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#16
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
At the risk of getting another "Unnecessary Sarcasm Flag" thrown, I agree with this. This is CS101 Syndrome: "It's perfect, I did it!" Guess it applies to electrical as well... Get someone who isn't familiar with your wiring to examine it if you can. They'll be more able to find the problem easily than you are, because they don't think "Oh, that's normal" on something that might not be right.
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#17
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
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However, we have a very high traction drive train (brecoflex treads with about a 1.5 CoF, 750ish N force of kinetic friction while driving). The gear ratio on the drive belts is 14.2:1 using RAWboxes. While the drive train definitely contributes to our issue, there's not much we can do about it with 6hours of unbag time. |
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#18
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
Guess it's worth a shot
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#19
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
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#20
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
Was off on my math/material type. It's actually .7CoF, 370N force of traction
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#21
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
We track and compile data from a battery beak, including power output, drain rate, and changes in amperage at various voltages. If they get below a certain threshold we stop using that battery and recycle it. We've also used FRC2619's battery maintenance guide in the past.
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#22
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
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I agree with Mike that your issue could be a bad connection somewhere between the battery plug and the PDP, on either the positive or negative leg. Double check every single connection starting from the battery plug. Check for corrosion or a bad crimp. If a ring terminal looks looks dull or corroded, either replace it or hit it with a wire brush till it's shiny. Check the contacts in your main battery connector for corrosion as well. You might also try replacing your 120 Amp Main Breaker with a new one. Main breakers can occasionally have weird issues. |
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#23
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
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#24
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
About 4.75ft/sec.
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#25
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
What are the units of "drain rate" and how do you measure it?
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#26
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
It's just power output compared to ℅ battery charge. We use it to get a rough idea of how fast our batteries are being drained. Older, worse batteries tend to lose charge faster.
Theoretically, loss of 30℅ charge from 100% is normal for us. So about 12.5v to 8.75v per match, according to our multimeters |
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#27
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
I'm still puzzling how you measure this. How do you measure power?
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#28
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
It's voltage, not power(joules), my bad.
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#29
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
4.75, or 14.75? 4.75 seems unreasonably slow. Like, low gear in a two-speed slow. I'm having difficulty believing you're browning out turning or pushing at 4.75 fps, unless you have serious drivetrain issues. I guess the other question is what your current draw is when you're running full forward with the treads off the ground.
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#30
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Re: Legality of running a capacitor inline with roboRIO power
Quote:
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