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#46
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Re: FRC Blog - It Wasn’t Against the Rules
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Ball 2 enters. Line break sensor is still tripped from Ball 1. Ball 1 completes traveling through sensor. Ball 2 completes traveling through sensor. How many balls were detected? (hint, it's less than 2) |
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#47
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Re: FRC Blog - It Wasn’t Against the Rules
Why are they using touch screens when you could assign a ref to watch a ball and give him a hand held trigger with a button for assists, truss/catch, high, and low goal. She would never have to take her eyes of the field.
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#48
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Re: FRC Blog - It Wasn’t Against the Rules
refs would have to calculate assists in their head (more complex than recording zone/robot possession pairs, which would require 9 buttons)
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#49
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Re: FRC Blog - It Wasn’t Against the Rules
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2) Optical sensing of goal-traversing balls has been tried before (2006). It wasn't reliable. Even detecting balls that were guaranteed to come through a sensor block one at a time was problematic (2010). |
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#50
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Re: FRC Blog - It Wasn’t Against the Rules
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Regardless of continuing FMS concerns, my contention that many referee volunteers out there are either ill-prepared or ill-suited for the role remains, independent of FMS issues. I have seen more direct video evidence of referees staring at blatant infractions (i.e. not distracted by HMI data entry at the time) than I care to recount this year. So how to fix both in future seasons? Seems Manchester can easily invest some resources to GREATLY address these problems, with the expenditure of a little more money and acquisition of more employee manpower. Better referee training. Earlier referee training. Visual referee training. A focus, once and for all, in ensuring CONSISTENCY in application of the rules - which has been a long standing complaint of countless teams and mentors for as long as I've been involved in this program. FIRST can spend more money to hire quality control staff to develop better, more visual training materials - referee training and any other training of key volunteers - LRI's, etc. FIRST can also, critically, spend more money to hire more field development staff to design and build and VET better field control systems. Many hands make light work, and many brains can help identify the human interaction bottlenecks experienced with this year's FMS and ensure that they are properly eliminated. I have asked a veteran referee - a degreed engineer - his thoughts about the overall training process. He has been thoroughly underwhelmed by the available training materials and methods over the years. I encouraged him to email FIRST HQ and explain this in detail to them, for anyone who sits back and simply accepts things the way they are is not doing anything to affect necessary change. Here is a brief summary of his feedback shared with me:
Here would be one obvious example of what I am talking about. Recognizing the FRC game scales such that the rules/penalties/manual are more complex than this competition, that simply means FIRST needs to hire sufficient staff to produce similar content for a more complex game challenge. http://m.youtube.com/playlist?list=P...u-E8Bbcg8ifQpa Last edited by Travis Hoffman : 18-03-2014 at 19:27. |
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#51
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Re: FRC Blog - It Wasn’t Against the Rules
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To your second point and the other poster above? I used to do volunteer work in racecar timing applications. We used a single photo beam and were able to detect 2 cars crossing the beam together, so long as they did not do so side by side by measuring the length of the occlusion. If it was longer than the longest car in the field, you knew it was 2 cars. In the case of the 2014 FRC goals, the low are easy to deal with, as only one ball can cross the plane of the alliance wall at a time there. In the high goal, if you orient an array of sensors perpendicular to the floor, spaced across the width of the goal such that a ball will always break exactly two of the sensors, it becomes simple to distinguish multiple balls crossing the opening. Just because we have been unsuccessful in FRC applications before does not mean it isn't possible to do. |
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