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| View Poll Results: Do you think adding new mechanisms after the fact like this should be allowed? | |||
| yes |
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204 | 94.88% |
| no |
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11 | 5.12% |
| Voters: 215. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#31
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
Teams are allowed to make changes... otherwise you would have a lot more teams with issues than the few that have added blockers during the competition.
Further, any inspection supersedes any previous inspection. If a team builds a blocker to add to their robot on Friday, they are no longer legal, until they get reinspected. At the point of that reinspection, all mechanisms that are and were a part of that robot are required to be present. If you're sitting right at 120lbs, you can't remove a 30lb shooter in order to add a 10lb blocker - both the shooter and the blocker would be included as part of the overall weight. However, if you were under 120lbs, and could add the shooter without taking anything off, how is this different (from the point of view of the rules) from a team modifying their shooter to make it more accurate? The rules don't say anything about robot capabilities, or intended use of mechanisms, or anything like that. In my mind, the grey area here is when a team is right at the weight limit and makes a change that includes removing something and adding something else. What happens when the team disassembles the old mechanism and uses the parts to construct the new one? Is this a swappable mechanism at this point, or is this a permanent change? What happens if a team spends an hour swiss-cheesing their robot in order to drop enough weight to add something to their shooter to make it more accurate? Do we need to collect all the metal shavings and weigh them with the robot too? These are just some examples where teams can really try to lawyer the rules, instead of looking at the intent of the rules. The intent of T08 is to ensure that robots designed with swappable mechanisms follow strict weight rules. It's not intended to prevent teams from making modifications to their robot. |
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#32
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
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Actually thats not true.. T08 would CLEARLY allow you to repair, modify or reconfigure ANY mechanism during the Regional (or other event)... provided it was presented at inspection (and here is the rub) and available for use "during the entier competition event".... It's really that entire competition event thats the rub... How can you honestly say that isn't in conflict with other rules and imply that you can't add new mechanisms in the middle of the competition (however there are other rules that imply you can as well)... hence the conflict between rules. However people keep pointing to other rules as implying you can do this.. however I point out.. NO OTHER rule specifically states "for the entire competition event".. |
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#33
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
As the team with the full court shooter about which this discussion started, 4212, I wanted to post my thoughts on how things played out at Wisconsin.
We're a second year team still learning how everything works. I read the competition manual and updates religiously during the Build Season and did not see the last-minute-pool-noodle extension coming. Because we shoot at a height of about 54 inches and saw that most bots were re-makes of the much shorter Robot in 3 Days prototype, I assumed our biggest obstacle would be making it to the feeder station and lining up. I thought through the possibility of an opponents' climber mechanism reaching above 60 inches to block our shots but also thought that wouldn't be a smart usage of time unless the mechanism couldn't produce a viable climb for the bot. But, after watching matches in Weeks 1 and 2, I knew our full court shooter would be toast at some point but was just hoping to get as far as we could before that happened. We were ecstatic to make it to semi finals and somewhat proud of the fact that we sparked fear in the hearts of our opponents ![]() |
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#34
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
Fundamentally, I agree with allowing total redesigns or modifications at competition. The modifying team will be behind the curve when it comes to practicing with said mechanisms, which is the potential pitfall. Additionally, it allows teams who've poured hours into a design that just isn't panning out to make a change and get inspired by teams who did.
Just be glad for the fact that FRC teams who pour effort into difficult autonomous routines can't be denied their gratification. In FTC, that still isn't the case. One would think that FRC's [G19] would be feasible to implement across all platforms, given the level of difficulty and effort required. |
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#35
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
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As part of an alliance the had a team "jury rig a blocker" as you said, to block your shots. Please someone correct me from 269 if I am wrong, but they got inspected on Thursday with said blocker on(and on Saturday before elims started), they just didn't play with it until they needed it. Which was when we faced you in the semis. It was a valid strategy that we really only used in the 1st match as 269 prevented 4212 from even getting to the feeder station in the 2nd match. You were undoubtedly upset over losing (who isn't?), however we all followed the rules. Good luck to all teams in their upcoming regionals, hope to see many of you in St. Louis! |
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#36
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
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We noticed this at the WI regional too, but from a different angle. We brought to the competition a robot with significant shot-blocking capability to begin with. When the improvised blockers started appearing, we didn't see anything wrong with it, but they did dilute what was once a competitive advantage for us. Ad-hoc engineering feels right and in the spirit of what the competition is about, but a line needs to exist somewhere, and the interchangeable mechanism weight limit seems a sensible place to have it. |
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#37
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
This has come up before. (The relevant rules were similar in 2005 and 2006.)
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#38
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
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If the team took off their shooter to put the blocker on because with both the shooter and blocker they are over weight, then they should still pass the new inspection. However they would have to play without their shooter for the rest to the competition including elims. They would not be allowed to put the shooter back on as that would violate the "multiple interchangeable mechanisms must be included in the 120 pound limit" rule. That is how I have seen it enforced in all my years, and how it was enforced at Northern Lights. As I am not an RI, I can only comment on how I have seen it enforced and how I interpret the rule. Final ruling goes to the LRI at each competition. Though having the rules on hand to cite never hurts, when politely disagreeing with your robot inspectors. |
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#39
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
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At any rate, I would encourage everyone to get their LRI involved early on if you're considering making a significant change that might, in any small way, run afoul of this rule, even if you think it shouldn't. |
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#40
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
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If you remove an ineffective floor pickup system and add a simple bucket for manual loading at a feeder station, the floor pickup is no longer part of the robot, and should have no bearing on the inspection. If you completely replace a pneumatic catapult with a motor-driven spinning wheel, I can't see how anyone can seriously argue that the now-obsolete catapult is still an optional part of the robot and has to be counted in the robot's weight when the modified robot is inspected. |
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#41
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
This.
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#42
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
Maybe I'm just "borrowing trouble", but this looks to me like a loophole through which a team could bring two alternative mechanisms to the competition, present only one for initial inspection, then swap in the other if they decided the first wasn't as effective as they'd thought, effectively giving two shots at picking the best design.
I guess at some point you have to just trust people to adhere to the spirit of the rules, but it seems to me it's better to get as much into the letter as reasonably possible to forestall temptation. The "add but not subtract" approach would do this, albeit at the cost of loss of modification flexibility being the price of squeaking in under the weight limit initially. This does not seem like such a bad thing. |
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#43
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
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#44
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
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#45
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Re: Modifying robot at competition?
Hi,
I'm the drive team mentor for team 4212. Since I'm a noob, I was asking a lot of questions of everyone I talked with, both competitors and officials. I want to thank everyone I talked to for the tips you all gave me. I asked the inspectors what we can change on the robot. The few inspectors that were there replied as long as we did not go over the set limits, we could make any wanted or needed changes anytime you are allowed to work on your robot as long as you come back after every change and get re-inspected. One inspector was adamant, any changes no matter how small or big needed to have an inspection after said change. This was as specific as the inspectors got with me on changes, and appears the rules are subject to the officiating staff’s interpretation and implementation of the rules. I thought, by the rules, what parts you came to the competition with is what you had to compete with as long as the total robot weight did not go over 120lb regardless of the parts. |
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