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#76
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
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#77
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
Because the rule says: "BUMPERS must be constructed as follows," and then lists a very limited set of very specific things. There's nothing there about "optional metal backing." Also note that the optional metal angle is required to be aluminum.
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#78
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
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You are an 8th year veteran mentor on an 8th year veteran team. I am quite sure that your students can handle pit duties quite well without you hovering over them... Volunteer to be an inspector. Your knowledge and insight will be valuable to the community (especially the rookie teams). Bottom line: You can be part of the solution if you choose to be... How's this for a suggestion: <Soapbox> Every team with greater than 3 years experience donates a mentor on Thursday to help with the inspection process. If you are not a technical wizard, OK. You don't need a Masters in engineering to weigh a robot or measure a set of bumpers. Think of a 60 team regional with 40 or 50 inspectors. Waiting would be negligable and rookies would receive undivided, top-shelf support. And when the inspectors return to their teams, they take that experience back with them (even veterans can learn)... </Soapbox> Regards, Mike |
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#79
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
Bumper question for Al and the rest of the inspection community:
When creating the "rigid fastening system" specified in R24-E with brackets, would you be required to use smaller connection brackets like Andy sells here, or could you have one continuous piece of attachment material stretching across the frame? I am seeing questions about metal backing on bumpers, and I was curious how inspectors would determine legality if the "rigid attachment system" was a continuous bracket running along the frame for 17+ inches. |
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#80
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
The bumpers are weight limited to 20lb. With this years smaller frame perimeter that still leaves a lot for a "robust" connection. At some point though I would think it would become a flag to see what other rules you are pushing the limits to.
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#81
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
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Those playing the home game can check out the full manual here: http://frc-manual.usfirst.org/viewItem/181 Do a ctrl-F for "4.1.6" and read from there Check out R24E: Quote:
So it seems to me that as long as this fastening system fulfills all the other rules regarding bumper construction (the big ones being overall weight, and protrusion distance beyond the robot frame) then teams are allowed to do quite a bit creatively. If you think back a few years, this fastening system was much more defined. The GDC (I believe) intentionally opened up the rules a bit, not only to make the rules simpler, but also to allow teams more room to do whatever attachment methods they want. As long as the bumpers weigh less than 20 lbs, are rigid enough to survive competition, follow the construction rules which heavily define the outside face of the bumpers and don't have attachment (hard) parts that stick out too far -- does it matter what the construction is? -John Last edited by JVN : 21-03-2013 at 11:14. |
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#82
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
Not quite. You can take off exactly 3.00 lbs of one mechanism and replace it with 3.00 lbs of a different mechanism.
I have also seen robots that have had exactly no physical changes made (except for code revisions) weigh anywhere between 0.1 and 0.4 lbs different between events. |
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#83
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
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#84
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
To address people's concerns about bumper legality during matches,
During eliminations, we had at least the lead robot inspector behind the field with the volunteers ready to re-inspect any robots as well as make sure they were compliant during the match. Some times, the head ref would catch something that we couldn't necessarily catch during inspection (for example, one robot was tearing up the field due to its pick-up mechanism) and ask us inspectors to rectify it or at least investigate it before the team took their robot off the field. I myself was behind the field with the rest of the volunteers quickly making sure there wasn't any obvious flaws that teams missed as an inspector (bumper fabric dragging on the ground, new mechanisms that hadn't been inspected, etc.) A lot of teams had made changes during eliminations to add a new mechanism and those had to be re-inspected quickly before their next elimination match. Moral of the story: feel free to make changes to your robot, just make sure that they're compliant and then please find an inspector well before your next match starts so we can re-inspect it |
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#85
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
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But in any case, that's not a paraphrase; that's a direct quote, except for adding emphasis to "must". I'd hope that anyone that's concerned about this particular debate has a copy of the rules at his or her fingertips and could read the parts I didn't include.The question I was answering was "how can you exclude metal backing?" Having the rule written the way it is allows a logical way to do that, and that's all I was trying to say. Quote:
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#86
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
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#87
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
I would rather think it's just the scales being calibrated differently/error within the scales.
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#88
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
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What he's not saying is that those materials are inherently prohibited in all possible bumper applications. Teams use enormous aluminum angle to add weight. Teams use heavy fasteners and brackets to add weight. There is no rule against adding weight, and if teams comply with all the other rules, it's legal. |
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#89
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
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The undefined rigid fastening system can be a heavy, rigid fastening system, as long as no other rules are violated. I'm not clear if Al is saying something different. I'm also curious if there is an official interpretation other than Al on the forum. I saw someone submitted a Q&A which touches on the subject. -John |
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#90
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Re: Al's Annual Inspection Thread 2013
At the Championship in St. Louis last year, it wasn't unusual to see a robot weight change by several tenths of a pound based on how people were standing around it. I think the air movement in the convention center was strong enough to put noticeable force on the scale when it came from directly above.
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