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#1
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pic: Team 2068 2014 competition chassis
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#2
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Re: pic: Team 2068 2014 competition chassis
Nice work! I think this is the closest that I have seen someone come to reproducing our frame correctly. The flanges on the outer edge of the side rails add a lot of strength.
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#3
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Re: pic: Team 2068 2014 competition chassis
Quote:
You said we came close to your frame - is it just something we did differently or did you have something in mind that could be improved that I could pass along to my team for next year? (There's always room for improvement, I'm sure) Last edited by MetalJacket : 16-05-2014 at 14:59. |
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#4
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Re: pic: Team 2068 2014 competition chassis
Cool to see another va team with a sheetmetal drive. I am curious though, how difficult is maintenance with only being able to access the wheels from the bottom of the drive?
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#5
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Re: pic: Team 2068 2014 competition chassis
Only maintenance we ever had to do at competition was shoot some grease up into the gears (we drove the wheels using a single stage of reduction with the pinion driving a gear bolted to the wheel), and our robot sits about chest height on our cart with the wheels hanging off the side so they're not too difficult to access. If we ever needed to replace a wheel or anything though, once the shaft is pulled out, the wheel can just fall out of the bottom. I won't be on this team next year (heading off to college) but I will certainly keep playing with this design - and shortening the height of the modules so the wheels stick out the top a bit (less material, less weight) is one thing I would change. That would also allow a secondary method to access the wheels.
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#6
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Re: pic: Team 2068 2014 competition chassis
Quote:
We have had our front and back frame rails bend under hard impacts. If you bend another small flange off of the top flange out there, that will add a bit of strength. We also put a couple ribs in the tubes to give us a nice solid contact point for superstructure mounting and to add some stiffness. Sounds like you didn't need them if things held up well this year, which is great.Some of the finer touches are to design in the PEM nuts into the belly pan for mounting electronics, the PD board, and to design in the battery box. Those take a while, but the end result is magical. |
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