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#1
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WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
After cadding up a 1/8" 6061 "WCD-style" belly pan, Inventor calculated its weight to be around 5.2 lbs. Would anybody consider this to be an accurate measurement? Assuming it has a diamond/cross hatch pattern similar to the ones displayed in this thread and encompasses the entire bottom part of the drive base.
Strictly in terms of weight, 5.2 lbs is around a pound lighter than the 1/4" unpocketed polycarbonate sheet that we used this year and had no problems with. Last edited by Chickenonastick : 21-04-2012 at 15:39. |
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
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#3
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
What our team has used for the last few years is a type of plastic extrusion called veralite it's really light, but if you mount it so that the grain of the plastic cells is right for the load, it can be way more rigid than polycarbonate sheets. for example, out bellypan this year for our WCD was about .3 pounds. it's also easy to drill holes in for zipties and other wire routing hardware.
Last edited by Borobo : 21-04-2012 at 15:56. |
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
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#5
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
Also, remember that a belly pan the one of the closest things to the ground on any robot. This helps lower you CG, which is really important in most games, and very important on any 6 wd bot. Furthermore, with lightening, it allows you secure attachment of electronics, and stiffens the whole frame. Therefor, it is worth the weight to invest in a bellypan.
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#6
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
i havent seen a west coast drive bot with this but i'd think polygal would work a bottom pan.
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#7
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
Our belly pan this year on our 2012 robot is ~2.5 lbs. We could've made it a little lighter. We added/left material where we thought we would need it for mounts/stingers in the feature.
-RC |
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#8
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
What material is it?
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
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#11
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
We went with wood after our aluminum bellypan (much like the one shown above) turned out to be about 5 pounds, which put us overweight. The wood performed great and was much lighter than the metal after we gave a freshman a two inch hole saw. In the end it weighed between 2-3 pounds.
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#12
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
This has come up many times in the past and I always respond with make a composite belly pan. From a mentors view making the belly pan - electronics board from composites is an excellent way to introduce students to the mystical world of composite construction. What our team does is take a 1/4 " , 4mm or 6mm piece of birch ply wood and laminate both sides with 5.7 OZ plain weave carbon fiber using vacuum bagging methods. It's not that hard and is doable by most teams. 11 of our student got hands on experience this year. All though keeping the students focused and neat, not making a gooey mess can be quite mentally draining. The end product is a wonderful material. I can provide some link if needed or search youtube, there are some good videos on it.
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#13
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
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But you're right, 1/8 acts to stiffen the frame much more than 1/16 does, for us it's just a matter of what resources are most readily available. |
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#14
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
Wow, our cheesing patterns must be very different then...
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#15
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Re: WCD-Style Belly Pan Weight
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I'll take a look at it for ya! -RC |
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