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#16
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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#17
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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+1 FIRST is more than the robot... It's about the culture. Believe it or not, we're training the future workforce of the USA and the world. Working under tighter pressure to produce more with less, while maintaining a high quality standard is required for competition on a global scale. While I see the OP's point, I will disgree that Bag and Tag is unnecessary. First, I'd like to state that building a complete second robot isn't that expensive, especially if you're getting donated components. The initial higher cost in buying duplicate transmissions and a cRIO (which is dirt cheap at $525 loaded) will be less in future years if you end up reusing the COTS items. It's not a bag-it-and-forget-it competition. You're allowed to bring a weight-limited sum of parts (R21) to the competition to add to your robot, why stop at Bag and Tag? Watch webcasts of regionals, get inspired, come up with strategy refinements, and add to your robot. Life isn't fair. Overcome its challenges and learn. I guarantee you the most successful teams had a steep learning curve before they "got it". Understand your constraints and work within them. Learn what your team does well and capitalize on it. Over the last three years, my team has grown in expertise and skill tremendously. At the same time, we've had funding difficulties, but found ways to make it work. We have also made a firm decision to build two robots every year because that's what it takes for us to field a successful robot and a trained operator team. I don't see banning use of second robots or eliminating bag and tag to be of any use for this competition and it would only serve to spoil the experience for the tens of thousands of students and mentors. Last edited by protoserge : 21-02-2013 at 16:17. |
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#18
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
I doubt very many teams have the resources to build more than one robot. Many of the teams I know struggle to find the resources just to buy their kit of parts. Yes there will always be some teams with the money and resources to build two robots, but I expect they are the exception rather than the rule. And, even if they are not, I chose not to worry about what other teams do or do not have anyway.
Our team probably does not have much of a chance to win at nationals, or to even get there except on a luckiest of years when they take all the right gambles. But that is not important. The students have already achieved a lot and benefited from the entire process. Dealing with significant limitations in resources can be a important skill in itself. Going through various design concepts, prototyping, building, and debugging is just as valuable on a simple design that takes advantage of our teams unique strengths and resources, as it might have been on a more complex one that we did not have the resources to build. Our current robot is relatively modest, and needed to be because of budget and resource limitations. However, it is solid and well thought out. Our team is just as excited over our robot as any team I have seen, and has learned more than I could ever have expected. They will go to regionals and will be very proud of what they have accomplished, and they deserve to be. They have felt the fire of what science and technology at work can do and they are spreading the word at their school and community. With all that going on, who has time to count robots? |
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#19
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
"Once upon a time, there was a competition called the Fair Robotics Competition..." -Issac Rife, FRC #33
I think Bag and Tag could get dropped in the somewhat distant future based on a number of things (what if the whole country shifted to mostly Districts and required all district events to be held in the first 4 weeks of the season?), but for now let's put aside that. Yes, there are well funded and well staffed teams that do exist, and total disclaimer: a lot of the incredibly dedicated mentors alumni, and students of teams like that are regular and/or long-time users of this forum. There are also mentors, alumni, and students of teams that are historically understaffed and hyper-conscious of resource management to ensure long-term sustainability of their team(s). 422 is one of those teams, but they still managed to develop some kind of practice platform. The kids and mentors are just dedicated man. They find a way. The day after stop build day you think they would make contact with their families, significant others, maybe catch up on a TV show, but no. Everyone is blowing up my inbox and chat windows... and I love it. No amount of money or other tangible resource can replace the dedication of the team (but if any potential sponsors are reading I'd love to put a price tag on it for you! )I've seen teams with enough money after registration to buy half of a Little Caesar's Pizza find a way onto the field on Saturday afternoon. Android has an advantage over iOS. The Baltimore Ravens had an advantage over the 49ers. GM has an advantage over Tesla. 1114 has an advantage over 49xx. It's the way it is and the way it should be. Like IKE was trying to say in one of the dozen or so "practice bot morality" threads, FIRST isn't supposed to be fair. It's work. It is hard work. It is a 52 week a year commitment if you want to be the best and it's wrong to lower the ceiling of competition for any reason except safety or something equally crucial. And people forget that at the end of the day, it's just a game, man. When I have students that end up teaching me a few things every day, I've already won (as cheesy as it sounds). Besides, For Inspiration and Recognition of Winning and Fairness (FIRWF) doesn't really roll off the tongue. |
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#20
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
I've been thinking about this topic a lot recently. I have heard a lot of similar themes in discussing it with teams and mentors...
Leave the stop build date because... "We need the rest" "It ensures all teams have similar amounts of time to complete the competition robot" Remove the stop build because... "Teams build practice bots to get around it" "With 30 lbs of additional parts, almost anything can be brought to the competition" However, I have come to the realization that there is a much more compelling reason to eliminate stop build day...and it is at the core of FIRST's mission...Inspiration. Imagine the excitement that teams could build in their schools and local communities prior to a competition if they were actually allowed to demonstrate that robot BEFORE and DURING the competition season. Our teams need this ability to build a fan base and a following. We need students, parents and community partners outside of our teams to get excited about our robots before they get to competition so we have a way to get them to attend. Teams could show off their robots at prep rallies just before they head off to district or regional competitions just like all the athletic teams in the district. If we really want to be the "Varsity Sport for the Mind", we need to market ourselves like a varsity sport. I can think of no better time (and I have tried) to show off our robots than right before we head off to competition. With this simple change, our ability to inspire others would grow immensely. In my opinion, this benefit outweighs any of the possible downsides, because this is the true mission of FIRST. |
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#21
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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#22
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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I'm totally on board with doing what it takes to achieve your goals no matter what the circumstances. I work tirelessly and endlessly for my FLL and FRC teams. We have made incredible progress in the last several years and will continue to get better. We are blessed with resources to field 2 identical robots. Perhaps it came across differently, but there is absolutely no whining from this camp. We do what it takes to get the job done. I don't like rules that have loopholes rendering them ineffective to their original purpose. I'm relatively new to FRC and when I first heard about teams building practice robots I thought, really? It's certainly within the rules but honestly it felt like a little sidestep. Within the goals of inspiring students for science and technology I don't see stop build day as helpful. There is still a deadline... choose what week(s) you want it to happen. I like the idea of the districts where everyone has to attend a week 1-3 event. On the other hand, those that want to wait until week 6 to compete, great. In the end, removing the stop build day will not change the outcome of the regional or national events... the same teams will still be on top. It will simply provide more opportunity for kids to be inspired throughout the competition season at a lower cost for everyone. |
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#23
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
I would like to see the stop build day actually mean STOP BUILD!!! Let's forget about the extra 30 pounds of prefabricated parts and whatever you finish with on stop build is what you bring to competition. I assume there are 6 weeks of competitions because of the lack of competition fields available, not for a 12 week build season. I don't like the way you can continually improve your robot for 6 more weeks and then add the 30 pounds on competition Thursday.
It's just my opinion, Mr. B |
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#24
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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Also, I probably couldn't participate in any meaningful way as I can't really afford to absent myself from family life for more than a quarter of the year. |
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#25
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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#26
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
The bag and tag is not only necessary, it's insufficient. FIRST is growing fast that it can't wrap its arms around everything anymore. Bag and tag and 2 day events are designed to make things easier and cheaper, but sacrifices some integrity to the 6 week build season. With open bag hours, witholding allowances, transparent bags, second robots, and constant prototyping and discussion on CD, the build season just doesn't end unless your own team says it does.
Is this an issue of fairness? I don't know, but I think FIRST is experiencing some serious growing pains. |
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#27
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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A practice robot need not be a full robot. Have a kitbot from last year or anyother working drive base lying around? If you built a modular robot and wisely planned out your witholding allowance you have a fully usable practice bot that will get you plenty of mileage with your drivers. A practice robot is just another design constraint you add during design. It will cost you almost nothing but time and labor, IF YOU PLAN AHEAD! |
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#28
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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As FIRST has grown, teams have been looking at, expanding and using that gray area to play the game in new and exciting ways. But I think it's time for FIRST to take a long hard look at said area. A refinement of the bag and tag rules and perhaps even an official ruling on the practice robots are needed. |
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#29
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
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And for the people who are constantly going on about how "life isn't fair": That's not a reason to make it less fair if possible. |
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#30
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Re: Is Bag and Tag Necessary?
[CYNIC] As has been said, life isn't fair, so why should the competition be? [/CYNIC]
Having said that, let me relate a short story. I once worked for a machine design firm. We delivered a $300,000 machine to a customer on the deadline. We then spent 4 months integrating the machine into their environment. Is this any different from the Bag-And-Tag versus after situation? Not significantly. This is the first year 1370 has made a practice robot. It has taken us three years of work to gather up the spare electronics and wheels to do it, but we think it will be worth it. We used a donation of materials and another of services to get two "identical" frames cut and welded so that we could make both bots work. Unfortunately, we didn't get enough weldments made, but the 30 lb witholding is our friend. ![]() The short form is it's not really a cost issue, it's a resources and partnerships issue. We have a metals distributor that sells materials to us at really low prices. We have a mentor who used to teach welding at our school before anything similar to a vocational program got taken away. The total incremental cost for making twice as many frame pieces as strictly needed was a few additional hours of a mentor's time and a longer teaching opportunity for the students. If you have a local welding shop who could donate an employee for a few hours as a mentor, all of this could be yours, too. |
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