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| View Poll Results: Best Drivetrain | |||
| Tank |
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146 | 64.89% |
| Mecanum |
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6 | 2.67% |
| Swerve |
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49 | 21.78% |
| Slide |
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4 | 1.78% |
| Holonomic |
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3 | 1.33% |
| Other |
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17 | 7.56% |
| Voters: 225. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#31
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Re: Best Drive Train
There is no universal best drivetrain, but if you look at complexity and cost vs experience, you CANNOT go wrong with the Kitbot on Steroids. It takes 3 hours to build, a couple more hours to wire and program, and it is a regional winning drive train. Heck, I bet there are teams that have gone to Einstein with this drive train.
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#32
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Re: Best Drive Train
I would agree that there is no best wheel. But, I believe the universal best design concept is one like our butterfly drive, where you are able to incorporate 2 different types of wheels (we chose 1 fast omni & 1 custom wheel that provided traction) that provide features that the other one could not solely do by itself. This was a big thing that we took into consideration when scouting and selecting other teams for our alliance, as some of them had drivetrains (I believe mechanum was one) where they could easily be pushed around and couldn't hold their ground and play defense, which was fairly important in Ultimate Ascent.
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#33
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Re: Best Drive Train
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#34
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Re: Best Drive Train
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Last year, I was a freshman, and brought CAD design to the team. We had very limited funds, tools, manpower, or space. We still build our robots out of extruded aluminum in a 2-car garage with a tabletop chopsaw and bandsaw. We built a simple robot- and won SDR with it. We had 15 students on the team, with a ~7 member "core" team. After that season, we impacted over 20,000 people and had our program grow to 22 students representing 16 different high schools and 6 homeschoolers. We simply worked hard, and because of that we eventually got rewarded for that effort. Anyone can do that. |
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#35
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Re: Best Drive Train
1) It's WAAAY more reliable then swerve. We never once had any major issue with our butterfly drive train this year (with the exception of breaking an omni during practice because we ran over a floor power outlet. We can also lose pneumatics (such as we did in final matches #2 & #3 at North Star and we can still drive just on omni's. If we lost an encoder with the swerve drive (ie. got unplugged), which happened a few times too many last year, we couldn't drive and it took some power cables with it.
2) It's WAAAY easier to fix then swerve. To fix a butterfly module, all we had to do was to unbolt 1 bolt and we could easily change out the module ("plug-and-play" if you will). We would just have to remove 2 additional bolts to get to the actual drive train itself. Now to fix the swerve drive, we had to work in crammed quarters trying to unbolt a bolt (which wasn't fun) and to fix wiring issues. 3) It's WAAAY simpler. The mechanics behind the butterfly drive is so much simpler then the mechanics behind the swerve drive. The fabrication and assembly of the butterfly drive was much quicker than the swerve drive. We were able to machine the parts for our butterfly drive ourselves because they didn't need to have that much precision vs getting precision lazer cut parts at our sponsor for our swerve drive modules. Assembly time was MUCH faster (~2 hours to assemble 10 butterfly modules vs 9 HOURS PER swerve drive). It's worth noting that the programming behind the swerve drive is quite complex versus the simple coding required to drive the butterfly modules. It's this simplicity that makes butterfly drive more reliable and easier to fix than the swerve drive. 4) It's WAAAY lighter and smaller. Each swerve module weighed ~6 pounds vs the ~1-2 pounds per butterfly module. I can easily hold 2 butterfly modules in my hands vs 1 large swerve module. Our chassis was also 'designed' to easily accomodate the butterfly modules. |
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#36
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Re: Best Drive Train
Saves motors, time, and is incredibly easy to use. If you want a truly great swerve, you have to use 8 motors, which is a lot of the motors you have and use. An octocanum or butterfly is just as maneuverable and only uses 4 motors, but there is no pushing power to the side. Why is pushing power on the side needed? And as said, too much easier. Swerve is cool but fairly wasteful.
Back to the original post, as stated there is no perfect or best drivetrain. Discuss what is needed (maneuverability for an intricate field, or pushing power for obstacles). My personal favorite is octocanum, because it's easier to design and make and maintain. And it covers all your bases (it's two drivetrains!) |
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#37
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Re: Best Drive Train
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#38
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Re: Best Drive Train
Well, that escalated quickly.
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#39
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Re: Best Drive Train
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Another thing to consider for the "best" drivetrain is size and weight. I believe that the one listed below is a bit overkill. A robot should *generally* need only 4 "modules", which reduces a lot of weight and a lot of those "hole"y robots. |
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#40
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Re: Best Drive Train
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In response to runneals your points for 1 and 2 can be wrong. I've seen 1717 win the LA regionals in 2012 running through elims on 3 modules working(they replaced for the finals). Also with a fully independent module it is quite easy to make a module replace with the removal of 3 screws. Not quite as little as your butterfly but still very little. |
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#41
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Re: Best Drive Train
So there really isn't a "Best" drive train. It really is what the team prefers, or works best with. My team has done a 4 wheel tank drive using 2 speed shifters in the long configuration. Our drive train is very sturdy, and is great at pushing other robots out of the way. We have been using our design for the past two years, and have had no complaints.
A drive train that I personally want to design, test, and see how well it fares compared to our current is swerve drive. P.S. If anyone saw 4471's robot at championship, that's our twin, both teams had difficulties with playing offense, so we were a defensive robot, and were pretty good at it honestly. Last edited by Rob3653 : 30-04-2013 at 21:44. |
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#42
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Re: Best Drive Train
Reading the original post i cant see any indication the poster was asking about resource draw, ease of maching, development time ect ect. from what i can tell he was just asking which is best, which is why i voted swerve, a perfected (shifting) swerve drive is the best drive train in FIRST. It allows for more versatility and options then any other type of drive train
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#43
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Re: Best Drive Train
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Work, resources and weight I agree with (though ours isn't so long), but that's not the initial selling point you mentioned, which is why I asked. Motors I'm less worried about after this year. I can't imagine what I'd use all of them for. We did fully independent swerve and a 30 point climb with a shooter and allocations for a floor pickup and still didn't manage to run through them all. Quote:
I have never seen an omni robot exhibit actual holonomic drive--full control of orientation while translating along any vector. Is this a function of physics or of execution? I can't tell from your page how the butterfly modules are oriented. If you had a real-time sequence of translational vectors and orientation headings, could (theoretically) you move through them simultaneously at will? (If so, remind me to make you do that when I want to push you ) |
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#44
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Re: Best Drive Train
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#45
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Re: Best Drive Train
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For instance - a major mistake our team has made twice is to directly center the weight in a 6 wheel drivetrain over the center wheel (2011, 2013) on a semi-tall bot. The result is a robot whose center of gravity constantly shifts. That creates a really ugly chatter through turns even with a very stiff frame. It also doesn't like driving straight because the weight shifts when you accelerate then shift forward again when you hit the brakes. It was really eye-opening, and explained why our driver spent the majority of the year driving with only two wheels on the floor ![]() |
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