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#1
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Re: FRC shifting gears
What kind of force is needed? I saw a supershifter demo with a servo that put out around 9 lbs but it was no where near as snappy as the pistons.
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#2
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Re: FRC shifting gears
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60 psi on a 3/4" diameter cross-section seems to do the trick nicely. |
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#3
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Re: FRC shifting gears
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Doesn't look like people like it very much, and I don't see a power rating on it. |
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#4
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Re: FRC shifting gears
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You can get a lot of shifts out of a couple filled tanks. |
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#5
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Re: FRC shifting gears
Quote:
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#6
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Re: FRC shifting gears
Quote:
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#7
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Re: FRC shifting gears
Hands down pneumatics, you can not beat the snappy action of a pneumatic cylinder in this application.
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#8
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Re: FRC shifting gears
This might be the first year such automotive "door motor" devices are legal. You're breaking new ground here. I think it's a great idea, and if you make it work well you'll probably want to talk to AndyMark about how you mounted things.
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#9
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Re: FRC shifting gears
I just want to say how glad I am that First Newbie has been asking these questions. You'll go far by approaching problems this way. Way to go!
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#10
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Re: FRC shifting gears
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Brought to you by the IACNAP campaign. |
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#11
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Re: FRC shifting gears
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#12
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Re: FRC shifting gears
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Just like I don't claim to drive my engine up to the store... truck is a lot more appropriate. Last edited by MrBasse : 15-12-2015 at 06:45. Reason: Changed "little" to "lot" |
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#13
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Re: FRC shifting gears
Actually the part applying the force is a rod or shaft. The rod is attached to a piston.
Last edited by IndySam : 15-12-2015 at 06:59. |
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#14
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Re: FRC shifting gears
With the update to the servo rules this season, is there any change in the viability of using a servo to shift? Thinking of using a SonicShifter as a winch with about 20 lbs of force from surgical tubing when retracted. Don't know if it would be possible to shift with a 10-12W servo in that case.
Would appreciate help. Thanks. P.S. For those unaware, servos are now limited to the current put out by the 6V rail on the RoboRio instead of a strict Watt requirement as in previous years. |
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#15
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Re: FRC shifting gears
This "IACNAP Campaign" is pretty annoying.
Linguistically, language evolves and usage is king, so what you want words to mean (and/or what you were taught that they mean, and/or what they originally meant (assuming you can even chase down the etymology to verify)) has no bearing whatsoever on what they currently mean. There is value in specificity, but there's also value in not "correcting" people when they're using terminology understood by everyone in the conversation. To whit, McMaster-Carr redirects searches for "pneumatic pistons" to their catalog page for "pneumatic cylinders." |
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