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#61
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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Unfortunately it wasn't until after our only competition did we find out we can power it via PoE from the VRM and the power connector for redundancy. |
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#62
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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The staff made good engineering tradeoffs this year on radio features. |
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#63
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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I'd still like to see quicker network connections, both for demos and competition. The long cycle time on initial connection made troubleshooting far more time consuming than it should have been. |
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#64
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
I was CSA at five events this past season. I think I might have seen three occasions where the power connection at the radio was an issue, and one of them was because the team was using the wrong size connector.
If you want quicker connections for troubleshooting, use USB tethering. |
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#65
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
We had our barrel connector come out twice, and we used the right size connector. One incident that was particularly humorous is when a team's defense manipulation arm actually landed on the radio connector with lots of speed / force, pulling it out of the radio. So I guess that's one reason to use PoE.
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#66
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[FRC Blog] Radio Silence
A trick we used was to loop a ziptie around the barrel connector. Using this method, we had one FMS disconnect the entire season (caused by a faulty Ethernet cable).
http://i.imgur.com/GdhH1Tq.jpg |
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#67
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
You should place that bet. I saw a multitude of radio barrel connectors eject themselves vs defenses (especially the rock wall). After each occurrence I advised teams to tape the connectors in place and it resolved their problems. From the detailed notes I took as FTA, I'd be willing to wager that 75% of the "phantom" radio reboots were related to power on the radio end, not the VRM.
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#68
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
While I understand that the VRM is likely not the cause for the radio dropouts, at a system level all components of the system should be compatible. Compatibility requires an assessment of such factors as tolerance stack-up.
The present VRM can provide Voltages as low as 11.93 Volts at the regulated 12 Volt output. It might be wise to require that the radio operate within the present system - or to alter the present system to operate the radio. Either specify ~11.5 Volts as the minimum operating Voltage at the radio input or change the VRM such that it provides a minimum of ~12.5 Volts at the 12 Volt output. Either of these solutions removes the possibility of hardware conflict due to Voltage tolerance. Intended as a suggestion. |
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#69
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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In point of fact during the bid round in which the RoboRIO was accepted I proposed in writing to FIRST this exact solution. Quote:
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Then again if we simply stop allowing power to the radios to be disconnected we'd not have to worry about these crazy boot issues except when loading the field. I really think FIRST should find a way to support batteries for those radios as others have mentioned, but finding a wide enough selection of COTS radios with this feature is going to be tough. I doubt FIRST wants to make custom mobile robot radios as I have mentioned it to them before. Quote:
Last edited by techhelpbb : 06-06-2016 at 12:27 PM. |
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#70
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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Considering that for most teams reliable video feeds from the robot is nice to have but not a necessity (except those doing vision processing on the laptops of course), to me it makes far more sense to ensure a reliable command signal to the robots over the luxury of a video feed. The old radios (pre-2009) would boot and connect in under 5 seconds, and were supported by a backup battery (through the controller), meaning even if you did somehow drop connection, you'd pick it back up almost instantly, no more sitting on the field for half of the match because of a momentary brownout or sudden impact. Switching away from the overcrowded 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz frequencies alone would be a huge benefit to field connectivity (plus people could set up WiFi in the pits again), and separating control signals from video could open up more bandwidth for both. Plus these days there are a ton of options available for compact radios of various frequencies due to the growth in the RC aircraft and DIY electronics communities, so finding a suitable Transmitter + Receiver for FRC uses should be much easier now than it was 10 years ago. |
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#71
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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The big issue with the DLinks was that the frequency backoff was hardcoded into the radio, and the value was the same for every radio produced. This meant that if they ever interfered with eachother, that would all start trying to separate from each other, but they would do so at the same rate, which just caused them to keep interfering. That was the root cause for the Christmas Trees. The new radios have that number legitimately randomize, which actually actively allow the radios to not interfere with each other. So even though they were FCC certified, for our uses they had issues, and our options for radios have to be specialized so those issues don't happen. |
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#72
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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Furthermore: even if they follow the same path to degrade they are all at various orientations, distances and signal strengths so the odds are very low they'd actually all block in that way. Last edited by techhelpbb : 06-06-2016 at 03:36 PM. |
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#73
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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#74
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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#75
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Re: [FRC Blog] Radio Silence
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Personally I'd rather have continuous control and a possibly temperamental camera connection than the chance of having my whole robot parked on the field doing nothing. I also think that, if the rules continue to allow driver station cameras, it will eliminate much of the need on-board cameras due to the far better framerate and resolutions possible with such a setup. On-board cameras are still great for targeting, but there are plenty of ways to score a goal reliably that don't require a live video link. Last edited by cbale2000 : 06-06-2016 at 04:50 PM. |
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