Buckeye Regional this weekend, it seemed that many of the teams believed that hanging was fairly unimportant, and thus were told not to hang on multiple occasions (in most cases, we did anyways). It is my opinion that hanging is an entirely situational decision as are many tactical decisions on the field.
As an example, if you are playing in the near zone and there are zero balls in said zone at the last 20 seconds, it may or may not be worth it to go ahead and elevate to get those two points. In another case, the middle zone has mostly been a dead zone in most of the matches I watched. As such, there doesn't seem to be much of a loss (and pretty good gains) if the middle bot elevates, even if it takes 20 seconds to do so. Most alliances that I saw could not consistently take two balls from the middle and score them within 20 seconds even if there was no robot in the center. On the flip side, if you are in the near zone, and somehow all twelve balls are there, you should probably just score them. Also, if you are defending and there are many balls there, it would be wise to stay. I will admit that this is a somewhat selfish post because my team's robot does hang. However, it seemed as if the teams thought of us as just a hanging robot, when in reality we did so much more than that. While I would not pick a robot solely based on its ability to hang, I believe that said ability in combination with a respectable ability to perform another task is a powerful asset to most alliances. |
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#2
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
Pretty simple for me. At time XYZ, can you score 3 points (or stop 3)? If not, hang.
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#3
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
I agree, I the Finals in Troy it was more benifitial to stay and play defense in the far zone (where we were all match) then to go and hang for 2.
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#4
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
If you are attending CMP, you better believe that getting elevated/hanging bonus points will be important.
It will determine quite a few matches, ESPECIALLY in eliminations. AND, you will see at least one team in almost every match do it. |
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#5
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
Something interesting to bring up. At the SBPLI Regional none of the 6 robots in the finals could hang or elevate themselves.
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#6
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
Identical situation at Buckeye if I remember correctly, although not true at the Boilermaker Regional. Honestly though, at Buckeye, there were very few robots that could hang that were really any good for anything else.
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#7
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
One thing that i noticed in Boston is that in finals (especially when double teamed) we were blocking a lot of shots, easily more than two in the last 20 seconds. And because we were in the defensive zone we would have had to leave the zone before the last 20 seconds to avoid contact with the other alliance if they tried to hang.
~DK |
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#8
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
Quote:
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#9
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
How did they do that while remaining elevated?
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#10
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
I would say that being able to elevate is a worth while mechanism if the robot can not easily make up the 2 points of elevation. At Traverse City BOB could have possibly made it into finals if we had a working arm. We lost the deciding match of semi finals by 2 so it is debatable if we could've actually won in 4th round of semi final match.
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#11
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
Our drivers couldn't see if they where completely clear or if there would be contact. They where too afraid of making contact in some way and damaging ourselves sine our electronics are mounted pretty close to out top.
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#12
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
In Ann Arbor finals match 3, our two points via hanging won us the Regional, and sent us off to the Michigan State competition.
I believe the first time 1448 and 1328 hang together the final score of the match was 5-5... so they tied the match just via that.' So, yes, IMHO hanging will be what separates good teams from great. Teams that can have others suspend off of them (Us and 1448 as far as I know) will be in great demand once they can do that consistently. One of the teams in the final game will probably have a team that can suspend someone else on the team, and that will be why they have gotten that far. |
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#13
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
Quote:
). While 846 did hang successfully, I was told by our human player and another alliance member that our opponents used the opening to score 6 shots. Final score: 13 to 10, them. If robots on your alliance are going to hang, they should not be playing goalie. They should be in the front or neutral zones. |
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#14
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
I've had a slightly different experience than you have, it seems. At the regionals I attended, scores did increase overall, but usually not as significantly has you have described (except when say, an opposing alliance's defense bot was dead then entire match). As for usefulness in eliminations, it varies. I saw a few matches at Boilermaker in which 2081 hanging decided the match. Also, as a side effect of hanging, if the opponents play defense too aggressively, they may get a penalty (or in the case of Finals match 1 at BMR, a red card).
Under the assumption of a constant rate of scoring, 20 seconds for 2 points is actually fairly efficient if you actually only take 20 seconds since you get what is usually more than 1/6 of the total score for you alliance in 1/6 of the time. |
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#15
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Re: Opinions: The importance of elevation/suspension
Hanging is situational, but can be critical. In a close game, one (or two!) hanging robots makes the difference between a win and a loss, and especially given that close win/losses garner a lot of QPs, it's very important.
Two otherwise-equally matched teams play in an elimination match. One has good hangers, the other does not. Who wins? ------------------- We built our robot as a strong mid-fielder -- one that can consistently and effectively funnel balls from the midfield into our alliance's scoring zone. If left alone, we did that very well, and won by a lot. If defended against, we tied up all of the balls in the middle most of the game, keeping the score rather low, and then hung to win -- and thus won by a little. This usually worked. It would not be a valid strategy if we were not a consistent hanger. ------------------ So that's the answer to your question: the importance of elevation depends on how you built your robot to win games. |
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