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#1
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Operating two Robots Simultaneously
I need help...we've done this many times before, but for some reason we can't get it to work now. We'd like to run our previous two robots at the same time for demonstration purposes. In the past we've taken one of the two and reprogrammed the bridge and driver station to a different team number (we usually pick 9999). When we try that now the robot does not respond.
To run both, we've begun to run RR with an Ethernet cable, and AA wirelessly. Ideally, we'd like to run the last three robots simultaneously - but we currently have only two driver stations set up. RR is (of course) a RoboRIO bot, with the newest version of Labview and the newest Driver Station. AA and UA are both CRIO bots, but we have the 2014 driver station software in a separate folder on our main driver station laptop. We usually just try to use any of the other Labview-installed laptops to run RR, since they all have the latest driver station software. Please help - We have a demo scheduled for July 3 where I'd really like to have 2 or even 3 robots running together. |
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#2
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
When we attempt to do such a thing, we use two separate laptops.
I think that having the Driver Stations for two different years on the same computer may cause some conflicts, so we have multiple laptops with different years and one laptop with a dual-boot. The 2013 robot might require the 2013 Driver Station, and might not be compatible with 2014. |
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#3
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
One of the easiest ways to run multiple robots simultaneously, all with the same team number, is to set them all up for solitary wireless operation as would be normal. Then just give each robot's DLink a different unique SSID, and connect each laptop wirelessly to the appropriate paired Robot/Dlink.
Turn off the laptop connecting automatically to DLinks with your team number. That puts everyone on separate networks, and fully separated networks can have common IP's just like your neighbor's home network probably uses the same IP settings that your house does. DLink's won't talk to laptops unless they have been connected, and there is no conflict with duplicate robot numbers unless they are on the same network. Last edited by Mark McLeod : 08-06-2015 at 11:20. |
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#4
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
We do this quite a lot, and there are in fact many ways to carry it out.
Can you describe what is going wrong? What your network topology is, etc.? Greg McKaskle |
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#5
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
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Yes, whenever we set up a radio and driver station with a different team number, the laptop will find the radio, but we continue to get a "no robot code" message Not sure what "network topology" means or is... I have re-programmed the dlink successfully with a different team number, then changed the team number on the driver station options, but it will not connect to the robot...only when I have the actual team number does it work. To the other responses - FlamingSpork: we do use two different laptops. One has both the new and the old versions, and the rest only have the new. I seriously doubt that the presence of both driver station programs is causing a conflict, because I can operate either the new or the old robot with the same driver station IF that robot is set up with our correct team number, and I can not operate a robot that is set up with a different team number on any laptop. Mark McLeod: Thanks for the response, but I'm a mechanical guy - I don't understand a thing you are saying. If you can dumb down your recommendation to my level it will probably work, since it does not involve changing the team number (which seems to be causing our problem). |
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#6
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
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We've always used a distinctive SSID on each robot's access point. It's easy to do. Just log into the D-Link's admin web page and change it to something that identifies that particular robot. Then you can connect your driver station computer to the wireless network corresponding to the robot you want to control. Last edited by Alan Anderson : 08-06-2015 at 16:10. |
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#7
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
The IP of the dlink really doesn't matter unless you need to connect to its web page. The address range of the DHCP is important if you are not running static IPs. For the RoboRio bot make sure the DHCP is turned on and set for the correct range. Just changing the IP of the dlink will not do this. The Week zero page of screensteps is a good read for the Crio. The IP of the driver station for the crios needs to be 10.te.am.xx where the te.am. matches the CRio.
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#8
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
Hmmm. We've programmed our 2014 robot radio to be 4276b, and just connect to that wireless.
BUT we must go into the settings in the driver station software and set it to the '14 DS mode. |
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#9
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
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That being said - I would much rather do this without having to change the team number, and what you're recommending sounds easy. Quote:
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#10
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
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Now, how to change it I'm not entirely sure, but I think it is the D-Link's configuration page. |
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#11
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
Here's the SSID setup for Netgear WPN824. I assume other routers have something similar in their config setup. |
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#12
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Re: Operating two Robots Simultaneously
First you can start by setting up your DLink using the FRC Bridge Utility if you aren't sure what state it was last left in.
It also gives you a known starting point at any time if you feel that something may have been messed up. Changing the DLink SSID:
Last edited by Mark McLeod : 09-06-2015 at 12:46. |
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