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#1
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
Yes, but it is often a manufacturing problem with the floor, rather than the robot. This year, as with many, it's a manufacturing design. There are these things called scoring platforms that disrupt the planarity of the field. Even in that lovely land of theory where everything works, this will result in one or more wheels becoming airborne when the robot meets one at an oblique angle.
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#2
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
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#3
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
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And I can certainly imagine wanting to strafe across the scoring platform to cap a stack that was already built, or to pack the stacks in close to each other to leave room for more. |
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#4
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
I just thought of something and I was wandering if it had ever been done before. Has anyone done a octicanum-like drivetrain with slide drive that can switch to 6-wheel drop-center? It would definitely push it with weight, but it might make it more worthwhile to go into traction mode for prolonged periods of time.
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#5
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
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#6
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
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#7
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
Yay, I didn't confuse everyone!
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#8
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
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Okay, I said octicanum-like because it still involves the ability to "switch" drive trains. Basically, you have six modules with traction and omnis. Then you have a center omni hard mounted to the center in the normal H-drive way. When you "switch" to traction, the wheel in the center gets raised off the ground. When you "switch" back to omni, the traction wheels go back up and the center wheel gets lowered back down to the ground. Did I better your understanding of it? |
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#9
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
We've used the Vex Mecanum wheels with Andmark Nanoboxes with No problems at all this year. We have encoders on each gearbox (3D printed bracket), gyro correction, and a very stiff frame. Wheels are set up to drive on to the scoring platform, and strafe to pickup totes in the landfill.
The Nanoboxes have very limited clearance between the upper mounting bolts and the CIM motor. We had to machine down the mounting bolt head OD to make these gearbox noise free. |
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#10
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
Team 3844 has been playing around with some firestone air springs as actuators that double as suspension. We will have some to give out at Championships next week if you are interested.
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#11
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
Unfortunately we won't be at Championships, but if you had a part number, pictures or CAD of your design we'd love to take a look.
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#12
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
^Seconded
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#13
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
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Also, if you're strafing ACROSS the scoring platform with your wheels on it how can you cap? The wheels will be where a stack is, unless you're like the High Tekerz and have you're wheels mounted perpendicular to the front of your robot w/ a cutout. I'd also encourage teams to seriously consider just how much value holonomic motion is adding to your robot. Ex: In the case of 4488 where everything is automated it is of high value to their game strategy (auto alignment to feeder station) However, for a team with a built in ramp (2826) they easily align with the feeder station w/ a 6wd because they designed for imprecision, mecanum is of low value to them. IN NO WAY am I saying that you should never use mecanum, but that you should honestly evaluate every option available to you in line with what Karthik outlines here. If, after honest analysis you believe that mecanum, octocanum or some other holonomic/holobrid is the best option; then go for it. This section is a word of warning from a team that had a slide drive, and got rid of it because we weren't getting the value we expected out of it. Last edited by Dunngeon : 19-04-2015 at 00:06. Reason: extraneous glyphs |
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#14
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
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(On a couple of non-drive notes, we now have a better tote lifter that is much more likely to pass inspection than our original spring-cushioned "rake". Despite this, it still has the double end-lift as well as single side-lift capabilities, and is fully capable of doing either on the step as well as the floor. We have also practiced far more tote-flipping since Bayou than we did before. We're striving to make these "inaccessible" totes available to some major stacker 'bots that are running out of "easy" totes. Carson may prove to be the best division we could hope for! ) Last edited by GeeTwo : 20-04-2015 at 22:25. |
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#15
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Re: Octocanum Drive/ Mecanum Suspension Designs?
hi all, just thought i would chime in.
this year we used with no suspension and no gyro on a very stiff overbuild 80/20 frame. the only problems we had with driving was when going over the end of the scoring platform when only two wheels were on the floor. Also though we had some of the most drive practice we have ever had,(about 50-60 hours) As primary driver i already had one years experience. So my question is this. Is there any advantage to spending an extra week or two in the build season to design these complex drives, coding gyros, and building suspension if those few weeks could have been devoted to the drive team practice? I know this year it paid off to go simple. We made it to the finals in Milwaukee. ![]() |
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