Go to Post We're thinking of using static electricity to pick up the tubes. The programmers are trying to figure out how to make the robot shuffle it's feet on the carpet. - Tom Ore [more]
Home
Go Back   Chief Delphi > Technical > Technical Discussion
CD-Media   CD-Spy  
portal register members calendar search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read FAQ rules

 
Closed Thread
Thread Tools Rate Thread Display Modes
  #1   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 14-01-2005, 22:20
M. Hicken's Avatar
M. Hicken M. Hicken is offline
Where am I?
AKA: I AM PACO
#0219 (Team Impact)
Team Role: Driver
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Rookie Year: 2002
Location: Washington, NJ
Posts: 158
M. Hicken is a jewel in the roughM. Hicken is a jewel in the roughM. Hicken is a jewel in the rough
Send a message via AIM to M. Hicken
Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

Since i have been told that arms with 2+ joints to them usually fail, we are looking into making a telescoping arm. All of our attempts in the past have failed miserably. Does anyone have any ideas on how to make a telescoping arm ~10' tall. I am also trying to aviod using a lot of cables and pulleys to extend it.

Also, im thinging of using a cabinet clip. You know, the little metal nipple with the 2 rollers attached by a spring to keep the cabinet door closed, as the mech to hold the tetra, with some base to hold them lateraly still

and Yes i did a search and the other 2 arm threads do not address this

Thanks
__________________
If duct tape isnt the answer you're looking for, you're asking the wrong question

There is no such thing as a stupid question, there are just a lot of inquisitive idiots
Personal rookie year: 2002
Team Impact 219: 1998
  #2   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 14-01-2005, 22:24
Cory's Avatar
Cory Cory is offline
Registered User
AKA: Cory McBride
FRC #0254 (The Cheesy Poofs)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: May 2002
Rookie Year: 2001
Location: Redwood City, CA
Posts: 6,806
Cory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond reputeCory has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to Cory
Re: Arm and grabber design help

I'm editing your thread title to reflect that it's about a telescoping arm in specific so you dont get harrassed by 50 people telling you to look in the other threads...
__________________
2001-2004: Team 100
2006-Present: Team 254
  #3   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 14-01-2005, 22:26
M. Hicken's Avatar
M. Hicken M. Hicken is offline
Where am I?
AKA: I AM PACO
#0219 (Team Impact)
Team Role: Driver
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Rookie Year: 2002
Location: Washington, NJ
Posts: 158
M. Hicken is a jewel in the roughM. Hicken is a jewel in the roughM. Hicken is a jewel in the rough
Send a message via AIM to M. Hicken
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

thanks, i hadent even thought about that
__________________
If duct tape isnt the answer you're looking for, you're asking the wrong question

There is no such thing as a stupid question, there are just a lot of inquisitive idiots
Personal rookie year: 2002
Team Impact 219: 1998
  #4   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 15-01-2005, 10:32
Sgraff_SRHS06's Avatar
Sgraff_SRHS06 Sgraff_SRHS06 is offline
Kappa != 1/(4Pi-Epsilon-Naut)
AKA: Steve Graff
FRC #1111 (The Power Hawks)
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: Ghetto D/CP, MD
Posts: 515
Sgraff_SRHS06 is a jewel in the roughSgraff_SRHS06 is a jewel in the roughSgraff_SRHS06 is a jewel in the roughSgraff_SRHS06 is a jewel in the rough
Send a message via AIM to Sgraff_SRHS06 Send a message via Yahoo to Sgraff_SRHS06
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

I am also needing help on designing the telescopic arm. How is it in comparison to other lifting arm types, such as vacuums, jointed arm, or other types.
  #5   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 16-01-2005, 01:41
RbtGal1351's Avatar
RbtGal1351 RbtGal1351 is offline
~La Reina de los Robots~
AKA: Stephanie
FRC #1351 (TKO)
Team Role: Programmer
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Rookie Year: 2004
Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 166
RbtGal1351 is a splendid one to beholdRbtGal1351 is a splendid one to beholdRbtGal1351 is a splendid one to beholdRbtGal1351 is a splendid one to beholdRbtGal1351 is a splendid one to beholdRbtGal1351 is a splendid one to beholdRbtGal1351 is a splendid one to behold
Send a message via AIM to RbtGal1351 Send a message via MSN to RbtGal1351
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

Quote:
Originally Posted by M. Hicken
Since i have been told that arms with 2+ joints to them usually fail, we are looking into making a telescoping arm. All of our attempts in the past have failed miserably. Does anyone have any ideas on how to make a telescoping arm ~10' tall. I am also trying to aviod using a lot of cables and pulleys to extend it.

Also, im thinging of using a cabinet clip. You know, the little metal nipple with the 2 rollers attached by a spring to keep the cabinet door closed, as the mech to hold the tetra, with some base to hold them lateraly still

and Yes i did a search and the other 2 arm threads do not address this

Thanks
we did a teloscoping arm-ladder last year to hang with, and it was very reliable on hanging. (getting up the stairs was a different story, but that's not the point). last year was our rookie year, and we used a cable that did NOT change length to extend it. the geometry was so that all the segments were parallel. its hard to explain, and i dont have schematics on the computer... or anywhere really... (i SAID we were rookies...)

i was in charge of the mechanism last year, so feel free to PM me if you want help. (but you -should- have decided your design by now, but im not one to judge... based on my team...)

because the cable is always the same length, we used a winch drum and 2 (fisher price ones i think) motors to extend the ladder (it even had rungs!) and retract it. (same motors! go cable geometry!)

hope this helps, if i find a schematic of our cable somewhere i'll be sure to post it,
~Stephanie
Team 1351
__________________
2004 Founding member and Arm leader, 2005 Lead programmer, 2006 Controls leader, 2007 Project Manager/President
Thanks for making FIRST such a great experience for me. I'm no longer on 1351, and I'm not currently planning to mentor team 97, but FIRST has meant so much in getting me to where I am now, in life and at MIT, class of 2011.
I met Billfred! He recognized me!
SVR 04: 11th seed - Highest Rookie Seed - Semifinalists w/ 1120 and 568 - GM Industrial Design Award
SVR 05: Semifinalists w/ 8 and 766
SVR 06: 6th seed - Quarterfinalists w/ 368 and 1072
Davis 06: 1st seed - Quarterfinalists w/ 649 and 100 - KPCB Entrepreneurship Award
SVR 07: 36th seed
David 07: 4th seed - Semifinalists w/ 1280 and 692 - Johnson and Johnson Sportsmanship Award
  #6   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 16-01-2005, 12:42
Salik Syed Salik Syed is offline
Registered User
FRC #0701 (RoboVikes)
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Rookie Year: 2001
Location: Stanford CA.
Posts: 514
Salik Syed has much to be proud ofSalik Syed has much to be proud ofSalik Syed has much to be proud ofSalik Syed has much to be proud ofSalik Syed has much to be proud ofSalik Syed has much to be proud ofSalik Syed has much to be proud ofSalik Syed has much to be proud ofSalik Syed has much to be proud of
Send a message via AIM to Salik Syed
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

you can use drawer slides... they are extremely strong.. but if you want it a considerable length you will need to modify them... you can also buy side load bearings and make your own track...
__________________
Team 701
  #7   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 16-01-2005, 18:11
M. Hicken's Avatar
M. Hicken M. Hicken is offline
Where am I?
AKA: I AM PACO
#0219 (Team Impact)
Team Role: Driver
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Rookie Year: 2002
Location: Washington, NJ
Posts: 158
M. Hicken is a jewel in the roughM. Hicken is a jewel in the roughM. Hicken is a jewel in the rough
Send a message via AIM to M. Hicken
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

because my team is a class. Not a team, we have not chosen a design yet, that is what our "goal" for tuesday. We are so sick of our teacher, we are going to start taking it home to my friends machine shop. But, if anyone has detailed pics or drawings of an arm is greatly appreciated.
__________________
If duct tape isnt the answer you're looking for, you're asking the wrong question

There is no such thing as a stupid question, there are just a lot of inquisitive idiots
Personal rookie year: 2002
Team Impact 219: 1998
  #8   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 16-01-2005, 22:07
Jeffel Jeffel is offline
Registered User
AKA: Jeff Ellis
#0269 (Cooney Tech Robotics)
Team Role: Mechanical
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Rookie Year: 2002
Location: Oconomowoc, WI
Posts: 40
Jeffel can only hope to improve
Send a message via Yahoo to Jeffel
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

Last year i think our team (#269) had the best telescoping arm.... I wasnt involved with the design much but i welded for some of it.... it was a triangular tubing shape and it went out ten feet with a hook on the end.... then to pull our selves up we used a winch and the rope went to the the top of the arm on the hook.... this hear we have a control system with two pistons to turn quicker that require pneumatics so our arm extends with the pneumatics compressor also..... very heavy but works great.... a telescoping arm isnt hard to build. search for good motor ideas and just build prototypes for it and see what works best...
__________________
Jeff
  #9   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 17-01-2005, 02:24
Tom Saxton's Avatar
Tom Saxton Tom Saxton is offline
Registered User
no team (Issaquah Robotics Society)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: Sammamish, WA
Posts: 98
Tom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud ofTom Saxton has much to be proud of
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

We built a telescoping arm last year and it worked pretty well.

http://www.issaquahrobotics.org/photos.shtml

The mechanism was pretty simple: three lengths of 80/20 extruded aluminum linked together with nylon sliders. Pulleys guided spectra cable (from Small Parts) which raised and lowered the arm (one set of cables for up and another for down). We used 50lb test cable for up and 300 lb for down, since that had to lift the weight of the robot.

Our only mistake was using two different motors for the two directions. We thought we could pick motor speeds that would keep the cables in synch, with tensioning loops to give us some slack to play with. That didn't work well at all and resulted in broken cables, including one disaster that broke the 300 lb cable in the middle of a match. It made quite a load SNAP that we clearly heard from the nose-bleed seats.

We didn't produce engineer documents, but I'm happy to answer any questions and/or take more pictures to show the mechanism.
__________________
Tom Saxton
http://www.idleloop.com/
  #10   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 17-01-2005, 02:51
SteveO SteveO is offline
Registered User
no team
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: NV
Posts: 122
SteveO will become famous soon enoughSteveO will become famous soon enough
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

Last year, our telescoping arm used no pulleys and was pretty easy to fabricate. We used three different sizes of square aluminum tubing that folded in on eachother to fit within the dimensions allowed. We used a van door motor directly connected (as can be seen in the photo below) to rotate out to full length. I don't think the van door motor will cut it this year lifting those 9 pound tetras, but it could be possible to do what we did with the arm setup of the new transmissions (outlined in "Guidelines, Tips & Good Practices" available in the manual section of the FIRST website) and lift the tetras. I haven't done the calculation yet.

There is a good picture showing how this works, but I don't currently have access to it. It's very simple.
  #11   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 17-01-2005, 09:58
Squeje250's Avatar
Squeje250 Squeje250 is offline
BIG RED
AKA: BJ Boville
#1259 (Paradigm Shift)
Team Role: Mechanical
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2004
Location: Pewaukee
Posts: 43
Squeje250 is on a distinguished road
Send a message via AIM to Squeje250 Send a message via Yahoo to Squeje250
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

well we are doing the same thing and it looks like we almost have to do the pullys we have tryed many ways also. we actually had a couple ppl on that team go to a hardware store and asked them to see a fork lift and we analized how that worked. once u know how a forklift works then make it a little simpler and go with it!!!! good luck
Hope I helped
Squeje250
  #12   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 17-01-2005, 10:54
sciguy125 sciguy125 is offline
Electrical Engineer
AKA: Phil Baltar
FRC #1351
Team Role: College Student
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2004
Location: Sunnyvale, CA
Posts: 519
sciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond reputesciguy125 has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to sciguy125 Send a message via MSN to sciguy125 Send a message via Yahoo to sciguy125
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

Quote:
Originally Posted by RbtGal1351
we did a teloscoping arm-ladder last year to hang with, and it was very reliable on hanging...last year was our rookie year, and we used a cable that did NOT change length to extend it. the geometry was so that all the segments were parallel....
In addition, we did some experiments and found that the robot can go into this year's competition nearly unmodified (not that we would, or could per the rules). We'd only need to change the manipulator on the end (which, in theory, could be just a stick).

Here's some pictures from the Silicon Valley regional SVR
__________________

-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 3.12
GE/S/P a-- e y-- r-- s:++ d+ h! X+++
t++ C+ P+ L++ E W++ w M-- V? PS+ PE+
5- R-- tv+ b+ DI+++ D- G
------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------
  #13   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 17-01-2005, 11:46
ChrisH's Avatar Unsung FIRST Hero
ChrisH ChrisH is offline
Generally Useless
FRC #0330 (Beach 'Bots)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Rookie Year: 1998
Location: Hermosa Beach, CA
Posts: 1,229
ChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond reputeChrisH has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Telescopic Arm and grabber design help

Quote:
Originally Posted by M. Hicken
Since i have been told that arms with 2+ joints to them usually fail, we are looking into making a telescoping arm. All of our attempts in the past have failed miserably.
There are many industrial robots that have more than two joints. However they were designed by people who have been working on such things for years and they do without a lot of consious thought things that make the job much easier. Starting from scratch is what makes it hard. The really hard part about a mobile robot with a multi-joint arm is keeping the CG within limits. Another key problem is making the arm go where you want and getting it to stay there. Some of the new "canned" code can help with that if you install some form of position sensor.

There is no inherent reason why a 2 joint arm should always fail, but there are many non-obvious reasons why a particular design might.


Quote:
Originally Posted by M. Hicken
Does anyone have any ideas on how to make a telescoping arm ~10' tall. I am also trying to aviod using a lot of cables and pulleys to extend it.
Thanks
Cables and pulleys are very light weight ways to transmit power and adjust the force requirements of a system to something a motor can handle. The keys to getting cables to work in any application are to:

1) keep the proper tension
2) make sure that cables only have to move in the plane of the pulley
3) minimize slack
4) have a means of adjusting the cable length to make it easier to do 1 and 3
5) have cable to pull both ways, the cables should be driven off of the same drum if possible
6) keep the proper tension
7) be nice to your motor (this goes for arms too) never design it to require more than 25% of stall torque in normal operation then you will have plenty of margin for those exceptional occurrences.
8) keep the proper tension

We have had telescoping lifts that have gone to 12' and more and have never had an issue with binding or had a major failure in competition. We have broken cables but nothing more serious than that and even those have been rare and due to operator mistakes. Done properly a cable system can be very low maintenance, but ignore the above and you risk having a kinked rat's nest.

There are other ways of telescoping, but compared to a cable set up the range is limited and they are heavy. Ball screws are linear actuators thatwill work if you don't want to go too far. I'd say if you only want to extend a foot or so they might be worth a look. But if you want to go to 10' then they will probably be pretty heavy.

If you have questions or need help with a specific design feel free to PM me.
__________________
Christopher H Husmann, PE

"Who is John Galt?"
  #14   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 17-01-2005, 12:56
Collmandoman Collmandoman is offline
Post-A-Holic
no team
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2000
Location: TEnNEssEe
Posts: 256
Collmandoman has a spectacular aura aboutCollmandoman has a spectacular aura aboutCollmandoman has a spectacular aura about
Re: Arm and grabber design help

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cory
I'm editing your thread title to reflect that it's about a telescoping arm in specific so you dont get harrassed by 50 people telling you to look in the other threads...
Pls look in other threads on how to tell someone to look in other threads subtly, this attempt was weak, I think you would agree with me. =)
i kid i kid
Closed Thread


Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
pic: Team Hammond 2 CD47-Bot Extra Discussion 9 28-03-2004 00:55
WHich motor to lift and for arm thoughtful Motors 8 25-02-2004 10:34
We're really not that mean. archiver 1999 59 23-06-2002 22:49


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:20.

The Chief Delphi Forums are sponsored by Innovation First International, Inc.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi