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#91
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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#92
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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#93
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
I thought the pits and fields could have been organized a bit better. We were in Archimedes, and our pit was the furthest away it could be from the drive team entrance to the dome. Meanwhile, our field was also the furthest one from the main entrance to the dome. Would have been nice to have a bit more balance there so our drive team didn't have to leave 35 minutes before the match began.
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#94
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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#95
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
Here's one that I don't think I've seen posted yet: Championship Volunteer Name tags. Please, Please, Please make the "Volunteer" text on the tag highly visible! White on yellow isn't that. Unless I, the other volunteers, and security is blind and this sentence is highly visible.
Getting to the dome floor during lunch break was a nightmare due to the tags... Due to security (and the tag issue) I ended up spending 20 minutes on what should have been a 5 minute trip to the volunteer parking lot (forgot my phone charger). Also, speaking of phone chargers, I miss the charging kiosks they had last year at championship. Not the most secure, but very handy. |
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#96
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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There was at least one charging station, it was at the end of America's center near the Marriott, I think it had an attendant as well. |
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#97
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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My assertion is that FIRST made the bumper zone too large in vertical span. If it had been reduced in height about the current center of the zone, say from 5"-11" many of the red card situations for frame perimeter violations could have been avoided. I could actually get behind a set bumper height with a +/- 1/2" vertical tolerance. The only reasonable excuse I heard for bumpers being at the maximum height position was to make the travel required to complete the scale smaller, since judgement was based on position of bumpers relative to the low goal. I'd, personally, have found a way to get the extra travel in the scaling mechanism, because the risk of high bumpers isn't worth it. |
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#98
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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There were chargers stations around. Just not as many. They were also on the second floor of the America's Center and one in the registration area. Last edited by RoboMom : 05-05-2016 at 09:04. |
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#99
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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#100
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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When I was a student, as Chris knows, I spent a lot of time in the pits. However, I was a programmer who did only programming (and driving in 2015). I knew nothing about the details of how it worked mechanically - only a basic overview, e.g. this did this and that did that. If something broke, I was not the one who knew how to fix it or why it broke, unless it was quite obvious. I was constantly nervous that I would get asked a question about the mechanical details of the robot and that I wouldn't be able to answer it well enough, and thus hurting my team's chances at any awards. Thankfully, I was often busy during judge visits with code, but this worry was a very real thing for my first couple of years on the team, and I am absolutely sure that I was/am not alone in that. Last edited by jtrv : 05-05-2016 at 10:03. |
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#101
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
I have been taught and have taught students I've worked with to say, "I did not work on X, but let me grab so-and-so who knows more about this topic." There is no point floundering if someone with more knowledge is in the pit.
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#102
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
Sometimes it's not avoidable. We had at least one set of judges specifically seek out students who were less knowledgeable about our business plan in order to determine how much the general team knew about the "business side." I guess they were impressed enough to still give us the Entrepreneurship Award.
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#103
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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It can be a tough call when you have, for instance, advanced students on your mechanical and electrical team but only basic skilled students on your programming team. Do you tell the mechanical and electrical teams they can't build certain things because the programmers won't be able to support it? If you do allow mechanical and electrical to build to their potential, how much and what kind of support as a mentor do you provide to the overwhelmed programmers? How do you balance success to encourage pursuit of STEM with student participation? It's not easy. The answers will be a little different for each team in any given year. Getting back to judges, another worry I have is once in a while a judge will mistake one of our students as a mentor. This usually happens to taller, mature, highly knowledgable seniors. Sometimes I get the feeling that we weren't believed when we correct this misperception. Quote:
I think the best a student can do when a judge approaches you with questions that you don't know the answer is to be honest. Tell them what your role is with the team, offer to find another student who can answer the judge's questions, and ask them if they have any questions that pertain to your role. |
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#104
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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#105
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Re: Lesson Learned 2016 - The Negative
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For a long time we've recognized in a pushing match, all things but bumper height conserved, the team with lower bumpers wins. Unfortunately, this year the possible height mismatch between one team's bumpers and another was so large and in conjunction with drive systems meant to climb things that many robots ended up on top of other robots. In this situation damage or tipping was inevitable and ultimately lead to numerous red cards over the course of the season. A simple change in constraints could have eliminated the single largest source of drama this season. |
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