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#1
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
Our team colors are Blue and silver, so we keep the Brushed Aluminum and Blue bumpers/paint look. It's a nice, clean style, and we like it.
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#2
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
Sheet metal and FDM. LOTS AND LOTS of sheet metal. Oh, and anodizing, powder coat paint.
Usually we do a subdued blue and gold-yellow paintjob, but 2007 we did Highlighter and Rescue Blue and 2006 we did Midnight Black Flat. I don't know what we'll do this year... either stay with the new colors, or go back to the old. Not much of a chance of black. -q |
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#3
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
Quote:
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#4
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
Quote:
We powdercoat/anodize pretty much everything aluminum on our robots. It's a great look, and can be extremely cheap or even free, if you can find the right shops to help you. The only 'problem' is it can sometimes take up to 3 or 4 days to get all your parts back. |
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#5
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
Blue anodized frame (or yellow painted), paint blue and yellow where wanted otherwise. For example, yellow team logos on our blue plastic ramps.
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#6
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
![]() Team 228 uses a combination of orange powder-coating with reverse spray-painted Lexan parts on our robots. We had originally planned to anodize our aluminum wheels on our 2007 'bot as well, but the build season schedule became too tight to do so (even though we had acquired everything to anodize the parts in-house). Our team also owns a three-foot-wide printer which we used to print out panels (which we laminated) for our 2007 and 2005 robots. And through our school, we also have access to a vinyl-cutting machine, which basically works by taking a giant roll of vinyl stickers (usually two feet wide) and cuts stickers out of it using vector images from Adobe Illustrator. These work great on Lexan, Robot Batteries, windows, painted plywood, and robot carts. |
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#7
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
1293's signature look (rookie year notwithstanding) has historically been bare waterjet-cut sheetmetal, more recently with orange accents. (Compare 2005, 2006, and (most of) 2007.)
1618 has yet to really nail down a signature look. Most of Uppercut's look was from laminated paper printed off in a campus computer lab, with type choices made mostly for availability on the Mac that I was using at the time and to make sure we had the proper stroke on our team numbers. (That explains why schools and sponsors were in Gill Sans in varying sizes, while our numbers were 365-point Impact). I might change the layout and choices of font, but the maroon and gold colors (Columbia High's school colors) did turn out nice. The team did use other techniques before my time, though nothing from those two years proved to become a signature* (2005, 2006, 2007) *Well, we do seem to find ourselves using a lot of pegboard in our robots... |
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#8
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
If the robot is half its weight in Lexan, it's probably a 190 'bot!
We don't really have a signature look, so far as I can ascertain, but we tend to have a lot of plastic and bare metal (sometimes burnished for a cool finish) with red highlights. Last edited by Nuttyman54 : 21-09-2007 at 23:30. |
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#9
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
We worked with negative space created when we cut weight. We cut our signature diamond into our arms and gears into some of the frame components. It was our first year really doing and CNC milling so we had fun with it.
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#10
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
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#11
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
Green. Lots of bright green (and blue).
One of our main sponsors (FANUC Robotics) has a paint booth that uses the same powder coating technique that you see on shows like American Chopper. We got all of our shee metal painted for free, I believe ![]() |
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#12
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
We take 1/32" polycarbonate and spray paint the inside orange. Then we print up stickers and stick them on the outside. Because the paint is on the inside it doesn't scratch, and looks shiny. Its easier and cheaper than powder coating, and the plastic helps protect the robots electronics - so its functional too.
We started making this "armor" in 2006, and it looked really good so we took it a step further in 2007 by covering the whole robot with it. Painting eyes and fangs on your robot also helps ![]() |
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#13
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
675 usually puts our team number/logo on some functional part of our bot, the conveyer belt last year, the ramp this year. It's also usually not top-notch quality -- Cthulhu was spray painted and Gloria was plasma cut by hand.
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#14
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
I've tried to incorporate "X" into the design when possible in the past -- which isn't terribly hard since it appears in trusses all the time -- but we've been moving away from that and trying to use the lightest material for the task to start with and lightening as little of the robot and its parts later.
I don't know how 'signature' that is, though, since I doubt that anyone has noticed. Last season, I cut lightening holes into a beam that, when read as morse code, spelled "XBOT," but the tube collapsed as a result. ![]() |
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#15
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Re: How Do You Give Your Robot It's Signature Look?
Chain and Crab have been big in the past few years. I hope that continues since its been working well for us. Also we have managed to put a turret on every bot in the past few years too, it goes right in hand with the chain and crab. I hope though that our anodizing of our robot continues for years to come. It is a good way to promote robotics by showing people something that is very aesthetically pleasing.
~Pavan. |
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