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#16
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
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But I agree: Too short for much value. I'd make a nice CNC router, but 16" of steel track doesn't help. |
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#17
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
The classmates are useful if a student wants to program but has no laptop available. The laptops are small but they're perfectly good for programming or researching tools and parts on the internet. And it would be a last-minute backup for a driver station if your primary station laptop malfunctions (this happened to us last year at our regional when our laptop decided to stop communicating over Ethernet)
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#18
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
The individual Igus components seem like the obvious worst deal when there's an entire bag of them.
The video card is easily the trickiest part since it's only as good as the knowledge a team already has. Many school computers have the proper PCI-E slot, but don't have a power supply that can support it. So it could definitely be a miss for a team that doesn't check compatibility ahead of time. On the other hand, it could easily be a MASSIVE win for teams who need another CAD machine and have an "almost there" computer donated to them. It also means the team should have some knowledge of CAD to make any use of it, considering that the team won't get it for another few weeks. There are definitely some steals on there if a team has machining capability and can adapt to a part. 8 ABEC-rated metric bearings for 5 credits ?! Or maybe they're a miss if there's a problem with reliability on the part, thus they're at fire-sale rates.Last edited by JesseK : 01-12-2014 at 14:48. |
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#19
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
For 95% of the CAD work most FIRST teams do, that video card is very overkill. An affordable ($200 range) workstation graphics card is all you really need for most modeling tasks. At this point, most reasonable computers are bottlenecked by CPU, not GPU, the opposite of most video games.
That said, if we have left over FC credits, I wouldn't be upset if our team grabbed one for the CAD stations. |
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#20
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
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#21
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
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#22
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
CADing on integrated graphics will be painful when you get into full robot assemblies or complex lightening patterns, but I would concur that a midrange Quadro is very overkill for FRC use. Really low or midrange gaming cards are perfectly adequate.
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#23
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
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In this scenario it's more that the team has a hundred credits that they haven't found a separate use for. I believe my team has only figured out get the most out of about 480 credits thus far and are considering whether to get more components to keep old robots running or small parts that may be useful in prototyping. If we wind up not figuring out a good use (we'd rather put the credits to good use rather than hoarding...) then we may get the card near the end of the purchase window, or one or two other things we're curious about. Last edited by JesseK : 01-12-2014 at 19:17. |
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#24
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
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#25
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
Maybe you could get 6 net books @ 100 credits each...
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#26
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Re: Worst Deals in FIRST Choice
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In which case it was the perfect solution... minimal weight increase and pretty much plug and play. So yes, the certainly have valid FRC uses. |
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