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#1
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I wonder if anyone from S.P.A.M. can tell me what they used last season on their RR robot. Can't argue with success.
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#2
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
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#4
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
You can twist to adjust the beam on the Maglite. We used the light's narrowest beam setting.
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#5
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
I never actually saw you respond to this until now, thank you very much! (:
Is there a reason why you chose not to use it again this season? |
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#6
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
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Last year there was no hard object to align with in the safe zone, the goals were only twice as wide as a ball, our camera tracking wasn't getting us close enough to be a consistent shooter, and camera alignment was taking too much time. This year there is the pyramid, so lining up is easy to do manually. The goals are about 4 times as wide, so the margin for error is larger. Our camera tracking doesn't need to be nearly as precise, so it can be much faster. Oh, and we do have a photon cannon on the bot this year. We just don't use it to align with the goal for normal shooting. =-] |
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#7
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
COUGH. Full Court. COUGH.
1102 did it too. I know (; |
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#8
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
Just to get clarification, do you have to wire up the flashlight to the power distribution on the robot from the main battery, or can you just use AA or AAA batteries in an isolated system? I've seen people do it both ways and I wanted to know whether that was legal or not. Thanks!
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#9
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
Quote:
Quote:
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#10
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
I would not consider a flashlight a computing device.
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#11
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
Just to be on the safe side, i would wire the flashlight to one of the WAGO connections on the PDB with a 5 amp breaker. If the flashlight is not designed to take 12 volts, see if you can solder a 7805 IC (or similar) with a heatsink on the flashlight's V-in line to drop the voltage down to 5 (or lower).
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#12
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
You have to do what's best for your team, of course, but our interpretation was that you CANNOT use separate batteries. It must be powered from the main battery of the robot in accordance to the wiring rules in the manual. There are multiple good ways to do this.
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#13
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
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#14
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
Question about using a flashlight to line up at start of the match.
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Can we have it permanently mounted and powered by the bot but manually turn it off and on? |
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#15
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Re: Use of Flashlight as Aiming Aid
My team actually used a regular LED replacement for the amber lights you see on all robots, and used a magnifying glass to extend and increase the halo.
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