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#106
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
Not a bad idea.
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#107
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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I think I should also clarify that when I have mentioned "blocks", I was implying blocks that were securely fastened to a cart or a table or whatever the team uses to work on the robot. Obviously just laying blocks on the ground with a robot on top doesn't prevent someone from bumping the robot and then causing the blocks to fall. |
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#108
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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However, I still think any sort of dedicated platform is overkill if proper precautions are used. Even blocks bolted to a cart or table are fallible and could result in a robot getting tipped over. How do you ensure nothing is caught in the wheels? Or that the robot is sitting just right on the blocks so the wheels don't touch anything? How do you lock down the robot so it can't tip? The reasonable answer always comes back to "a person has to check" and, in my mind, a person hovering over a disable button is just as good as a person spot-checking everything to do with blocking up a robot, or pulling breakers, or fiddling with code, or whatever the selected safety method is. The important thing is to be redundant in your safety measures and to have a practiced mode of operation so that everyone near the robot knows what could happen and how they must respond. The exact details are largely irrelevant. |
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#109
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
I noticed last year a LOT of extra space at Peach Tree. Obviously you couldn't add a few more practice fields due to money, personnel, time, etc. (the room in the GWCC could probably hold another 4 or more) but you could add several ~10' square spaces with simple guards around them so people have an out of the way area to practice sub systems. Obviously this only works if the regional had that kind surplus area.
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#110
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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Most venues I have been to in MAR had some room they could find for this purpose. All they need is floor really and perhaps scrap rug. |
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#111
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This is my solution. It took me about an hour. It's simple made out of 2x4 and plywood. Basically we will have this on hand at sbpli for testing and people can't put rest their chassis on the wood blocks while still being able to test mechanisms. This is obviously not perfect but it's something.
So yea if anyone here is at sbpli come to our pit and get this thing before you test. |
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#112
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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#113
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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#114
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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But even if I am missing something basic, robot frames are not all at the same height off the ground. I'm afraid that this "solution" would not work for a large fraction of the robots I have seen this year. |
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#115
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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#116
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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Just make one for your own robot guys. |
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#117
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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To be clear, this is at least slightly tongue-in-cheek. But there seems to be a lot of "my solution is foolproof, but here, let me build a better fool to break yours" going on. I have no reason to believe that this rig will actually harm anyone at SBPLI, and commend the effort towards what I hope and believe is a full spectrum attempt at safety culture. Kudos. At the same time, I think we're all simply cautioning that, regardless of your solution, common sense/safety culture is still necessary to implement it properly. Raising the wheels is by no means an entirely safe solution. In fact, I can think of specific cases in which allowing the wheels to spin under power is more dangerous than actually controlling that power digitally or electrically. Again, it takes critical thinking. Anything anywhere in life that is sold as a perfect solution comes with the danger that users will stop thinking about its risks. |
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#118
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
Indeed, for much of the development of the TechnoKats' mecanum software this year the wheels would have a fit if they were lifted from the ground. The robot would jerk back and forth as the wheels convulsed, and it could easily have rocked itself off a set of blocks. Using closed-loop speed control does not play well with unloaded motors.
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#119
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Re: Safety Issue: Robots Moving in Pits
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I guess I'm picturing jacking the robot up like a car then testing the wheels. Is there really that much sideways movement when your run the wheels off the ground? |
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#120
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