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#16
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
I too would like to help my team improve their use of encoders.
I'm most interested in encoders that could be used for flywheel shooters that don't require any machining to install. In 2012, I remember teams used light emitting sensors to count light and dark marks on a spinning disk. Are these still viable? If so, which ones work well (high reliability, easy installation, non-contacting) and are reasonably priced? Dave Build Mentor 2976 |
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#17
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
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What you're referring to is a simple IR beam break sensor (example: https://www.adafruit.com/product/2168). One of the modules is just an IR LED, and the other is a receiver that tells you if it sees the LED or not. I don't see any problem with the electronics not being reliable, but you would have to manufacture you're own spinning disk to serve as an interrupter. Those adafruit ones seem pretty straightforward to mount, but I'm sure there are some better ones out there that come in a single module. While I think mechanically attaching a proper high speed encoder would be the right solution for a flywheel shooter, these are still pretty useful. You can use them as limit switches and even "linear encoders" with the right interrupter. |
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#18
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
If you are spinning it fast enough (quite likely), you can put the light/dark pattern directly onto the disk, and use a reflective optical sensor. If you do this, use a relatively inexpensive sensor and be ready to replace it, because it'll be located right next to that spinning wheel, and FRC robots have been known to collide with one another or the field elements. On occasion.
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#19
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
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#20
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
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All of these require no machining and interface nicely with other COTS components. |
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#21
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
Do you have a source for these? 469 used a ton of them as well when I was on the team, but I've found it hard to source them at a reasonable price.
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#22
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
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http://www.allegromicro.com/en/Produ...Cs/ATS667.aspx As long as you can get the face of the sensor close enough to the teeth of a ferrous metal gear, you'll see one pulse per tooth that passes. They're around $7 each. |
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#23
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
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#24
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
I've grabbed a few off ebay a few times. Just make sure to look the exact model number and make sure it meets your specs.
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#25
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
We use the Grayhill 63R on the drivetrain. Last year, we used the gyro on the Spartan Board--it worked great, and we likely will use it again.
Like others, we have used banner sensors/photo eyes for no-contact object tracking in the past. We used 4 VersaPlanetary integrated encoders on our shooter wheels, scaler, and portcullis device this year. Provided you manage your ribbon cables properly and know how to match the direction of the encoder with the direction given by the SRX, I would highly recommend them. |
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#26
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
gyro&accelometer - for PID and stuff i think...
microswitch - to know if the ball is secured inside the robot magnetic door sensor - to know if the scaling arm lifts the robots high enough for the scale to count |
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#27
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
We used the built in accelerometer of the roborio as a tilt sensor.
This year, in autonomous, we had a problem. Our robot was top heavy. If we tried to get over obstacles in autonomous, if we went too fast, we tipped. If we went too slow, we got stuck. The tilt sensor was our salvation. You can see it in action in this youtube video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=roVc581joiA As 247 goes over the moat, the announcer indicates that we look stuck. What you see on the film is that we drift back to the back side of the moat, and then suddenly charge forward. Well, the drift isn't a drift. We programmed it to wait two seconds and check the tilt. If we weren't on flat ground, we would go slowly back, and then gun it full speed to finish the job. It worked quite nicely. We also used it as an anti-tip sensor. If the tilt got too high, we cut wheel speed or moved in reverse to prevent tipping. That one didn't always work, as seen in the same video at about 1:10. |
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#28
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Hey I was thinking the same thing by using the gyro as an anti-tilt. Can I ask how effective that was at saving the bot from tipping? I might try it out my self next time we have a tall bot challenge.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G900A using Tapatalk |
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#29
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
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Challenges with such a document:
I'd expect some mentors or students don't want to think about sensing system design much, and just need a quick answer as to "what should I use for situation XYZ". Others will have this design experience, and just aren't familiar with what's commonly used for FRC... Perhaps a community-maintained wiki for this (and other topics) is an option? I haven't seen one yet, although I haven't looked very hard either... EDIT: After a brief amount of searching, I came across https://firstwiki.github.io/wiki/tech , but it looks like there is plenty of work to be done still. Last edited by gerthworm : 04-08-2016 at 09:13. |
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#30
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Re: What sensors do your teams use
We use students as limit switches... the robot runs into them and they let us know about it. Decent feedback but a little slow and if they get hit too hard then they stop working sometimes. The good thing is we seem to have a never ending supply of them for replacements.
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