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#16
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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Most teams are several orders of magnitude away from being optimized enough for bellypan choice to even matter much anyway. I posted in a bellypan thread the tradeoffs between several options but am on mobile and can't hunt it down. |
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#17
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...0&postcount=48 Quote:
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#18
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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Garolite makes it look more "professional" compared to plywood, but I feel like we could just paint over it. I've seen your bellypan threads, and I thought they were very helpful. It's also reassuring to know that your team has tried many different options and optimized. As long as we don't have a game like this year's and we don't build too big, we're probably okay weight-wise. Both Garolite and plywood are so easy to use that I'm reasonably certain we can swap it out on one robot if the need is dire. |
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#19
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
Another really lightweight pption is 1/2in or3/16in corrugated plastic. That stuff is sure light and great for electronics boards. We've used it the past few years and have seen many teams using it before. You can even get it in colors to look good
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#20
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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How good the robot looks depends more on how you use the material and your workmanship. There was a mostly wood robot in the Tesla Division that exhibited better workmanship and looked more professional than 80% of the other robots in Tesla. Of course, there were metal robots that also looked better than 80% of the other robots in Tesla. |
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#21
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
The biggest negative (performance wise) to plywood over G10 is that it is thicker. If ground clearance is important it can make a difference. Otherwise its much easier to manufacture and secure components into(pre drill and then self tapping screws). The extra weight is negligible because it is so low to the ground.
Last edited by MichaelBick : 23-05-2015 at 14:00. |
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#22
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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Has anyone actually performed a statistical test on how wooden robots perform vs how metal robots do? I don't know or suspect an answer, it just would be interesting to know. |
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#23
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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#24
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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#25
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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Statistical evidence can only prove a correlation. It cannot prove causation. Therefore there could be statistical evidence that wood robots perform better than metal robots, but the evidence could not show that robots perform better because they are made out of wood. For all we know wood robots could perform better because they are made by better teams. |
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#26
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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#27
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
A plywood bellypan is easily rattle-canned black, and no one would ever know it's wood.
The wood we use is a 5 ply baltic birch at 6mm thick. It's density is .025 lb/in^3. For a structural bellypan two things are happening load wise. 1) Shear loads are being transferred corner to corner. 2) frame torsionally loads are reacted. Most reasonable materials easily satisfy #1 if attached properly. The second is harder, and is one of the advantages of the plywood (over the garolite) due to stiffness. The increase in stiffness mainly comes from the much greater thickness. We like the wood because it's so easy to work with, and meets the performance specs we need. The garolite works, but is much harder to get cut how we need and costs far more. |
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#28
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
We use perforated aluminum sheet like this stuff. It's surprisingly strong, and offers plenty of pre-made spots for zipties and other cable management hardware. It's not particularly heavy, either. The one thing I hate about it is that the holes don't line up with component holes, but some precision drilling can make up for that.
Anyway, cool gearboxes. I couldn't tell what you meant by a dropped swerve until I saw the modules in a base. |
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#29
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Re: pic: GBX-123 chassis example
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