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#1
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pic: About Daisy Thunder
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#2
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
Beautiful Robot! I honestly would not be able to tell between robot and CAD besides the fact that your CAD has no belts or chain.
Very informative poster. I wish all teams did something like this. |
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#3
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
What cams do you use for tensioning?
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#4
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
Would you mind providing more details about your feeding system?
- Sunny G. |
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#5
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
How do you guys turn so well without a dropped center?
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#6
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
Turning on 4 wheels = Turning on 4 wheels, whether or not there are more that are off the ground...I presume that the length of the wheelbase was short enough that they decided that just having 4 would do the trick.
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#7
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
Quote:
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/1443 |
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#8
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
Quote:
For the most part, the feeder is pretty straight forward. When the discs enter the magazine, gravity feeds them to the bottom and the discs stack up on top of the lower roller (the 2.75" dia. drum). When we're ready to shoot, we turn the feeder system on and the bottom disc gets kicked out from the bottom of the stack and fed into the top roller.The top roller is there to prevent the disc from sliding into the shooter when the arm is down. A lot of teams that use home depot buckets or vertically stack discs have had problems with discs jamming. "Smart Shot" helps prevent jamming problems. When the intake system is on, the feeder actually runs at a low speed. When the first disc enters the magazine, the feeder continues to run until the IR sensor detects the disc, then the feeder turns off. By doing this, the lowest disc is in contact with the top roller and each subsequent disc in the magazine gets stacked at an angle which prevents the infamous nesting problem. Quote:
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#9
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
Excellent stat sheet!
Great job with the layout and detailed subsystem/component views as well as the clean layout. |
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#10
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
This looks awesome! Could you explain your "command driven autonomous"? I think I've got the gist of it, but I would love to hear an explanation of how it works :D
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#11
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Re: pic: About Daisy Thunder
We push commands on to an STL deque and read them one at a time with a special handler for each type of command. For example, the drive command uses PID to drive to a specific distance in a straight line using an encoder and a gyro. Commands also have timeouts, so that if something goes wrong and the robot never reaches its setpoints, it will automatically move on to the next command.
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