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#46
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
We are running 4" stealth wheels that are connected 1:1 onto mini cims. The only time we damaged the ball was when we were testing, and somebody forgot to reverse the left motor. This made both motors spin the same direction. It made two small gashes in the ball but it's still usable. We have another ball we bought, but we don't want to use it until we get the final version of our shooter made. Has anybody noticed a difference in performance in a wheeled shooter from a new ball compared to an old vall? And does anybody know how often they will switch balls out in the game?
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#47
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
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#48
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
To be honest, I don't really know. We have all of our electrical on a practice robot so we just plugged the motors into an old power distributor, with no motor controllers. It shoots more than far enough, just need the correct angle.
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#49
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
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That's why it's important to test your prototype to see how much the correct angle is affected by voltage. If the effect is enough to be a concern, you will want to design your shooter to operate at a lower voltage (say 9 volts) and then used a closed-loop controller (PID, bang-bang, Take-Back-Half, etc) to hold the wheel speed constant as the battery gets weaker. |
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#50
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
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#51
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
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Did you mean to say 1:2 ? If so, you might want to instead consider increasing your wheel diameter by 50% and reducing your motor speed appropriately. |
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#52
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
We made a second iteration of our shooter that uses 4'' colsons and no longer rips up boulders. We're running that shooter off 2 775pros. We've noticed a significant and problematic difference between a fairly new boulder and the boulder pictured here, which is now even more torn up than before. I think that this is caused by the torn up boulder losing air faster and not "pushing back" as much on the shooter wheels. I guess catapults have the edge on this problem, although they might have their own problems.
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#53
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
Yes, that is what I meant. So every 1 rotation of the motor, the wheel rotates twice. But it appears you understood what I was trying to say atleast. Thank you for correcting me.
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#54
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
You might want to ask around for opinions from other teams who have tried that, before investing too much time in it. Just a thought.
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#55
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
I also had made a prototype that resulted in this. I used a 4 inch hi-grip wheel. Only shot it about 10 times and it is covered in bruises. We named the ball Ricardo, so out little Ricardo was in a little bit of pain.
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#56
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Re: pic: Shooter damaged a Boulder
What kind of compression, gear ratio, etc. did you have for your shooter?
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