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#106
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
I've met the student who CAM-ed and ran that part on the school's rather unimpressive CNC mill. He was also their operator that year. Please stop with the libel.
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#107
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
I would assume that's why he said many, instead of most.
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#108
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
I'm going to close this thread for a few hours to let people cool down and stop personally attacking other teams.
If they cannot refrain from doing so at that time, this discussion is no longer productive and the thread can stay closed. |
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#109
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#110
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Thread is now open again. Keep it civil please.
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#111
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Last year we acquired a waterjet sponsor and most of our robot was created by that sponsor from CAD files we generated. This year that sponsor could not support us, but I honestly feel like our robot is actually going to be more competitive. It's all about planning to your design / build resources. All of our robot is being made with a bandsaw and a drill press and I feel great about it. Either way, our students are inspired by the end product.
The best thing your team can do is plan. Download CAD, layout your design, get everyone on the same page. You'll learn a lot building your robot virtually before you ever cut metal in the shop. Complaining about what others have is a waste of time. Step up and make your team better. Last edited by Ryan Dognaux : 12-02-2015 at 21:33. |
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#112
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Having a Cnc machine is probably a great experience and helps teams greatly. That being said.
It is one of the sweetest feelings in all of creation to beat one of those teams. Not because of the "underdog affect" Because you worked harder Because you innovated harder Because you gave harder I'm not saying this to attack teams that may have above average resources. To the contrary, more power to them because they more than likely went out and earned them. As said before having access to more equipment is just another tool to help teams win. But it's not the only one. If you want it enough no other teams will be able to stop you from winning. The only team that can stop you from succeeding is your own. |
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#113
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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So to answer your question, we do have CNCing, we earned it tooth and nail, and we still consider ourselves lucky. Accidents of geography are a thing. Success without insanely hard work is not. |
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#114
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Dead horse thread though. Most people like more mentor involvement, and only a few people like completely student-run teams. We are the latter and do okay. Mostly it's because our programmers tend to be really good (as we come from a computer-heavy area) and don't need help, and there is a severe lack of mechanical adults (as we come from a computer-heavy area) so we can't even get mentors. I am looking for some during the summer though. That being said, being able to design a robot and actually build it has played a huge role in my decision to become an engineer. Having more mentors would be nice to point out mistakes or suggest things would be fantastic, but I am more inspired by a robot that I know I had a say in actually moving around than one that I knew would work anyway. I never liked building from the Lego kits more than once. |
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#115
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
I can understand the frustration here. FIRST Robotics is unlike any other sort of competition that high schoolers participate in. It can be very difficult for many to understand the disparity that they see on the field at an event.
Funding and resources play a huge part in our chosen sport - much more so than many other sports where rules work to even the playing field. ("Inflategate" aside, a regulation football is a regulation football wether it costs $25 or $500.) The disparity between what teams can actually fabricate and then practice with varies extremely wildly. Budgets range at least two orders of magnitude and while some teams have full time access to a complete official competition field, many have a "practice field" consisting of a linoleum floor math classroom with the desks shoved to one side or a parking lot. For teams working with hacksaws and hand drills, hearing other teams report that "parts are starting to come in" can be a bit frustrating. The part of the fabrication rules (R11) say the cost of parts do not need to be included in the $4000 limit if they are made by "sponsor employees who are members of the team". Most interpret that to be "Parts made by employees of a team sponsor." Is this the same thing? This is not a dead horse. This is a real issue that teams do face when they have to justify their existence to whomever might be influential enough to require it. I'm sure we can continue this discussion in a thoughtful, gracious and professional manner. Just some thoughts. Have a great last weekend! - Mr. Van Coach, Robodox |
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#116
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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I work at a student-run fabrication studio at my college. I also mentor team 1648. The waterjetting I do for my team doesn't go on our bill of materials. However, if I instead asked my buddy over at XYZ waterjet services to cut the parts out, that would have to go on our bill of materials, even if XYZ waterjet services sponsors us. |
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#117
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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- Mr. Van Coach, Robodox |
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#118
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#119
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#120
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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