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#1
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West Coast Drive is Illegal?
According to R2:
"The ROBOT must have a FRAME PERIMETER, contained within the BUMPER ZONE, that is comprised of fixed, non-articulated structural elements of the ROBOT. Minor protrusions no greater than ¼ in. such as bolt heads, fastener ends, and rivets are not considered part of the FRAME PERIMETER." I would interpret wheels as articulated elements, therefore WCD designs are illegal this year. Or am I missing something? ![]() |
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#2
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
Please read the blue box of the rule:
Quote:
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#3
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
Articulation implies a flexible joint. West coat drive wheels are on a fixed frame and do not move with respect to the frame.
In any case, the restriction is regarding the frame, and not parts. |
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#4
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
Bumper rules are much like 2014. West coast drives then as now need structure outside the wheels to define the frame perimeter and support the bumpers. The west coast drive "frame" is well inside the frame perimeter for a legal robot
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#5
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
All this said though you can still make an illegal west coast drive
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#6
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
Quote:
The relevant requirement is R26. Quote:
Quote:
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#7
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
Here are two examples of frame perimeters of a west coast style frame. The not legal one has a wheel defining the frame perimeter. The wheel moves relative to the frame so is not legal. To be legal the bumper would have to be attached to and be supported by the wheel. Not useful. On the legal frame, the upper frame defines the frame perimeter because it is in the bumper zone. If was not there the robot would still be legal because the front rail would define the frame perimeter, not the wheel. Bumper support rules would still have to be met.
While probably not as heavy defense year as beach ball bot, Good practice says you want to keep the bumpers from being driven into the wheels. Last edited by FrankJ : 17-01-2016 at 14:23. |
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#8
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
What if you are using 8" wheels? You can no longer satisfy R26 which states that you must have perimeter frame support for bumpers with gaps not exceeding 8 inches. do you have to have an outer frame member that covers the wheels from end-to-end?
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#9
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
Quote:
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#10
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
Quote:
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...postid=1515197 - Everett |
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#11
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
Hmmmm... not the kind of engineering I want to teach my team. I get how one can circumvent rules to remain 'legal' however that doesn't necessarily make it sound engineering. I was hoping for both a legal way AND a way that follows the spirit of the rule which, I believe, is for the frame perimeter to support the plywood bumper base sufficiently so that it doesn't crack during collisions.
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#12
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
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#13
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
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We have built them similarly to 118 in the past, drive the heck out of our robot, collisions and all, with no cracks in our plywood bumpers ever. I'd say it was pretty sound. To each its own. |
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#14
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
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#15
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Re: West Coast Drive is Illegal?
It does make me wonder how many teams will pursue a 'west coast drive' this year. I know cantilevered wheels and the rougher defenses make me nervous, but I've never been terribly bold.
So, who's going for it? |
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