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  #16   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 28-03-2006, 19:30
Scott358 Scott358 is offline
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Based upon the fact that it's very difficult to measure the speed for most teams (we had theoretical values, tested per the angle/distance method, and even purchased a radar gun.. but even then tested (at our own request) a bit too high), why would the muzzle velocity not be a part of the robot/safety inspection (obviously only for those with a shooter).

With the exception of those who would change the value after it's checked, this would ensure compliance for those that wish to play by the rules. As it is now, many teams who probably think they are in compliance may not be, and hopefully they won't have issues after the fact.

I would suggest this be an added inspection check at Nationals.
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Unread 28-03-2006, 22:52
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Quote:
Originally Posted by Scott358
Based upon the fact that it's very difficult to measure the speed for most teams (we had theoretical values, tested per the angle/distance method, and even purchased a radar gun.. but even then tested (at our own request) a bit too high), why would the muzzle velocity not be a part of the robot/safety inspection (obviously only for those with a shooter).

With the exception of those who would change the value after it's checked, this would ensure compliance for those that wish to play by the rules. As it is now, many teams who probably think they are in compliance may not be, and hopefully they won't have issues after the fact.

I would suggest this be an added inspection check at Nationals.
You might notice that all the posts before you were from about two weeks ago. At the LA regional last weekend every shooter went under the speed gun. If you couldn't pass or if you ripped up the inspection ball, you were not allowed to shoot. They will prpobably do the same at all the other regionals next week end and again in Atlanta.
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Unread 29-03-2006, 07:23
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

After a day of practice, the referees become very good at determining ball speed. Those that are suspect get tested out on practice day. Of all the robots I tested in two regionals, only one was fast, every other one was under and averaged about 11M/s.
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Unread 29-03-2006, 08:56
Scott358 Scott358 is offline
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Quote:
Originally Posted by ChrisH
At the LA regional last weekend every shooter went under the speed gun. If you couldn't pass or if you ripped up the inspection ball, you were not allowed to shoot. They will prpobably do the same at all the other regionals next week end and again in Atlanta.
It's good that at some regionals this is happening, but as far I as know, as of now, it's up to the regional how they handle it. My team has been to 2 regionals and there was minimal inspection on this, but shooters that were definitely questionable.

As you said, perhaps everyone will be checked at Nationals, but until FIRST makes it part of the official inspection, it's only by luck that there will be consistent enforcement. Based upon the fact that this is factor that can give a significant advantage to those who operate above the speed and don't ever get checked, or can be an issue to those who are found to be above the speed after a match, I would still suggest it should be part of the official inspection specified by FIRST (and not left up to chance).
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Unread 29-03-2006, 11:21
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

The 1 meter long speed tester at the St. Louis Regional was a joke. After breaking their tester by not lining it up correctly and hitting it with a ball, we got inconsistent readings all day. After finding a speed that the sensor said we could use, we tested our distance and we couldn't shoot 10 feet. If they are going to require speed testing at nationals, I should hope that they will come up with a more acurate way of testing.
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Unread 29-03-2006, 12:04
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

We checked the official FIRST speedo against two team's devices and all agreed. If you have used a radar gun to calibrate then your speed is way off. We have not found a radar gun that accurately read the ball speed from any direction. There is not enough surface to reflect a readable signal back to the gun to be accurate.
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  #22   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 29-03-2006, 13:42
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Quote:
Originally Posted by hillale (team 1625)
The 1 meter long speed tester at the St. Louis Regional was a joke. After breaking their tester by not lining it up correctly and hitting it with a ball, we got inconsistent readings all day. After finding a speed that the sensor said we could use, we tested our distance and we couldn't shoot 10 feet. If they are going to require speed testing at nationals, I should hope that they will come up with a more acurate way of testing.
I don't have nearly enough data to reach a conclusion on this, but the following experiences might be helpful to those who perform ball speed tests, or to teams with robots that require ball speed testing, at the remaining events.

At STL, the head ref (Frank Kusiak, who was also head ref at MWR the following week) and the lead robot inspector (I) met Thursday to develop a procedure by which ball speed tests would be conducted. It went like this:

1. No ball speed testing was included in the required robot inspection checklist. This is established by FIRST headquarters and is not a regional option for lead robot inspectors.

2. Our interpretation of <S02> was that the head ref is the only official at the event who can order a ball speed test. The head ref may rely on his/her own observations and those of the other referees when deciding to order a test, or he/she may choose to respond to protests from competitors; i.e., drivers and/or HPs on the field.

3. When a ball speed test is ordered, the test equipment provided by FIRST is to be used in a manner directed by the FTA at the event. Robot inspectors will conduct the test with the assistance of the FTA if required, and with the cooperation of the team whose ball speed is being tested. This ensures that the team receives immediate feedback from the test.

4. Test conditions are as follows: the team is instructed to fire one ball per test through the FIRST ball speedometer into a curtain, and the speed of that ball is read using LabView. At STL we had the team repeat this test with several (at least five) balls, and looked for a consistent result. We ignored measurements that were inconsistent, assuming that high results were due to the shooter contacting the ball at the hard spot and that low results were due to incorrect speedometer alignment with the ball launch path.

5. When a consistent result exceeding 12 m/s was obtained, we advised the team that they needed to take corrective action. Teams were permitted to make software corrections at the test area and repeat testing immediately.

6. When a consistent result at 12 m/s or lower was obtained we advised the team and the head ref that the ball speed test had been passed.

Six teams had ball speed tests ordered by the head ref at STL. The only team for which multiple tests were ordered was 1625. My opinion is that 1625's shooter was legal in all matches that I observed; however, the backspin imparted by their shooter mechanism created a relatively flat trajectory and increased range, making their initial ball speed appear faster than it actually was. It was this appearance (IMO) that caused the head ref to order repeated ball speed testing. Again IMO, time spent on testing and overcorrection of the shooter wheel PWM level caused 1625 to perform worse than they could have in a few qualifying matches.

Two weeks later while volunteering as a robot inspector at Waterloo, I saw team 1596 suffer similar results for similar reasons: backspin caused flat trajectory and overcorrection caused low initial ball speed (with significant loss of range) in one or two qualifying matches. As with 1625, my opinion is that 1596's shooter was legal in all matches that I observed. In each case (1625 and 1596) the robot had one of the best (arguably the best) shooter at the event.

The point here is that it does not matter what the inspector or lead inspector thinks, only what he/she measures. What matters is the head referee's judgment, and in my opinion that judgment was remarkably consistent at events I attended and at those I watched via webcast.

My feeling is that there must be some method for ensuring compliance with <S02> and that the head referee's judgment is the best method. Test equipment and procedures can certainly be improved, and hopefully FIRST will provide some guidance.
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Last edited by Richard Wallace : 29-03-2006 at 13:46.
  #23   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 29-03-2006, 13:48
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard
I don't have nearly enough data to reach a conclusion on this, but the following experiences might be helpful to those who perform ball speed tests, or to teams with robots that require ball speed testing, at the remaining events.

At STL, the head ref (Frank Kusiak, who was also head ref at MWR the following week) and the lead robot inspector (I) met Thursday to develop a procedure by which ball speed tests would be conducted. It went like this:

1. No ball speed testing was included in the required robot inspection checklist. This is established by FIRST headquarters and is not a regional option for lead robot inspectors.

2. Our interpretation of <S02> was that the head ref is the only official at the event who can order a ball speed test. The head ref may rely on his/her own observations and those of the other referees when deciding to order a test, or he/she may choose to respond to protests from competitors; i.e., drivers and/or HPs on the field.

3. When a ball speed test is ordered, the test equipment provided by FIRST is to be used in a manner directed by the FTA at the event. Robot inspectors will conduct the test with the assistance of the FTA if required, and with the cooperation of the team whose ball speed is being tested. This ensures that the team receives immediate feedback from the test.

4. Test conditions are as follows: the team is instructed to fire one ball per test through the FIRST ball speedometer into a curtain, and the speed of that ball is read using LabView. At STL we had the team repeat this test with several (at least five) balls, and looked for a consistent result. We ignored measurements that were inconsistent, assuming that high results were due to the shooter contacting the ball at the hard spot and that low results were due to incorrect speedometer alignment with the ball launch path.

5. When a consistent result exceeding 12 m/s was obtained, we advised the team that they needed to take corrective action. Teams were permitted to make software corrections at the test area and repeat testing immediately.

6. When a consistent result at 12 m/s or lower was obtained we advised the team and the head ref that the ball speed test had been passed.

Six teams had ball speed tests ordered by the head ref at STL. The only team for which multiple tests were ordered was 1625. My opinion is that 1625's shooter was legal in all matches that I observed; however, the backspin imparted by their shooter mechanism created a relatively flat trajectory and increased range, making their initial ball speed appear faster than it actually was. It was this appearance (IMO) that caused the head ref to order repeated ball speed testing. Again IMO, time spent on testing and overcorrection of the shooter wheel PWM level caused 1625 to perform worse than they could have in a few qualifying matches.

Two weeks later while volunteering as a robot inspector at Waterloo, I saw team 1596 suffer similar results for similar reasons: backspin caused flat trajectory and overcorrection caused low initial ball speed (with significant loss of range) in one or two qualifying matches. As with 1625, my opinion is that 1596's shooter was legal in all matches that I observed. In each case (1625 and 1596) the robot had one of the best (arguably the best) shooter at the event.

The point here is that it does not matter what the inspector or lead inspector thinks, only what he/she measures. What matters is the head referee's judgement, and in my opinion that factor has been remarkably consistent at events I attended and at those I watched via webcast.

My feeling is that there must be some method for ensuring compliance with <S02> and that the head referee's judgement is the best method. Test equipment and procedures can certainly be improved, and hopefully FIRST will provide some guidance.
Thank you very much for this quote. You are correct in everything that you said. Very gracious and very professional. I should have taken more time to think before I posted.
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Unread 29-03-2006, 16:31
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Assuming the measured length is 1 meter, there is a simple calibration that can be performed to check the speed tester. Simply hold it so the ball can drop through it vertically. Hold the ball close to the first sensor and drop it through. The ball speed should read 2.2 m/s.

Don't belive me? do the math! Hint d=(at^2)/2. If anybody needs more than that post here and I'll walk you through it. I figured this out for our own tester.

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Unread 29-03-2006, 16:49
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Quote:
Originally Posted by ChrisH
Assuming the measured length is 1 meter, there is a simple calibration that can be performed to check the speed tester. Simply hold it so the ball can drop through it vertically. Hold the ball close to the first sensor and drop it through. The ball speed should read 2.2 m/s.

Don't belive me? do the math! Hint d=(at^2)/2. If anybody needs more than that post here and I'll walk you through it. I figured this out for our own tester.

ChrisH
The ball speedometer we used at STL and Waterloo had ~34.5 inch (0.876 meter) sensor spacing. For that spacing the correct speed reading for a ball released vertically just above the top sensor, with no initial velocity, would be 0.876 / sqrt( 2*(0.876)/9.8) = 2.07 meters per second. [edited several hours later; denominator is still the elapsed time, new numerator is the drop distance (incorrectly used 1 meter in original post)]

Be sure to measure the sensor spacing, and check that the actual spacing is entered in appropriate field of the LabView screen that controls the ball speedometer.
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Last edited by Richard Wallace : 29-03-2006 at 22:35.
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Unread 29-03-2006, 19:35
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Uh without actually checking anyones math, how is it that the speed of a 1 m drop is 2.2 m/s and the speed of a .876 m drop is 2.37 m/s ?
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Unread 29-03-2006, 22:36
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Re: Ball speed testing after matches

Quote:
Originally Posted by TubaMorg
Uh without actually checking anyones math, how is it that the speed of a 1 m drop is 2.2 m/s and the speed of a .876 m drop is 2.37 m/s ?
Sorry, my bad. Posted in haste earlier, then went elsewhere for several hours. Corrected now, I think.
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