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#31
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
Well talking about the gloves, safety personnel questioned many teams at FIM Howell district event. The main reason they stated was sharp edges and what not. I get their concern, but its not a rule. Our drive team does not use them anymore, some of them don't feel comfortable. Its a personal choice.
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#32
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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No one, I assume, will be driving their robot in the pit like they drive it in a match. At a race track no one is allowed to be on or near the track when cars are racing, but they are allowed near the cars in the pits where speeds are slower and there are considerably fewer cars at any given time. The same should hold true for robots: go easy on driving in the pits, do as little as is needed, and do it reasonably safely and slowly. No one is allowed to interact with a robot on the field for safety reasons as well as interference/performance reasons. The rules are the rules, and we have had games with significantly more human interaction (I'm specifically thinking of 2005 and 2014 where the human player was right next to the field with very little between them and the robot). I believe the rules this year are more of a design constraint than a safety concern. |
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#33
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
Im sorry to hear that your dad was hit by a robot. I personally was hit by a robot last year and it hurt but I laughed it off. It was going full speed and I had a bruise on my thigh but I still would not want a rule to prevent people running robots on the floor of a competition. We built our first real robot cart this year and it does have pegs to lift the wheels but I still want to put it on the floor to test some things.
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#34
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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#35
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
With the tight quarters, heavy, elevated robots and many years with flying objects, I think we need to have a full set of rules enforced. Everyone inside the pits should be wearing bump caps (hard hats would be acceptable), have shirts tucked in, no jewelry (rings or otherwise), and steel-toed shoes with met-guards. The pits are an incredibly unorganized multi--function-shop-workspace that would be completely unacceptable in a real-world enviornment to OSHA or any other regulatory body, and we're so lightly scratching the surface of real-world safety standards that UL Safety Award is a joke. I'm surprised they're willing to put their name on the award.
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#36
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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Last edited by who716 : 12-03-2015 at 12:52. |
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#37
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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Anyhow, when accidents do happen, the action was unintended. It could be due to many reasons, like bad piece of program or failure of a sensor etc. This is why we need to exercise safety. |
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#38
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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This is supposed to be a "sport for the mind". Teams should be using their intelligence and creativity to create a culture of safety that employs good practices to adapt to the conditions as required rather than codifying very specific practices in "full sets of rules" that will be difficult to enforce as each year's game causes the hazards to change. The GDC has a hard enough job covering all the "holes" in the Game rules. How would one expect them to create rules that anticipate all the possible hazards, especially if there are so many teams that take creative approaches to the game? The Game Q&A is up to over 400 questions about the game. We would probably have to have a separate Safety Q&A each year if there are more rules regarding safety than there are now. |
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#39
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
Thanks for making my point. You're simply picking a version of 'safety' that's a functional joke, and we aren't comparing apples and oranges. We're saying 'be safe', yet ignoring industry standards for safety - standards that will be enforced for every individual that goes into engineering fields and works in any sort of test facility.
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#40
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
I keep hearing people say in the "Real World" you do this and that. I work in the "real world" and at my company we have the bigger machine shop on the West Coast and in the Machine shop all you wear is pants closed toed shoes and safety glasses or even just regular reading glasses. In the "Real World" for most advanced machining shops you must be 18 years of age or older. The best way to be safe is to have some common sense. Think about what you are doing. You can try to be as safe as you want but there will be someone who doesn't think before they do there action. It's like measure twice cut once.
Last edited by hunterteam3476 : 12-03-2015 at 18:37. |
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#41
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
Common Sense is definitely agreeable. The unfortunate thing is that what's common sense for me, for an absolute beginner, for a complete novice, for Danger Dan, and for Evel Knievel, it's all completely different things... Problem more so if you have all of them working together.
We might need more Common Common Sense. I really think that if teams are going to be moving their robots, they ought to at least let their neighbors know. That way, at least I know to move away if my own common sense tells me that I'll never be able to jump out of the way or save anyone else fast enough. |
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#42
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
For those who say that there is not enough practice space/time at a regional to test out autonomous driving routines, I agree. I feel your pain in trying to schedule a practice time on the field between matches. But that is something to be addressed separately, because I've not seen a 10' x 10' (or smaller) pit yet that will safely accommodate autonomous driving, human cordon or not. (With one hand, I applaud the efforts to try to make an unsafe practice safer, the other hand insists it would be better to eliminate the unsafe practice entirely, so I guess you get the sound of one hand clapping.) Unless your pit comes with rails similar to the practice or competition field to contain the robot...
Some have objected that they have to operate their robot on the floor, then proceed to describe non-driving actions. That's not what the OP was talking about. Most non-driving actions won't allow your robot to leave the pit. Removing the circuit breaker for the drive motors is an excellent compromise where carts or blocks are not practical. |
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#43
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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Because the alternative is much, much worse. No event or match or championship is worth risking injury to people. This is clearly evident because out of bounds and unsafe robots are disabled during matches. |
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#44
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
Without putting the robot on the ground, it is not possible to fully test a robot mechanism that is designed for picking objects off the ground. Without putting the robot on the ground, it is extremely difficult to test closed-loop wheel speed or position software.
Putting robot wheels in contact with pit floors has legitimate uses. I believe a rule against it would go too far. |
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#45
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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