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#1
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Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
I have worked on an inertia navigation system for aircraft (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inertial_navigation_system) and was thinking of how to do something similar on the cheap. Last year I was able to see how different teams located themselves on the field for autonomous systems. Some worked well and others, eh...
So I am curious if anyone has ever tried using one or more laser computer mice to replicate an INS system. As long as my tolerance is over 12 inches in the x and y it should work great. In fact if I put two or three on their and was really picky about my starting position I bet it could hold a tolerance of less than a few inches. It’s cheap, the drivers exist and it does not rely on any external references. Any thoughts? |
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#2
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
I know team 972 tried this before they merged with our team in 2008. IIRC, they used just a mechanical mouse, where they had the ball running against the ground. I don't think they had all too much success, but it looked fairly promising. I think with laser mice, you will run into a similar problem of having to have it very close to the ground. This could have been a problem for the last two years (bumps + lip by goal for Breakaway, and lip by poles for Logomotion).
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#3
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
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Good to know though. Thanks |
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#4
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
A few teams used a follower-wheel system in 2009, using unpowered omni wheels attached to encoders or something similar.
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#5
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
This has been my pet project for a while. As long as your robot pivots around a single point and doesnt strafe, then a follower wheel and a high accuracy gyro should be able to integrate for position. Alternatively if you can find a high speed trackball (over 15fps, which I have so far been unable to do), you could use that and strafing wouldn't be an issue.
If you are really interested in using a laser mouse, i would suggest looking up the razor gaming mouse (as it is the only one that i know is fast enough), then milling it a plastic mount with rounded edges to get over bumps, and spiring tensioning the mount against the ground. |
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#6
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
(Laser mice don't actually use lasers. And in 2011 "lasers" were not allowed. FWIW.)
Anyway, if this were combined with some distance sensors (I'm thinking ultrasonic) you should be able to recalibrate your position from time to time, when conditions are 'right'. Add odometry and a 2-axis accelerometer and you might be onto something... |
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#7
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
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Mice don't work on an inertial principle. What kind of drivetrain would you be using? |
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#8
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
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EDIT: would laser mice be allowed in the 2011 rules? |
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#9
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
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I know team 51 had some kind of location on their drivers station in 2010. I'm not sure why they used it, but it worked pretty well. |
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#10
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
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BTW, a number of teams use accelerometers without any problems. Gravity is either accounted for or ignored, but the accelerometers are reasonable in cost and complexity. |
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#11
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
This idea has been thrown around for years, in FIRST and elsewhere. I don't think anyone has really solved the problem of carpet providing a poor surface for taking measurements. I believe there were a few optical mouse systems in 2009, when the fibreglass panels were being used as a floor surface.
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The laser rules have been a bit of a mess in the past, but the general trend has been to prohibit them if exposed. ("Exposed" is ambiguous—exposed to what, when, and on purpose?) |
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#12
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
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Edit: This is what I mean by being 1 processor cycle behind. To integrate, you basically have to use Reimann sums in this case. For best accuracy, you'd want trapezoidal sums, so for 1 position value, you need 2 velocity values, so 3 acceleration values. This means you'd have to integrate acceleration for 2 cycles to get the two velocity values required for a single position value, putting you 1 cycle behind realtime. Last edited by rahilm : 31-07-2011 at 17:53. |
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#13
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
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#14
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
I meant replicate the functionality of an INS system. Instead of using gyros and accelerometers and an initial location, i use an initial coordinate and a set of x y inputs from a mouse.
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#15
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Re: Has anyone ever used a Computer Mouse to locate themselves on the field
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