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#16
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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But speed controllers & relays fit into the blogs definition of an active device. The proposed rule says one active device. NOT one active intermediate active device connected to a second active device. The blog has an approval process for active devices. Part of the approval process seems to be that you will need the resources to make the device commercially available to all the teams. So the approval bar starts off pretty high. |
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#17
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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But I agree both that the wording doesn't say this exactly and that we can't predict all of the GDC's intent or future actions. |
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#18
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
Does anyone know what kind or type of connector is used? Its a 17x2 pin connector, but not sure on anything else of it. Trying to find a source for a female plug to adapt to it. Thanks
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#19
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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#20
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
I think "passive" in First terms would include extension headers for the pins, wires, pcb traces, etc. Anything that does not modify the pathway. You make a daughter board that covers all the pins, but passively passes through the used pins. perhaps with a locking PWM connector that has the power & ground so you use a conventional PWM cable. Without allowing for the in the rules, an inspector somewhere would not let you do that.
The wording is the way it to allow for servos & VEX motors which take a direct PWM input well as conventional brushed motors & controllers. Last edited by FrankJ : 24-09-2014 at 13:59. |
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#21
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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#22
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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#23
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
Servos do connect directly without an intermediate speed controller. So do some servo-like motors, though those might not be legal actuators.
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#24
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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The former encompasses an awful lot of things The latter is defined as something that fits onto the MXP and needs FIRST pre-approval. Carry on... |
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#25
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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I agree that SPICE is useful. It's just not clear to me how the MXP port would cause you to use SPICE if you'd been given a proper data sheet. If I'm speccing a filter a simulation is great to go along with the graph for what the cutoff is supposed to look like. But in the MXP port there should't be anything interesting analog wise: everything is either digital, straight to an ADC, or straight to a DAC. And I doubt that the digital stuff is fast enough that the use of SPICE is warranted. Quote:
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#26
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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The other factor, of course, is that it's quite possible to mess up numbers with the mechanical drawings. (Trust me--even with a good drawing, sometimes the only thing saving your bacon is some really good measuring to interpret the drawing.) By saying that X needs Y distance of clearance, they are taking an aspect of the drawings that may or may not be clear to the average EE/programmer and saying "Pay attention to this. You need to take this into consideration. The drawings are less idiot-resistant than we'd like to be able to make them." |
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#27
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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Try an experiment just for fun, next time you are around high school students ask them what the decimal equivalent of 7/16" is and see how many can pull it off without a calculator or the internet. |
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#28
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
Or have them half 13/16. Not really a knock on the quality of students or teaching. There is a art or craft to all of this that takes time & practice to learn.
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#29
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
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I think it's appropriate that a person would have to look ahead and see where they have to start walking again. And I think it's appropriate that people would have to determine clearances themselves. I say this as a person who has started daydreaming on one of those walkways and noticed the end by a foot coming out from under me. (It's actually kind of amusing; I recommend trying it sometime.) ![]() |
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#30
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Re: [FRC Blog] myRIO Expansion Port - What's the Deal?
Sorry to be getting to this late. The MXP is a standard developed for myRIO and utilized for roboRIO. At least some of the drawings, tools, and documents are there because myRIO is used for college level design classes. If you don't need SPICE and don't want to expose the kids to it, I don't think anyone is going to twist your arm. If your comment is that some basic information is missing, please ask and I'm sure it can be provided.
As for the mechanical design. There are inserts for screwing the MXP card to the roboRIO, and the assumption was that this would be a common approach. The MXP docs also defines a planar variant that is intended to be used on myRIO side connectors. It is the team's design, and if you would rather have the board extend up into the robot, that is your choice, but unless the board is tiny, I suspect it will better serve as a lesson in how not to do mechanical design. Thus the recommendation is to use the ninety degree connection and screw the accessory to the roboRIO. The primary goal with the MXP was to open up and more fully support the daughter-card or co-processors that a few teams implement. This can be limited to physical connector selection or can include integrated sensors and even processing. Even with the documentation, there is a chance of failure. There is also an opportunity for more open discovery and innovation. Please let us know how to improve it. Greg McKaskle |
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