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Unread 14-05-2014, 14:41
Steve W Steve W is offline
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

Quote:
Originally Posted by FrankJ View Post
Hard to say what will be legal in 2015, but by the 2014 Q& A, this would be legal. Or you could send the first choice pressure switch back to Nason & asked that it be re calibrated so that it actually switches at 115 psi rising. Or order one from Nason with a 118 psi rising SP. That would keep you keep you below the about 120 PSI stated in the rules.

The instructions from Nason for recalibrating the SM series pressure switch calls for rotating the barrel 1/2-3/4 turn. Not dissembling the switch. I have done this on our tee shirt cannon & it has been working fine with a consistent set point (120psi) for the last year or so. Per the 2014 Q&A you cannot do this on your comp bot whether or not it works is a mute point for FRC. As in all things, you should always thoroughly test your adjustment to be sure they have the result you intended.
Frank, I would suggest that the Q&A does not allow that part. The Q&A states that the part being substituted must be the same or equivilant to the Nason pressure switch. The fact that it is ajustable means that it is not the same or equivilant.
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Unread 14-05-2014, 15:28
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve W View Post
Frank, I would suggest that the Q&A does not allow that part. The Q&A states that the part being substituted must be the same or equivilant to the Nason pressure switch. The fact that it is ajustable means that it is not the same or equivilant.
Q258 Allows any pressure switch that meets the pneumatic rules.

Q459 Allows switches to be callibrated per manufacturer-provided instructions. It does not allow the end user to adjust a switch that the manufacturer did not intend to be adjustable.

R88 calls out the requirements for the pressure switch. The adjust-ability of the switch is not specified.

Quote:
R88
The pressure switch requirements are:
  • It must be connected to the high-pressure side of the pneumatic circuit (i.e. prior to the pressure regulator) to sense the “stored” pressure of the circuit.
  • The two wires from the pressure switch must be connected directly to a digital input and ground pin on the Digital Sidecar.
  • The cRIO must be programmed to sense the state of the switch and operate the relay module that powers the compressor to prevent over-pressuring the system.
Doing a quick control-F search on the game manual, the only time the word Nason showed up was in the word Panasonic when referencing allowable batteries. When searching Q&A only 258 and 459 mention the word Nason. Where does the phrase "must be the same or equivilant to the Nason pressure switch." come from. I can't seem to find it.

I heard there was an inspector who successfully got adjustable pressure switches removed from a robot at Champs. Clearly it was not a universal interpretation amongst inspectors, as we ran with this.
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Last edited by Alpha Beta : 14-05-2014 at 15:31.
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Unread 16-05-2014, 23:47
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Alpha Beta View Post
Q258 Allows any pressure switch that meets the pneumatic rules.

Q459 Allows switches to be callibrated per manufacturer-provided instructions. It does not allow the end user to adjust a switch that the manufacturer did not intend to be adjustable.

R88 calls out the requirements for the pressure switch. The adjust-ability of the switch is not specified.



Doing a quick control-F search on the game manual, the only time the word Nason showed up was in the word Panasonic when referencing allowable batteries. When searching Q&A only 258 and 459 mention the word Nason. Where does the phrase "must be the same or equivilant to the Nason pressure switch." come from. I can't seem to find it.

I heard there was an inspector who successfully got adjustable pressure switches removed from a robot at Champs. Clearly it was not a universal interpretation amongst inspectors, as we ran with this.
The inspector was actually Big Al and Frank was also in on the decision I believe.
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Unread 14-05-2014, 15:36
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve W View Post
Frank, I would suggest that the Q&A does not allow that part. The Q&A states that the part being substituted must be the same or equivilant to the Nason pressure switch. The fact that it is ajustable means that it is not the same or equivilant.
Can I respectfully request that references are posted to specific Q&A?

Doing Q&A search I find these related answers:
Q258
Q. Are teams required to use the Nason Pressure Switch (am-2006) or can we use another switch that stops below 120 psi?
2014-01-30 by FRC3669
A. Any pressure switch may be used, provided it meets all applicable ROBOT rules.
Q459
Q. Can the pressure switch be calibrated per the manufacture's directions? (Specifically the Nason SM-2b-115R supplied in the kit of parts)
2014-03-18 by FRC2974
A. Calibration of pneumatic components per manufacturer-provided instructions would bot be considered alteration. The specific part in question is not marketed to be field/user adjustable so any calibration would be considered an alteration and therefore illegal per R76.
From which I draw conclusion that any pressure switch can be used that meet rules requirement.
In fact I cannot even find the rule the prohibits replacement Pressure Switch with Pressure Transducer.
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Unread 14-05-2014, 15:37
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

Alpha Beta beat me to it LOL
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Unread 14-05-2014, 17:02
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

OK, to be a stickler here, the Pneumatic Rules also include the 2014 FRC Pneumatics Manual which lists the specifications for the switch as "This switch is normally closed. The switches will open at approximately 115 psi and will not close again until the pressure drops to approximately 95 psi." In addition paragraph 4 of Section 4, "In addition, another intent of these rules is to have all energy sources and active actuation systems on the ROBOT (e.g. batteries, compressors, motors, servos, cylinders, and their controllers) drawn from a well-defined set of options. This is to ensure that all Teams have access to the same actuation resources, and to ensure that the Inspectors are able to accurately assess the legality of a given part."
For those reasons, adjustable pressure switches are deemed illegal, in particular any switch that can be set to a pressure higher than 115 psi. Throughout section 4.10 the Nason Pressure switch is shown as the pressure switch. BTW, I am betting that the OP is using a standard robot pressure gauge that may or may not be accurate. Tapping on several (hundred) over the years have caused them to change pressure displayed.
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Last edited by Al Skierkiewicz : 14-05-2014 at 17:05.
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Unread 14-05-2014, 17:30
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Al Skierkiewicz View Post
OK, to be a stickler here, the Pneumatic Rules also include the 2014 FRC Pneumatics Manual which lists the specifications for the switch as "This switch is normally closed. The switches will open at approximately 115 psi and will not close again until the pressure drops to approximately 95 psi." In addition paragraph 4 of Section 4, "In addition, another intent of these rules is to have all energy sources and active actuation systems on the ROBOT (e.g. batteries, compressors, motors, servos, cylinders, and their controllers) drawn from a well-defined set of options. This is to ensure that all Teams have access to the same actuation resources, and to ensure that the Inspectors are able to accurately assess the legality of a given part."
For those reasons, adjustable pressure switches are deemed illegal, in particular any switch that can be set to a pressure higher than 115 psi. Throughout section 4.10 the Nason Pressure switch is shown as the pressure switch. BTW, I am betting that the OP is using a standard robot pressure gauge that may or may not be accurate. Tapping on several (hundred) over the years have caused them to change pressure displayed.
I wish the rules and manual's language would be a lot clearer.
I am reading same paragraph and I do not see that it means prohibition of pressure switches other than Nason switch provided in KOP
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Unread 14-05-2014, 17:27
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

Where in the rules is the pneumatic manual referenced? It seems to be more guidance than a rule. If it going to be taken as rule then it needs to be incorporated into the rules at least by reference so team know they are a rule.

R81 only says stored pressure needs the be below 120 PSI.
The Robot inspection checklist under power on checks specifies the compressor turns at about 120 PSI.
The Q&A Q459 specifically allows pressure switches to be calibrated if intended to be so by the manufacture.
All of this seems to be in conflict with pneumatic manual.

Using cheap non calibrated gauges to verify pressure settings, particularly safeties is a separate thread.
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Unread 14-05-2014, 19:21
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Re: Calibrate Pressure Switch?

Quote:
Originally Posted by FrankJ View Post
Where in the rules is the pneumatic manual referenced? It seems to be more guidance than a rule. If it going to be taken as rule then it needs to be incorporated into the rules at least by reference so team know they are a rule.

R81 only says stored pressure needs the be below 120 PSI.
The Robot inspection checklist under power on checks specifies the compressor turns at about 120 PSI.
The Q&A Q459 specifically allows pressure switches to be calibrated if intended to be so by the manufacture.
All of this seems to be in conflict with pneumatic manual.

Using cheap non calibrated gauges to verify pressure settings, particularly safeties is a separate thread.
The pneumatics manual clearly says it cannot supersede the rules.

Quote:
The 2014 FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) pneumatic components are outlined in this document. It is being provided as a courtesy, and therefore does not supersede any information or rules provided in the 2014 FIRST Robotics Competition Manual. For official questions, please go to the FIRST Forums at http://forums.usfirst.org.
Al has hinted that there will be some rule changes for 2015. Hopefully this will get cleared up. I still can't find the leg that the inspectors are standing on when disallowing adjustable pressure switches this year. As always the LRI has the final say at the tournament, and we will continue to respect that. At the same time we hope their decisions can be fully backed up by a reasonable interpretation of the rules.
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