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#1
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Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
Hello Mentors/Teams/Students. I'm hoping to learn more about the advantages and pitfalls for a West Coast Drive type of chassis/drive train compared to the traditional drive train. Which of you have recently transitioned from traditional drive train to WCD? Please share your experience.. the good, the bad and the ugly!
What are unique design challenges? Maintenance issues? Challenges with buying WCD parts during the rush of build season? Cost? Reliability? Since we dont yet know what the 2017 game: is WCD drive better for certain playing field surfaces but perhaps not-so-good for other surfaces? Discuss some of the varoius versions of WCD. Anxious to hear your thoughts! Thanks Jim |
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#2
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
What would be your definition of a traditional drivetrain? I thought that WCD was the traditional drivetrain...
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#3
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
Maybe 6-wheel drop-center KoP drive is traditional?
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#4
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
Quote:
Making bearing blocks used to be the toughest part for us. Again VersaFrame COTS parts have fixed that. Mounting the gearboxes is the next challenge. There are COTS solutions for some of the drive train gearboxes. We have a milling machine to make custom mounting plates for any gearbox we use. Design challenges: You can quickly design your base frame shape to fit the scoring section configuration. Cut and rivet the tubes... (to borrow a phrase) Boom. Done. Maintenance: Wheels are easy to change if your tread wears out. Buying parts: We commit to WCD style before seeing the game and buy tubing, gussets, and bearing mounts before the season starts. We've pondered swerve drive but haven't yet committed the resources to develop one. Surface: I usually consider WCD a 6 or 8 wheel skid steer system. There are several variations on this theme. However, the wheels don't care which construction technique you use. Skid steer driving performance comes down to designing for scrub / traction forces, good construction, good control, and good weight distribution. David |
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#5
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
Pros:
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#6
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
I've found a good WCD to be far more rigid than other drivetrains. This gives it better, more consistent driving characteristics and allows you to run less drop.
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#7
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
While my team has never built what I would consider a true WC drive train, we have incorporated at least one element of WCD in all but our rookie year. First of all, my understanding of the definition of WC vs traditional skid steer:
Common elements:
Distinctions:
Note that there are also drives which incorporate these features mix-and-match. The common example which comes to mind first is the (recently discontinued?) Andy Mark nano tube chassis. It has direct drive on four cantilevered axles, but these are the two corners, NOT the one usually nearest the CoG. Our second and third year drive trains also featured direct-drive wheels on cantilevered axes, but for similar reasons were clearly not WC drive trains [Edit: Our 2013 robot only had two driven wheels and two idle omnis, whereas our 2014 robot had mecanum drive; we learned a lot from these mistakes]. Advantages of WC:
Advantages of traditional skid steer:
Last edited by GeeTwo : 06-11-2016 at 22:44. |
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#8
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
Well, let me tell you all about our experiences at 2363!
Quick Build Drive Train Concept Triple Helix West Coast Drive Trains |
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#9
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
Here is my only question for you, has 254 ever not done a WCD?
I'd bet $100 that 254 does a WCD next year, and another $100 that that is what we settle on as well. It is quick, easy, and robust. Most of the design drawbacks for a particular game can be designed around with WCD without much effort, this year it was wheel spacing. |
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#10
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
One of the great things about it is that it's almost formulaic in design, which allows for super quick design and construction. Many of the problems have already been solved so you can focus on the harder elements of robot design. Obviously there are some exceptions (this year was a year of drivebase exceptions), but in a flat floor game, it becomes much easier.
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#11
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
The primary reason to build or not build a WCD versus a "traditional" skid-steer drivetrain is what your resources are. Some teams resources lend themselves to a more traditional drivetrain, some towards a West Coast Drive. It's worth noting that time is most definitely a resources. Probably the most important one. Just because you have the fabrication capability and money to make something doesn't mean it's worth time investment during the season if it's not an efficient use of your time.
The primary disadvantage of a WCD over a more "traditional" drivetrain is that it usually requires more precision machining (yes there are COTS options like the VersaBlocks that can let you build one with hand tools). WCD requires live axles and does not offer as many simple solutions for chain tensioning. Dead axles tend to be a little more forgiving, but nothing that can't be achieved with time and attention to detail. Bumper mounts also takes more thought. The primary advantage is typically maintenance and access, especially with replacing wheels and worn tread. There are some marginal performance benefits that can be gained by putting your wheels a little farther outboard than usual. Sheetmetal construction methods are also generally not well suited to making WCD either, which is why you see many teams with sheetmetal sponsors opting for other drivetrain styles. It's worth mentioning that many of the challenges associated with building an effective WCD are obsolete due to new COTS options and the proliferation of exact C-C belts and chains. Machining the bearing blocks, developing a good chain tensioning method, wheel retention, ability to make custom wheels with hex bores and building a transmission with the correct output speeds on a live axle shaft are all aspects of WCD that are now available as COTS or able to be fabricated without a mill/lathe. These weren't available even a few years ago, which made WCD out of reach or not worth the resource investment for many teams. At the same time, it also means that many of the advantages of a WCD are now available to "traditional" drivetrains as well, so the lines are blurred a bit. From a COTS standpoint, if you're not doing any precision fabrication yourself it's still likely cheaper to take your KOP chassis in the kit or purchase the VexPro 2014 Drive-in-a-day (both of which are "traditional" drivetrains) rather than spend money on the various bearing blocks, bearings, etc for a WCD. Don't make drivetrain decisions in a vacuum, especially if your team already has a particular drive style that you like using. I'm not saying don't switch, but be sure you're considering what the cost of switching would be (time, money, learning curve, etc) and what problems you're solving by making a change. Is it cheaper? Maintenance? Better performance? Fewer or easier to make parts? Then figure out how switching to a different drivetrain style addresses that. |
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#12
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
While WCD maintenance, on the whole, is quite nice, one very annoying aspect is access to the belts or chains, which generally are driven by pulleys/sprockets inside the gearbox. In the case of belts, the gearbox has to be taken apart for any maintenance that requires removing the belt or putting on a new one.
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#13
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
Quote:
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#14
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
I don't recall having to take a gearbox apart to change belts or chains on a traditional drive train. Robot chassis, but not the gearbox. Then again, I have seen drive trains which were described as WC which had easily replaceable chains, and others where it was apparently impossible in an FRC pit period - or six. I would list this more as a "gotcha" of too-well protected chain and belt, not a WC feature per se.
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#15
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Re: Advantages/Disadvantages of West Coast Drive
Yes, but it's usually somewhat easier to slip an axle out than to take a gearbox apart.
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