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#1
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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#2
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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"Beat the defender, get into position and score." In 2014, the secret was to score quick enough that a safe zone wasn't needed. |
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#3
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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#4
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
Too many people in this thread are speculating. That puts a lot of noise out there for teams looking for good information.
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#5
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
Question (somewhat rhetorical): As it relates to being the victim of a T-bone pin, does swerve (or mecanum, or other omnidirectional drives) help you get out, or make the problem worse? What about if you're trying to place the T-bone?
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#6
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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Wheels with rollers also can't cause a T-bone, since they can't push with any substantial force. Swerve drive can place a T-bone. |
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#7
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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I've seen swerves get TBoned. I've also seen mecanum wheeled robots shove 6wd robots sideways.. Physics is weird sometimes, this is why we prototype. |
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#8
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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Personally I'm a fan of active mechanisms to get out of T-bones. Using our offseason edition of our H-drive in 2014 we never got stuck in a pin unless it was against the wall. However, a hexagon is another way to achieve the same goal. If your team feels it's worth pursuing, go ahead and do it - speaking from experience, it really is an awful feeling to not even be able to control the movement of your robot just because someone's pushing you around. |
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#9
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
1058 did it with mecanum against teams with weaker tank drives or other non-tank drives pretty consistently in 2014. However once we met teams with more powerful drive trains we were less effective.
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#10
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
We retrofitted our 2014 bot for a hex frame (Octoframe, actually) last fall and used it at an off-season event. There is a brief thread on CD about the experience:
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...30#post1406830 We weren't on the receiving end of a lot of T-Bone attempts at the event, but our driver did get a bit of experience with it. It helped a bit with T-Bones, but didn't appear to be a magic bullet. The biggest problem with bulged side bumpers came when we tried driving parallel to the wall. Once the tip of the bulge hit the wall, it turned the robot slightly toward the wall, which started an instant vicious cycle that sucked the bot tight into the wall. I don't expect we will try them again soon. |
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#11
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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Our experience running butterfly in 2013 offseason made it seem well suited for that style of safe zone to safe zone sprinting, but we also ran a normal 6wd that year and had similar performance. It's hard to say for sure, there are many variables involved with the implementation (and how its' driven) that matter a great deal, so it's not as simple as X drive versus Y drive. The best thing to do is to proto and test what you want to run if this is a performance advantage you are going for. Designing your setup to be a modification of the AndyMark or Vex kit drives would make this iteration easier for most teams. |
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#12
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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#13
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
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#14
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Re: FRC T-bone-ing and Hexagonal drive
Hexagonal and round robots have trouble fitting through doors in some venues. Williams Arena, I'm lookin' at you!
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