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#16
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
I would rather touch dry ice than an 8 inch pneumatic wheel spinning at 5000 RPM...
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#17
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
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That seems like it's so much overkill though. |
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#18
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
It depends how hard and how long you have to touch each thing.
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#19
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
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Further to this thought, even if dry ice were to be considered an "energy source", would it not be included under the "deformation of robot parts". After all, the energy would come from the thermodynamic expansion of a gas, which is specifically legal in a closed-loop gas shock... which means the gas is a robot part and it is allowed to deform. I challenge anyone to find a rule prohibiting phase changes! A logical thought experiment... would it be legal to leave the dry ice on the motors while queuing, then remove it immediately before going on to the field? I'd say "yes"... which means that having thermal gradients is legal. (An interesting thought... for teams using off-board compressors... chill the air in your aluminum storage tanks, and place them above your warm motors... as the match goes on you might get a bit more energy out of them.) If we really wanted to find excuses to not allow Dry Ice on the robot, we could try classifying it as "compressed air", and as it was compressed by a source other than the compressor then it might not be legal. However since "air" is primarily nitrogen, and Dry Ice is CO2, that would really be stretching it. In short, however, if the dry ice was handled safely, and placed on the robot in a secure manner, unlikely to injure competitors or officials, and unlikely to damage the field or other robots.... it would be up to the event officials to explain under what rule they were disallowing the dry ice. If they couldn't do that, then they would be obliged to rule the dry ice legal. And why not? I mean, it's just dry ice! I shared the same "gut feeling" as the cat at the top of the page, but after looking at all the rules... I'd have to pass it at inspection. Jason Last edited by dtengineering : 10-04-2013 at 00:36. |
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#20
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
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Interesting arguments though |
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#21
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
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"G53: Ambient energy of any form present within the boundaries of the PLAYING FIELD may not be harvested and employed by a ROBOT. This includes; thermal energy present in FIELD ELEMENTS, carpet, atmosphere, or other ROBOTS; radiant or photon energy from venue lighting; acoustic energy from the PA system or spectators; and magnetic or cosmic energy fields or streams which may exist within the venue. Violation: TECHINCAL FOUL" |
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#22
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
Interesting topic. On the line of dry ice, would liquid nitrogen used for the purpose of motor cooling violate any rules?
How about room-temperature mercury for the purpose of electrical conductivity (or if you have a lot of it, liquid-based weight distribution)? I would think R37 specifically permits the use of ferrofluids as a way to store energy. |
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#23
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
According to this MSDS http://avogadro.chem.iastate.edu/MSD...xide_solid.htm Dry Ice can be toxic in a gaseous state. So therefore your team would have to prove that no fumes can escape your robot during operation. The problem then would become the dreaded "what-if" questions that inspectors like to ask.
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#24
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
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No Prohibited Materials – e.g. sound, lasers, noxious or toxic gases or inhalable particles or chemicals <R08>Referring to Sec 4 of the Game Manual: R08 ROBOT parts shall not be made from hazardous materials, be unsafe, cause an unsafe condition, or interfere with the operation of other ROBOTS.Dry ice poses handling and asphyxiation risks. Also, if dry ice is put in a tightly closed container, the container may burst. The grey area is if the dry ice is not part of the robot, but instead is used to cool components between matches, etc. In this case, dry ice is no longer an inspection issue, but the safety advisers may prohibit its use in the pits. |
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#25
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
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Dry ice, sometimes referred to as "Cardice" or as "card ice" (chiefly British English), is the solid form of carbon dioxide. It is used primarily as a cooling agent. Its advantages include lower temperature than that of water ice and not leaving any residue (other than incidental frost from moisture in the atmosphere). It is useful for preserving frozen foods, ice cream, etc., where mechanical cooling is unavailable. (wikipedia) Quote:
There are far better ways to cool motors. Cooling fins, Heat sinks, airflow. Did you want to create a mystery mist around your Robot? Kind of like the lighting schemes that many teams use? |
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#26
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
I'm surprised no one has yet mentioned that if you release any CO2 gas, then you are violating rule G13:
G13: ROBOTS may not intentionally detach or leave parts on the FIELD. Violation: TECHNICAL FOUL |
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#27
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
Precisely....we joked about using dry ice to create smoke trails for our frisbees ...one can dream...
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#28
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
Do we now have to capture any air released from pneumatics?
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#29
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
Just go to the question box and ask to be shown the detached part(s).
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#30
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Re: Dry Ice on Robot?
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