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#46
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
Amazon is also a good source for Baltic Birch plywood in a variety of sizes and thicknesses.
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#47
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Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
While it is pretty typical our experience might be useful for someone. We used a piece of 1/16 aluminum sheet on our WCD which is quite a bit thinner than most teams use (254 uses .1 so they can tap it I believe) which was nice as we didn't have to pocket it which would of taken a lot of water jet time. We were worried about it breaking especially around the battery but it worked great. It also added ton of rigidity to the chassis which improved handling IMO.
Last edited by mman1506 : 29-12-2014 at 19:57. |
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#48
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
I'm going to toot my own horn for a moment....
We've done 1) 1/16" G-10/FR4 Garolitem (2009, 2009 offseason, 2010, 2012) Pros -Looks darn good (glossy black) -Very Stiff/strong -Easy enough to drill, but vacuum the mess! Cons -Expensive -Waterjet delaminates it, so they pierce 3-4" away from final cut and feed over. We did some external slots to act as rivet holes, then match drill rest on robot. 2) 6mm (~1/4") 5 ply baltic Birch (2012 offseason, 2013 season, 2014 offseason, 2015 season) Pros -Easy to cut -Cheap -Very HIGH stiffness to weight -Can thread fasteners right into it for components -When painted, looks nice enough. Cons -Termites -Ignorant teams look down on it. This is fine, it just points out their lack of understanding of material properties and basic math 3) .125 6061-T6 diamond pattern (Waterjetted/lasercut). (2011 season, 2011 offseason, 2014 season) Pros -Hypetrain -Forces you to do layout Cons -Expensive resource wise -Not as stiff as the other 3 items -One and done, no mods 4) .25 ABS (if you count 294). This is similar enough to (2007 season) -It's really just a heaver version of plywood. I'd use plywood over this. I highly recommend the wood, no need to laminate or do anything to it. Just use it as is. If your frail ego can't handle the wood, garolite is a great option at 1/16" thick but requires more tools to work with. The diamond bellypan is nice... but in nearly all cases is a huge resource waste. Many subsystem gearboxes and gussets could be cut in the same time. Last edited by AdamHeard : 29-12-2014 at 21:14. |
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#49
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Quote:
I've never understood the diamond belly pan thing is their any other advantage over a thinner sheet besides being able to tap it? |
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#50
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
We like that it makes it super easy to zip tie wires down. You can do this with wood too, but you have to drill a hole wherever you want to put a zip tie in.
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#51
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No need to drill holes through the wood. http://m.homedepot.com/p/Commercial-...5665/202520055 |
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#52
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
Quote:
Instead I will waterjet GIANT holes ![]() |
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#53
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
Quote:
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#54
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
[quote=AdamHeard;1417870]
3) .125 6061-T6 diamond pattern (Waterjetted/lasercut). (2011 season, 2011 offseason, 2014 season) QUOTE] Don't you want to go back to Einstein? Lol. I'm sure 973 will do fine without the fancy belly pan. Dumb question, why do you switch from year to year? |
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#55
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
We use this stuff:
http://www.piedmontplastics.com/land...ate-sheet.aspx It's often called "twin-wall" or corrugated polycarbonate. I believe McMaster sells it but I'm not sure what variety they have. We typically aim for a thickness between 1/4th and 1/8th. Anything less than an 1/8th can be too flexible. It's lightweight and reasonably priced from our local vendors. It's also easily machined... and by machined, I mean you can drill holes into it or cut it with a knife/razor. I highly suggest learning how to cut it and mount it to take advantage of it's inherit perpendicular strength (perpendicular to the inner walls that is). We've been very happy with it over the years. |
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#56
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
Would something like this work fine? http://www.homedepot.com/p/Unbranded...1178/203183010
Or does it have to be baltic birch? |
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#57
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
We have a sponsor willing to cut a pan out of sheet metal for us this year. Does any team use sheet metal instead of aluminum? If so what gauge? Or does any team use stainless steel. Just wondering short of the electrical issues that could occur if we were not careful, are there any other downfalls to using sheet metal. We normally use .25 lexan and have really not had any issues with it but it is expensive. and a pain to cut
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#58
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
I agree with other posts further up: say thank you to the sponsor, but use plywood.
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#59
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
Quote:
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Unbranded...9023/100073744 |
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#60
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Re: Good Material For Bottom of Chassis
Quote:
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