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#76
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
You could make a box tubing frame that goes to max. height and run fishing line from top to bottom at 9.5" increments. Blocks boulders, almost impossible to block cameras. Cheesecake is still alive, you're all welcome
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#77
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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The pertinent tournament rules are G7, T12, T14, T15, and the paragraph quoted below from 5.5.2: Quote:
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#78
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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1) Team A places their robot on field, with a shot blocker 2) Team A plays match, successfully blocks vision and no shots 3) After a visit to the question box, and convincing by a team, the Head Referee determines Team A's robot was in violation of G7-A at the start of the match 4) The Head Referee notifies Team A that the blocker must be removed, or he will disable them at the start of their next match for G7. Is it right? There is clearly a disagreement between the Head Referee and the LRI as to what constitutes as an R9 violation, since the LRI passed the robot through inspection. Ultimately, however, the Head Referee's decisions are final and he/she may make the interpretation that a mechanism violates G7 and refuse to allow the team to play a match until it is remedied. This sequence and rule gives the Head Referee ultimate discretion as to the legality of any part of a robot. While I'm not saying it will go to this extreme, the Head Referee certainly has the authority to disable a robot he/she believes is in violation of a robot rule. The major concern is consistent enforcement with something that already exists in such a grey area. The question of what constitutes as "specifically designed to interfere with" and what constitutes as "interfering with remote sensing capabilities" is what defines an R9 violation, and this Q&A has opened up a very large question as to the intended interpretation. Previously, I would have thought that Jon Stratis' interpretation was the correct one: passive devices which interrupt line of sight are not interference, as long as they are not attempting to mimic the vision target or otherwise confuse the software. The GDC seems to have taken the stance that "blocking" is to be considered "interfering". R9 is a safety rule at the core, and nothing about blocking camera tracking seems to be inherently unsafe, unlike tricking a camera to see another goal, and causing a bystander to get hit with a ball (or whatever the game piece is) It's worth noting that the term "specifically designed to" and "solely designed to" are not equivalent. I can have a device which is specifically designed to accomplish multiple things, such as an arm which can manipulate multiple defenses. I can also have a device which is specifically designed to block shots, vision and help me see my robot. It has multiple intended functions. How do you prove that something was not specifically designed for a task that it is performing? |
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#79
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
But your box tubing confuses my camera algorithm! And blocks my rangefinder, throwing off my shot! /argument_to_head_ref
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#80
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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#81
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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Please, quote the rulebook where it gives the head ref the power to disable a robot for violation of a robot rule. There are specific game rules that reference specific robot rules with consequences (like the bumper rules), and there are game rules that mirror robot rules (like starting configuration). But there's nothing like what you've described here. |
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#82
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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#83
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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#84
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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We can't retroactively red card teams like that. You would see half the teams at a competition getting red carded for one or more matches when we do the finals reinspection, as we ALWAYS find stuff that the teams hadn't had respected during the event. I really, really doubt you or anyone else wants us to go to that extreme. |
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#85
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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#86
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
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Last edited by CalTran : 22-03-2016 at 17:47. Reason: Sniped. |
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#87
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
Which is ultimately determined by the LRI, as the LRI has the ultimate authority on the legality of all robots/components/mechanisms.
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#88
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
But if a robot has been completely approved by the LRI, and has already passed inspection, then a G7 argument is neither here nor there. The Head Referee should only require a reinspection if he feels the blocker in question is illegal, but if the LRI already inspected you and deemed that your blocker is fully within the rules, then he gets the final say in terms of robot legality.
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#89
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
I fail to see how an LRI can ever overrule the Head Referee on a G7-A decision. I am not arguing that the Head Referee is correct. Head Referees make incorrect interpretations of rules all the time, unfortunately. It's part of being human. Once the Head Referee determines that G7-A is violated, it is their discretion and their discretion alone (per 5.5.3) to make the decision to disable a robot, regardless of if the rule was actually violated. It is in the ARENA, it is under Head Ref jurisdiction. Period.
The Head Ref could see a blocker, make an independent decision without consulting the LRI that it violates R9, disable a robot, have the team come up to the question box afterwards, and refuse to replay the match, even if the LRI says it was legal and passed inspection. It's their prerogative. I'm not saying it will ever go to that extreme. But per the rules, it could happen, and crazier rulings have happened on shakier ground in the past. |
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#90
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Re: Your tall opaque robot is now illegal
Exactly. I have never seen a head ref call a G7-A on his own. If a robot has passed inspection, the head ref has to assume it's legal according to the robot rules. Believe it or not, most head refs don't know the robot rules all that well! Once a robot has passed inspection, the most I've seen a head ref do is ask the LRI to take another look at something specific.
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