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#1
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Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
the team I was on had some trouble with driving this year (it wasn't great but it did the job). Having mecanum wheels would have helped greatly in lining up our robot to grab/shoot frisbees and we also had some trouble with speed and getting blocked.
How well does a set of four mecanum wheels deal against being blocked? and how fast could a set of mecanum wheels get a robot up to compared to standard wheels? Are supershifters worth it? and how would a supershifter on each mecanum wheel do (assuming the money didn't matter)? thanks! -3734 |
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#2
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
What were the details of your team's drive train this year? Also, what are the details of where you had trouble lining up? If you had trouble lining up with the feeder station slots, it could be that having a wider target for your human players to feed the discs into would be the solution rather than altering your drive system, for example.
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#3
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Before you pursue an entirely new drivetrain, let's break down your current one. What setup were you using? (Gearboxes, number of wheels, which wheels, wide configuration or long configuration, etc). Could you also provide us some video of the robot driving? There's more you need to look at before making a decision such as moving towards an omnidirectional drivetrain. The kit drivetrain is one of the easiest and most powerful drivetrains out there.
Last edited by Anupam Goli : 01-04-2013 at 23:38. |
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#4
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Please keep into consideration that our season is over (we had a good run, first time getting picked) and we are currently working on a new frame from scratch (preserving this years bot) in order to test drive trains. We also have a good amount of money left in this years budget that we can most likely buy the gear boxes (we already had the wheels) especially considering that they are reusable.
This years drivetrain was a 6 wheel tank drive on the andy park standard KOP frame using the long formation with omni wheels in the front and back of the bot, and kit standard wheels from andymark (highgrip) in the middle, all 6 inch. we had 4 cim motors on two cimple boxes. We added the omni wheels because it could not turn for its life on carpet. It worked well in competition, as it could run very well when it was just going back and forth collecting and shooting frisbees. I was pleased with it because last year we were basically a sitting duck with our 6 highgrip wheels powered by 2 cims. The problems came up when we had two line up our bot to shoot/load frisbees. Unfortunately our bot could not change the firing angle at all, and had no sensor, so the shooting had to be lined up by shooting very specifically at the bottom of the pyramid. It worked great in auto mode, but telop was tricky because with tank drive it was impossible to make slight adjustments to alignment. Especially with lateral movement. The feeding was the same thing, but easier because we could communicate, still took way too long. I will admit our feeder could have been much better designed. On the optimistic side, lining up on the pyramid was easy and took no moving parts at all for climbing. I don't have any great videos, but we have some O.K. ones on our website with more elsewhere that need to be uploaded. there really are not any obvious problems at first glance, but it is defiantly not fast, and it does not block/handle blocking well. Last edited by bs7280 : 01-04-2013 at 23:57. Reason: unintended text at bottom |
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#5
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Shifters are great, but I'd have to recommend against Mecanum wheels for the usual reasons. You can find many threads on the subject. Many of the top teams use 6 or 8 performance wheels. I know 254 almost always uses the same drive train with eight 4" wheels (this year maybe six because of reduced size). Many other teams have the same setup too, unless they have a good swerve drive like 1717 last year.
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#6
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
We used 4 AM SuperShifters on our Mecanum prototype base, but we decided it wasn't something we'd ever use in competition unless another game like LogoMotion came about.
Last edited by JohnFogarty : 02-04-2013 at 00:17. Reason: :P |
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#7
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
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#8
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Quote:
Alignment issues are a pure driver practice thing. It's much easier to get your driver to practice lining up in one sweet spot (and with the goal this year being so wide, you don't need to exactly have only one sweet spot) than it is to invest time and resources into an omnidirectional drive, only to use it just to strafe a couple of inches every match. Try expanding your feeding are on the robot. My team's loading mechanism on the robot is the length of 2 frisbees. We had very rare issues with lining up to the feeder slot, and we ran a standard 4 wheel wide drivebase. |
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#9
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Building a competitive drive train is about building an efficient, stiff and robust base with the correct math done regarding gearing. There are resources a-plenty for learning to do this.
At 159, we had such incredible success with our traction drive last year, that it's unlikely we will ever use a drive without traction wheels. As per lining up... I build bots with a philosophy that if you can't line it up with a tank drive and a few minutes of practice then your mechanism is broken and not your drive train. |
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#10
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Sorry about the "H"
I though that I had fixed all of them.What was wrong with the mecanum super shifter combo? or what was wrong with just the mecanum wheels? if one were to make a swerve drive, what ratio would be best for the speed/power combo (as I saw a lot of options on andymark)? I feel like part of our shoving problems came from our omni wheels (so that takes care of its self). I am tempted to try and make one as a summer project. could you please go into team 254's drive-train, or at least just something to use as a search query. thanks so much! -3734 |
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#11
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Don't underestimate the power of the kitbot. 2013's new and improved kitbot performs better than many, if not most, custom drivetrains and, possibly most importantly, is quick and cheap, so you have more time to spend on developing other systems for the robot.
Additionally, with simple modifications, such as building 1114's kitbot on steroids, adding higher traction wheels or perhaps shifting transmissions. Personally, I haven't played enough with Mecanums enough to give a verdict on their performance, but from what I've seen, a decently constructed, well driven tank drive can often outperform all but the best Mecanum drives in everything but going sideways. When considering Mecanum, you have to decide if going sideways is worth being slower and having less traction. Post #254! Go Poofs! |
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#12
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Quote:
In the past few years we have used both AWD robots with traction wheels and robots with mecanum drives. The team has tended to favor mecanum for its alleged maneuverability strengths. I think this is a bit of a fallacy, as we haven't been able to drive or align the mecanum robot any better than the AWD versions. Building a mecanum robot is a great learning experience from a build and a programming standpoint but don't expect a huge boost in driver performance. It isn't as maneuverable as it looks on paper. |
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#13
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Quote:
Last edited by Anupam Goli : 02-04-2013 at 00:51. |
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#14
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Well we got rid of the "h". Now if only we could get rid of that extra "c" :-) |
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#15
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Re: Supershifters and Mechanum wheels
Quote:
I'd take a mecanum kitbot with basic WPI code over a hacked together and poorly programmed swerve drive any day. If you really, and truly need an omnidirectional drive train, I'd start with mecanum and plan to go to swerve or butterfly later. If you don't, look at some of the tank drives with traction (and sometimes omni) wheels around FRC, such as Team Titanium's Tremendous Turning Twinspeed Tank Transportation in use on this year's robot. |
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