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#1
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
From my own experience with "the wedge" I would not recomend one, reguardless of your intnet. Tons upon tons of controversy can compile once a wedge bot makes it presence. The only wedge I think may be user friendly comes from a robot I saw in 2001, it was basically a ramp that other robots could climb to get onto the teeter totter. "Wedge", bad. "Ramp", good.
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#2
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
I can think of a really good application for an upsidedown wedge this year
if your bot has enough momentum when it makes contact! |
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#3
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
To be honest, I really don't like wedges.
Although they might be made with a good purpose (helping others onto the platform, etc) The temptation and randomness of autonomouse mode makes real and major risks for them to be used to flip others - if even accidentally. |
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#4
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
We've had a movable wedge on our robot for the past three years. Our net flipping of robots is zero.
A wedge (inclined plane) is the simplest of the simple machines. It would be poor engineering to eliminate this concept just because you think it might be seen as "ungracious." What's next? No wheels? (That's the other super-duper-simple machine.) I can hear the discussion now. "That robot is made to roll around. Some rolling robots ram into other robots. That's ungracious. Therefore, all things with wheels are ungracious. Therefore, wheels are bad and shouldn't be used." |
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#5
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
At the same time - why would any robot need to be made to be shaped like an angle?
A number of teams from my own experiences have made wedge like designs, and unintentionally flip teams or carry the risk of flipping them. |
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#6
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
Quote:
It's not the wedge itself that is ungracious... sometimes they are just used ungraciously. *Shrug* When I reffed last year, I would warn teams that I felt were playing "rougher" than they should. In most cases, this put a stop to it. JVN |
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#7
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
First of all, I'd like to point out that the robot pictured is Chief Delphi's, not HOT's. It says so on the side
![]() I think wedges are a valid design, but gracious professionalism has to go hand-in-hand. If you are an aggressive wedge you're going to be called on penalties. I see it like basketball; you're not allowed to shove someone, but if they run into you it's their problem. In that manner, a defensive wedge would be perfectly legal. A wedge with another, non-offensive or defensive use would be perfect (Wildstang in 2001, wedge-to-ramp). |
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#8
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
Quote:
In every 2v2 game I have seen in FIRST, a key metric has been the degree to which one can maneuver in the presence of direct opposition (the proverbial pushing match / tug'o'war / carpet melter). This is why we see FIRST robots with six-motor drive trains that shift on the fly into ultra low gear. This is why we continue to strive for wheels or tracks with the best friction properties vs carpet and HDPE. As long as there are going to be two other robots with a vested interest in preventing your robot from doing what you want, FIRST competitions will continue to be dressed up tractor pulls. As teams strive to keep a competitive edge in this regard they will all eventually run into certain barriers, i.e. the physical laws that govern our reality and the constraints set forth by FIRST. Once we've all maxed out our mu and squeezed every bit of power out of the kit motors, the only place left to go is, quite literally, up. We'll go from tractor pull bots to sumo bots. Some teams are already on the way. It's not good. It's not bad. It's not ungracious. It's competition. It's invention. It's engineering. Teams are seeking the best solution within the constraints of the problem. That's the way I see it. -Joel |
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#9
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
the only time you are allowed to be aggresive is when you have the potential to score points, and the other team is preventing you, like king of the hill last year - if you were blocking the ramp, you were fair game for a bashing
but if another team is scoring points by manipulating scoring objects, then running into them or bashing them would be considered attempted damage, being un-necessarily aggressive, and poor form. The year that really started the head to head confrontations between bots was 1999 - the puck - you had to be ontop of the puck to get extra points or a multipler (I forget which) and this was the first time we really saw some pushing and shoving and proverbial hair pulling at a FIRST event in fact it was pretty tame in the seeding rounds, but in the playoffs bots got knocked off, dragged off, RIPPED off, sometimes leaving a trail of parts across the floor. in this years game, the only time I would expect to see shoving matches would be if a bot was blocking a corral opening, or trying to control access to the chinup bar. If someone comes over and bashes you while you are herding balls, or placing the 2X ball, I would expect them to be disqualified. Last edited by KenWittlief : 22-01-2004 at 21:08. |
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#10
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
In 2002, it was stated explicity by FIRST that it was permissible and probably a good idea to ram a robot that was trying to dump a basket full of balls into a goal.
Vigorous contact (on the guy who is about to score) != intentional damage It's just like football. You can hit the guy with the ball. That's defense. You can't go and smash the kicker while he's doing his nails on the sidelines. That's intentional damage. -Joel |
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#11
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
Quote:
but 'a good idea to ram a robot trying to score' ? I think I still have my 2002 manual around here somewhere :c) |
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#12
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
It was on the QnA board, Ken. The question was something like,
Q: Is it legal to ram an opponent who is about to deliver balls in a goal? A: Yes. See rule <R01>. -Joel Last edited by Joel Glidden : 22-01-2004 at 22:58. |
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#13
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
Quote:
I expect there will be a great deal of defense in all aspects of the game. If I decide to cap your "big goal" early in the match to prevent your HPs from scoring... I could then spend the rest of the match blocking you from getting to it. In this case... hits would occur. On stairs... Anyone else notice the first thing the "kit drivetrain" did during kickoff was drive off the side of the 6" platform sideways? That would be a nasty fall for anyone with a high CG. Note: I'm not advocating playing dirty, or being overly rough/destructive. We on 229 play clean, but we do play hard. I urge everyone else to do the same. Build them robust folks... this game is more like '99 than '01. John edit: I agree with Joel's above analogy. I think it applies well in this case. If you are scoring... my stopping you from scoring is LEGAL DEFENSE. /edit |
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#14
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Re: What do you think of a wedge
Our robot was shaped like a wedge last year in stack attack... its a simple and easy design (we were rookies... so easy was good for us)... it works fairly well, but its a little top heavy... we almost tipped ours last year going up the ramp...
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