Go to Post Magic doesn't count as a support, sorry. Neither does simply constraining in CAD... - EricH [more]
Home
Go Back   Chief Delphi > FIRST > General Forum
CD-Media   CD-Spy  
portal register members calendar search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read FAQ rules

 
Reply
Thread Tools Rating: Thread Rating: 6 votes, 5.00 average. Display Modes
  #16   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 04-05-2014, 20:13
PayneTrain's Avatar
PayneTrain PayneTrain is offline
Q&A Dartboard Detractor
AKA: Lizard King
FRC #0422 (The Meme Tech Pneumatic Devices)
Team Role: Mascot
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: RVA
Posts: 2,259
PayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond reputePayneTrain has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris Fultz View Post
You need to design a robot that can play and win at the CHP level.

There are robots that can win a District / Regional, and there are robots that can win a Division / CHP. They are not necessarily the same robots.
This is very true. Some teams have the muscle and the might (resources and talent) to build the perfect robot to play the game. Some teams don't have that kind of robot capital and have to choose. One thing that I hope will change with a possibly expanding CMP is the addition of robots that can't win at the regional level but know exactly how to plug themselves into an Einstein alliance.
Reply With Quote
  #17   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 04-05-2014, 21:46
Duncan Macdonald's Avatar
Duncan Macdonald Duncan Macdonald is offline
Globe Motor Fan Club
FRC #0610 (Crescent Robotics)
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Rookie Year: 2006
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Posts: 190
Duncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond reputeDuncan Macdonald has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via MSN to Duncan Macdonald
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Quote:
Originally Posted by Brandon_L View Post

I have no idea who/what '1118' is anyway
Now you are going to hurt 4489's feelings...Nerds Inc. -->Cybertribe

Back on point, don't overlook the importance of driver skill and practice time. Watching an offseason event you can see a 99.9 percentile robot drop if a new drive team is behind the glass.
__________________
Queen's Applied Science '13, Applied Mathematics
Reply With Quote
  #18   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 10:36
Peter Matteson's Avatar
Peter Matteson Peter Matteson is offline
Ambitious but rubbish!
FRC #0177 (Bobcat Robotics)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: South Windsor, CT
Posts: 1,653
Peter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond reputePeter Matteson has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

I just want to put in perspective how difficult winning a division is to remind everyone why so few teams have done it.

Just 106 teams in FRC history have won a division.

That is .02% out of ~5200 teams in FRC history.

There have been 176 slots available for teams to appear on Einstein since divisions were created in 2001, so if each spot was won by a different team it would still be .0338% of all teams that had made it.

Just 34 teams in FRC history account for 59% (104) of the division wins, these are the multiple division winners.

Even more staggering is the 7 members of the "5-Timers Club" account for over 22% (39) of all appearances.

You shouldn't be upset that your team has never broken through.
__________________
2011 Championship Finalists/Archimedes Division Championships w/ 2016 & 781
2010 Championship Winners/Newton Division Champions
Thank-you 294 & 67

2009 Newton Division Champions w/ 1507 & 121
2008 Archimedes Division Champions w/ 1124 & 1024
2007 Championship Winners/Newton Division Champions w/190, 987 & 177 The Wall of Maroon
2006 Galileo Division Champions w/ 1126 & 201
www.bobcatrobotics.org
"If you can't do it with brains, it won't be done with hours." - Clarence "Kelly" Johnson
Reply With Quote
  #19   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 12:00
JDGallagher's Avatar
JDGallagher JDGallagher is offline
Registered User
AKA: John Gallagher
FRC #1086 (Blue Cheese)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Feb 2014
Rookie Year: 2012
Location: United States
Posts: 55
JDGallagher is a glorious beacon of lightJDGallagher is a glorious beacon of lightJDGallagher is a glorious beacon of lightJDGallagher is a glorious beacon of lightJDGallagher is a glorious beacon of light
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Quote:
That is 2% out of ~5200 teams in FRC history.
if each spot was won by a different team it would still be 33.8% of all teams that had made it.
fixed percentages
Reply With Quote
  #20   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 12:15
Jared Russell's Avatar
Jared Russell Jared Russell is offline
Taking a year (mostly) off
FRC #0254 (The Cheesy Poofs), FRC #0341 (Miss Daisy)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Rookie Year: 2001
Location: San Francisco, CA
Posts: 3,078
Jared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond reputeJared Russell has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Quote:
Originally Posted by JDGallagher View Post
That is 2% out of ~5200 teams in FRC history.
if each spot was won by a different team it would still be 3.38% of all teams that had made it.
fixed fixed percentages
Reply With Quote
  #21   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 12:26
Citrus Dad's Avatar
Citrus Dad Citrus Dad is offline
Business and Scouting Mentor
AKA: Richard McCann
FRC #1678 (Citrus Circuits)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: May 2012
Rookie Year: 2012
Location: Davis
Posts: 991
Citrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond reputeCitrus Dad has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

"Successful" teams that come to mind in Northern California include 701, 1868 and 604. They've won regionals but haven't won a Champs division. However they've developed overall programs that we are trying to emulate. They could win the World Chairman's. They may approach building their robots differently than we do, but they produce very successful student team members, which is the true definition of success in FRC.
Reply With Quote
  #22   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 12:38
Adam Freeman's Avatar
Adam Freeman Adam Freeman is offline
Forever HOT!
FRC #0148 (Robowranglers)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Rookie Year: 2005
Location: Rockwall, TX
Posts: 497
Adam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond reputeAdam Freeman has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Quote:
Originally Posted by tindleroot View Post
What do successful teams do to robot-wise to win division champs and Einstein from year to year?
Your questions seems to focus most on how teams do it from a robot standpoint, but there is so much more that goes into making Einstein than the robot.

There are many, many factors...but they start with the Team. Robots make it to Einstein once, but Teams make it there multiple times.

Some of the factors are:

Leadership: The team must have quality leadership to help guide them through the early stages of the build. Leadership with both fore-sight to see what Einstein will look like, and also hind-sight to know what has worked in the past. Since students are on a 1-4 year cycle, the best teams draw their leadership from their mentors. Not saying students aren't leaders, but the best teams draw from that partnership and usually have a mentor as the final decision maker.

Expectations: The top teams expect to get to Einstein! They focus all of their effort to attempt to achieve their goal.

Quality Game Analysis: This is a must! Need to understand the game and decisions that will be made at the start of the season and all the way though to Einstein. This is a continuous improvement process. Analyze, Adapt, Analyze, Adapt....

Engineering and Design: Very few (if any) robots make it to Einstein that aren't high quality machines. Since you are playing though an entire regular season and the division, your machine needs to be designed for robustness.

Driver Skill/Practice: To compete to get to the biggest stage in FRC, your drivers better be well versed in how to operate their machine. Either through practice or match play, by the time you get to the division eliminations, they should be as good as they can get.

Hardwork / Preparation / Determination: Be prepared to put in the work, either through efficient time usage or brute force hours.... the top teams are focused and determined to not get knocked off their pedestal. From Jan - April there is usually something going on to design, iterate, test, practice, fix, improve, etc...

Execution / Continuous Improvement: Einstein level teams have a hunger to drive for perfect execution. They continously work on every detail of positioning, machine operation, strategy, communication, etc... to hopefully continue to improve every step of the way.

Scouting: Good scouting is essential to making it to Einstein. Without it you won't make it through a Division qualification without issues that may or may not damage your chances at making it to Einstein. Additionally, a successful alliance selection at Champs is probably the #1 way to get onto Einstein. Recognizing that team that exactly fits the strategy that compliments your machine or picking up that team @ the 18th pick that should have gone in the top 8. These are the ways that improbable, but dominant allliance are formed (ex; 1477, 1241, 610).

Luck!: Sometimes it just takes a little luck to make it to Einstein. Having a good qualification schedule, not having robot issues in eliminations, someone else having issues, being on the right side of the bracket, etc... there are just so many variables that have to fall into place to get your one machine onto the correct alliance, against the right opponents, etc... that even with all the above a little luck always helps.

Even with all these factors well in your control, the best robots don't always make it to Einstein. As Peter pointed out above, such a small percentage of teams make it to Einstein, that we should all be considered really lucky just to make it there once!

But even with that said, talking with the Teams that make it there consistently, you know they will be working as hard as they can to be in position to make it there year after year.
__________________

2005 FIRST World Champions (330, 67, 503)
2009 FIRST World Champions (111, 67, 971)
2010 FIRST World Champions (294, 67, 177)
Reply With Quote
  #23   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 13:51
cadandcookies's Avatar
cadandcookies cadandcookies is offline
Director of Programs, GOFIRST
AKA: Nick Aarestad
FTC #9205 (The Iron Maidens)
Team Role: College Student
 
Join Date: Jan 2012
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: Minnesnowta
Posts: 1,551
cadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond reputecadandcookies has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Another piece of being successful on Einstein: interteam relationships. Get to know people from successful teams and build up relationships with them. I believe EJ mentioned on Gamesense that a large part of their division picking strategy (specifically picking 2848). While an excellent robot certainly played into their decision, being able to work with other drive teams and having those relationships can help teams on the edge up their game and get into eliminations and Einstein.

For a lot of teams, building these relationships is something natural in their own area, but at Champs, long-distance relationships is key.

This isn't to say that you can be one of those incredibly successful teams with a mediocre robot, but soft skills are what separates teams with great robots from great teams with great robots.
__________________

Never assume the motives of others are, to them, less noble than yours are to you. - John Perry Barlow
tumblr | twitter
'Snow Problem CAD Files: 2015 2016
MN FTC Field Manager, FTA, CSA, Emcee
FLL Maybe NXT Year (09-10) -> FRC 2220 (11-14) -> FTC 9205(14-?)/FRC 2667 (15-16)
VEXU UMN (2015-??)
Volunteer since 2011
2013 RCA Winner (North Star Regional) (2220)
2016 Connect Award Winner (North Super Regional and World Championship) (9205)
Reply With Quote
  #24   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 14:17
OZ_341's Avatar Unsung FIRST Hero
OZ_341 OZ_341 is offline
Registered User
#0341 (Wissahickon)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Rookie Year: 2000
Location: Ambler, PA
Posts: 1,477
OZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond reputeOZ_341 has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Adam's post pretty much sums it up.

The only modifier I would add is that the decision to be a winner is made in September. What your students do in the Fall (positive or negative) will have long lasting impact for the entire team. I have always impressed upon our team that the game starts as soon as we return to school. Your level of preparation will shape your build season actions and decisions. Early and thorough preparation ultimately determines your long term success.
__________________
2010 Championship Chairman's Award
2016 MAR District Champion (thank you 225 & 1257)
2016 Galileo Division, #6 Seed, 9 W - 1 L
2016 MAR District Innovation in Controls Award
2016 Westtown District Finalist (thank you 4954 & 484)
2016 Westtown District Imagery Award (It took 17 yrs)
2016 Hatboro District Judge's Award
Overall Record 49 W - 21 L
Reply With Quote
  #25   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 15:05
Link07 Link07 is offline
Volunteer
AKA: Andrew
no team
 
Join Date: Apr 2013
Rookie Year: 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 226
Link07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant futureLink07 has a brilliant future
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Quote:
Originally Posted by OZ_341 View Post
Adam's post pretty much sums it up.

The only modifier I would add is that the decision to be a winner is made in September. What your students do in the Fall (positive or negative) will have long lasting impact for the entire team. I have always impressed upon our team that the game starts as soon as we return to school. Your level of preparation will shape your build season actions and decisions. Early and thorough preparation ultimately determines your long term success.
I would argue that the decision to be a winner starts right now.
Reply With Quote
  #26   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 15:20
waialua359's Avatar
waialua359 waialua359 is offline
Mentor
AKA: Glenn
FRC #0359 (Hawaiian Kids)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Rookie Year: 2000
Location: Waialua, HI
Posts: 3,304
waialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond reputewaialua359 has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Getting to Einstein takes a lot of luck with respect with being in the
1. right division
2. right schedule
3. right alliance
4. route through elims to get to division finals

in addition to fielding a competitive robust robot.

I'd argue that you have to be either the one of the top 2-3 robots in your division, or ranked somewhere between the 10-15th best robot.

Like small regionals, many good teams never make it on the #1 or #2 seeded alliance, yet are good enough to replace the second pick on the #1 or #2 alliance, always getting stuck somewhere in between.

Not always the case, but happens quite often.
__________________

2016 Hawaii Regional #1 seed, IDesign, Safety Award
2016 NY Tech Valley Regional Champions, #1 seed, Innovation in Controls Award
2016 Lake Superior Regional Champions, #1 seed, Quality Award, Dean's List
2015 FRC Worlds-Carver Division Champions
2015 Hawaii Regional Champions, #1 seed.
2015 Australia Regional Champions, #2 seed, Engineering Excellence Award
2015 Inland Empire Regional Champions, #1 seed, Industrial Design Award
2014 OZARK Mountain Brawl Champions, #1 seed.
2014 Hawaii Regional Champions, #1 seed, UL Safety Award
2014 Dallas Regional Champions, #1 seed, Engineering Excellence Award
2014 Northern Lights Regional Champions, #1 seed, Entrepreneurship Award
2013 Championship Dean's List Winner
2013 Utah Regional Champion, #1 seed, KP&B Award, Deans List
2013 Boilermaker Regional Champion, #1 seed, Motorola Quality Award
2012 Lone Star Regional Champion, #1 seed, Motorola Quality Award
2012 Hawaii Regional Champions #1 seed, Motorola Quality Award
Reply With Quote
  #27   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 15:30
AndrewPospeshil's Avatar
AndrewPospeshil AndrewPospeshil is offline
meme lord supreme
FRC #0503 (Frog Force)
Team Role: Leadership
 
Join Date: Sep 2013
Rookie Year: 2011
Location: Novi, MI
Posts: 90
AndrewPospeshil is a jewel in the roughAndrewPospeshil is a jewel in the roughAndrewPospeshil is a jewel in the rough
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Robot-wise, successful teams have to push for victory. Off-season training of new members, development of engineering practices/methods, a proper grasp of the game's strategy from kickoff weekend, remaining diligent during build season to produce a quality, top-tier robot, and preforming well at competitions are all things I would bet winning teams would agree is crucial. Strong mentors and sponsors help propel many winning teams forward as well, in addition to $$$.
__________________

Chairman's Award Presenter // Vice President // Outreach Lead // #Victors21 〽️️

2014: MIKET DCA // MILIV DEI // MICMP DCCA | 2015: MISTA DCA // MICMP DCCA

2016: MICEN DCA // MILSU DEI // MICMP DCCA


The opinions expressed in my posts are those of my entire community, team, and its sponsors. Everytime I make a post,
I have to gather everyone in one huge room and make sure I voice all of their thoughts in my post at once.
Reply With Quote
  #28   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 17:03
Wayne TenBrink's Avatar
Wayne TenBrink Wayne TenBrink is offline
<< (2008 Game Piece)
FRC #1918 (NC Gears)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Rookie Year: 2006
Location: Fremont, MI, USA
Posts: 527
Wayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond reputeWayne TenBrink has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

EJ Sabathia's ("254 Mentor Extraordinaire") appearance on FRC Game Sense Friday Finale shows why 254's appearance & ultimate success on Einstein was not an accident. If I could be so bold as to summarize some of the the discussion: They were open minded about the game and correctly identified what it would take to win. They prototyped a variety of mechanisms, not just ones that had worked in previous games. They didn't limit their efforts to simply building a robot - they focused on building alliances.They practiced on a full field with two complete alliances, not in an assist-free, defense-free vacuum. They worked with their partners in advance of their matches, rather than just talking to them. They were able to step into whatever role the alliance needed. They did the hard work on and off the field.

It is easy understand this after the fact, but figuring it out and making it happen before you see others doing it isn't so easy. The "Successful Teams in FRC History" (not just 254) are the ones that approach the game with a clear mind, have the ability to "get it right" before "right" has been defined by others, and never quit doing the hard work.
__________________
NC Gears (Newaygo County Geeks Engineering Awesome Robotic Solutions)

FRC 1918 (Competing at St. Joseph and West MI in 2017)
FTC 6043 & 7911
Reply With Quote
  #29   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 17:04
tindleroot tindleroot is offline
Free Scouting Help to All
AKA: Casey LeeVan
FRC #4272 (Maverick Boiler Robotics)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Mar 2014
Rookie Year: 2007
Location: Indiana
Posts: 595
tindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond reputetindleroot has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

Thank you all for the great comments! I really hope others who are reading these posts are as inspired as I am to work hard and try to make it to Einstein.
Reply With Quote
  #30   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 05-05-2014, 17:16
XaulZan11's Avatar
XaulZan11 XaulZan11 is offline
Registered User
AKA: John Christiansen
FRC #1732
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Rookie Year: 2006
Location: Milwaukee, Wi
Posts: 1,329
XaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond reputeXaulZan11 has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to XaulZan11
Re: Successful teams in FRC history

A couple of people have mentioned the need to accurately analyze the game before prototyping/building. I'm not sure I agree with that being an necessity for all teams. Earlier on GameSense Tom from 254 said they thought the game would be more run and gun opposed to the focus on assists (turns out the traits needed for the 3 ball auto allowed it play the assist game very well!). I believe there was a post from 33 after their first district stating they were surprised by the game play, expecting to use their well-practice solo-cycles more often.

I think the take away should be that the high resource teams can over come a mis-step in strategy but the average or below average teams wanting to compete with those high resource teams need to nail the strategy as their margin for error is much smaller and they cannot waste precious time on functions not directly tied to winning (such as catching in 2014, climb/dump in 2013, suspension in 2010...).

Last edited by XaulZan11 : 05-05-2014 at 17:20.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 00:47.

The Chief Delphi Forums are sponsored by Innovation First International, Inc.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi