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#1
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Drive Practice
We're looking to make some significant improvements this season over last - one of which is the amount of practice our drive team gets before competition. So, how do other teams handle this? Do you have a set time where the drive team gets the robot, or separate drive meetings, or something else?
We may or may not have the resources to build a practice bot, but in the case that we do, how much does the practice bot help with drive practice? |
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#2
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Re: Drive Practice
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#3
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Re: Drive Practice
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We use a separate set of students as the "pit crew" to keep the robot operational at competitions. Any scheduled drive team practice would also include pit crew practice. I see your team is scheduled for one regional this year and would recommend that you spend time making a tested competition robot instead of investing in a practice robot. Finish it by week 4 or 5 of build season so your can spend the last two weeks practicing and improving. Make sure you are ready to unbag the and inspect the robot immediately on practice day. You'll get good practice time on the real field and be ready to hit the ground running during the first qualification match. David |
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#4
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Re: Drive Practice
Once your competition robot is operational drive practice is something you should aim to do as often as you can, while keeping in mind the physical limitations and wear and tear that may occur. However, choosing to sacrifice time for drive practice for other tasks (Fine-tuning, programming autonomous, etc.) is something that is dependent upon where you're at in the season and a decision you'll have to make for yourself.
Drive practice doesn't have to be treated as completely separate from build though, it allows you to see which areas of your robot may need improvement and can give you a better understanding of what your robot is capable of. This coupled with iteration on these flaws will make you much more prepared for your competition, and you should see a drastic improvement in your performance. During drive practice I'd recommend setting a time limit of 2 minutes and 15 seconds (Standard teleop match time) for each round, this will give you a good understanding of how long that truly is and what your robot can accomplish in that time. There're plenty of good resources on this (and strategy in general), I'm sure you can find a few threads on this topic. The first one that pops into my mind is 1114's notes on strategy. Last edited by Damiaen_Florian : 12-29-2016 at 11:09 AM. |
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#5
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Re: Drive Practice
I'm in agreement with much of what those above me have said. 4256 has been fortunate to have a practice bot 4 of 5 years (every year since rookie season). We build them completely identical and spend the first few days after the robot is built debugging with the drivers on our full-size field, and we continue that until we feel we are ready for just the drivers to practice. We then make them master the button layouts. After that, we run practice matches after auto mode as much as possible, and the drivers work with the strategy team closely to figure out what we want them practicing. We get as much time with the gym as possible (our school has lots of activities, but most night the practice gym is available). We pick our drivers with them knowing full well what a commitment driving is, as most nights they are there alone through late hours of the evening. In short, we want them to get as much training as possible because a good driver is a humongous competitive advantage, and we try to increase our advantage as much as possible in all aspects of the team.
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#6
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Re: Drive Practice
On Code Orange we built 3 robots (2.5 for 2016)
1) competition robot- driven a few times before bag and tag and kept as pristine as possible 2) practice robot for drivers and trying new ideas- we practice nearly everyday and continuously improve the robot from what the drivers, mentors, and team members see happening during their practices. The rest of the team then figures and designs solutions, while pit crew gets their practice attaching new things so we can repeat at comp and are able to fix issues quickly since they experienced them on this robot! 3) programming robot- to tune in things like autos and vision tracking, the first robot we complete! Practice robots are so important, I can not stress them enough. If you cannot build a full replica, build a drive base, your drivers need to know controls like the back of their hand Last edited by Pauline Tasci : 12-30-2016 at 02:23 AM. |
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#7
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Re: Drive Practice
If you have the resources to build a practice robot, it is the surest way to increase your practice time, and therefore performance at the robot competition.
If you are close, you can do something in between: While we have worked to build two full robots the past few years, the most important part to have a duplicate is the main chassis, including drive train and most of the control system. If you can get your manipulators down to less than 40 lb (or whatever the withholding allowance turns out to be this year) plus some easily removable/addable COTS items (or parts that you DO make two copies of), you can leave this out of the bag, transfer it to your practice chassis, and keep driving and learning pit routines between stop build and your competition(s). If you do not have the resources for two chassis, be sure to have the robot functional at least a week before stop build so you can drive it around, get used to the controls, and identify/begin to resolve the bugs. 3946 has a goal for functionality about 2 weeks before stop build, even though we do build a second robot, it's that important. Edit: We have total build meetings scheduled for about 14-15 hours each week from kickoff to final competition. We have tried to have ten or more of those hours for drive & pit practice beginning week 5 of build. We achieved that in 2015, with very little pit time. In 2016 we were a week later starting, and a far greater fraction was pit time. Improvements and work on the other robot was still taking place during drive sessions before bag. After bag, we continued improvements, built the pit decorations, and other non-robot prep for competition. Last edited by GeeTwo : 12-30-2016 at 10:04 AM. |
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#8
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Re: Drive Practice
How many hours of practice do you usually shoot for? The actual amount depends on a lot of things, of course, but what's the goal?
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#9
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Re: Drive Practice
What does pit practice entail? Is it just when you have to fix an issue, you handle it like you would at a competition?
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#10
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Re: Drive Practice
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Pit practice is just as important to prepare for a competition. Little items that can be caught in the pit can ruin a match. David |
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#11
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Re: Drive Practice
That's the main thing - don't bother fixing it right, just get it working again as quickly as possible - but make notes so that repeated problems will be really solved when there's time. This is also a chance for the pit crew to internalize their checklists - things like swap the battery, be sure the pneumatic dump valve is closed, chains are in place, non-loctited bolts are tight, and check that that piece of foam rubber that wears out every few matches is still in good shape, or replace it if not. In rough years (e.g. 2016), realistic pit drills are as much benefit to consistent performance as driver practice.
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#12
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Re: Drive Practice
I totally agree here. I have been primary driver for three years now and i cannot stress enough how different it is to drive on a real field with other robots and drivers. It is the best drive practice you can get. I am not sure if there is one were you are located but if it is possible try to make it to a week six build season practice competition. There is one near us put on by charger robotics 537 every year that around 20 teams come to. It is always very good drive practice.
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#13
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Re: Drive Practice
As a member of my team's drive team, drive practice is more crucial than some people think. In 2016, we had little to no drive practice, because every time we tried, someone else would take the robot. My advice is to be as assertive as possible. Don't let people take away your practice, and have set times when you're practicing, to let everybody know.
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#14
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Re: Drive Practice
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#15
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Re: Drive Practice
We build a practice bot and have a half field in our shop. There's a smooth transition from build to driving practice. At first, drive practice requires stopping and starting multiple times to fix, adjust, and change things. It's helpful to have more than just the drivers during those times. Eventually we get to the point where we are competition ready and it's good to have time with just the drive team and a few students to assist (battery changes, field re-set, etc.)
We are small enough that our drivers are still students who built and programmed a large part of the robot, so I think it would be different for teams with specialized drivers. You might want programmers, etc. on hand during much of driving practice. |
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