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#1
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witricity legality?
I seriously want my team to do this next year but im sure about how legal it would be based on this and last years rules.
witricity is basically the cordless transmission of power. By using coils that resonate on the same frequency one will pick up the power that the other is broadcasting(no signals are being sent only electromagnetic waves), using this with victors it think would make a very sweet crap drive, but im not sure if it would be legal via this and last years rules. thanks for the help cody |
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#2
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Re: witricity legality?
Not to rain on your parade, but FIRST's rules are the least of your concerns. Physics and the FCC will stomp this many times over.
1) The drive train uses a lot of energy. 2) RF transmission is lossy. 3) The energy that leaks out will affect other systems. Do you have any examples of this "witricity" as you call it? I'd be interested to see their numbers. Cool idea though. |
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#3
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Re: witricity legality?
Regardless of legality this doesnt seem like a great idea. Two things that come to mind would be the interference of magnetic fields and electronics. Also based on the wikipedia article the efficiency is not very good, researchers needed two 24in coils and only tansmitted at 40% efficiency, not great for battery life.
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#4
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Re: witricity legality?
witricity which using resonating magnetic coils was proved possible my mit last year by using it to light a 60watt light bulb 2m away. With stuff blocking directing line of sight
also Tessala (can't spell) using witricity to transmit massive voltages over great distances, one example is that in a eletrical field you can light flourencent lights with out plugging them in. the laws of physics allow this to work, but im not sure if the metal frame would interfere. Also other eletronics can work in a witricity feild if they don't opperate on the same frequency they will not conduct the current. Which is why you make sure that the cycles of the field is very high (10megahertz or higher). MIT tested this device, there was 40% power loss in transmission. If we weren't going for speed this could be viable i think. You know for a engineering award. |
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#5
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Re: witricity legality?
You could also just build your own slip rings to transmit the power to the motors in the crab drive. It would most likely be a lot simpler.
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#6
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Re: witricity legality?
Rather than planning this as a power transmission method for a FIRST robot drivetrain, where robustness and reliability are paramount, this sounds like a great science fair project.
If you do your research and start building prototypes and testing them now then you will not only have a good science fair project, but... if you can move more than 40 amps through the ether with minimal losses, then you will have something that your team can check against the FRC rules for legality. Just keep in mind, however, that transmitting current is quite different from transmitting voltage. Also keep in mind that when a CIM is drawing 40amps at 10 volts, that is 400 watts of power. If you have a 40% power loss then you have 160 watts of heat showing up somewhere. Any compact, lightweight system is going to start getting really hot, really fast. So if you are interested in this system, study it. Research it. Test it. And should you get it to the stage where you can use it in an FRC robot, then worry about what the FRC rules are. Even if it doesn't work for FRC, it will still be a very cool science fair project. Jason |
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#7
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Re: witricity legality?
That would probably be legal, however would be difficult to do as stated in the other posts.
Another way which might be easier but probably illegal is to make a microwave transmitter to beam microwave frequencies to a reciever. The reciever is usually a rectenna, which converts microwave to electricity. It could be relativley efficient also. However, that could be extremley dangerous and illegal in the competion. Other methods that would be safer are also availiable like laser beaming. One may actually be able to replicate experiments such as this one http://youtube.com/watch?v=4BxV_48Sjj4 Anyway, I hope that helped. Amir M. |
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#8
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Re: witricity legality?
I see no FIRST rule that would prevent the use of Witricity.
That being said, you still have a lot of things to overcome 1> Matching resonators for transmission and reception. Any impedence mismatch will greatly reduce your transmission efficiency. 2> Each device would need a separate frequency to transmit power. 3> You would need to make sure you do not induce any current in any robot frame on the field, to do so would break FIRSTs rules. 4> You would need to make sure you do not interfere with any signals on the field. 5> Power losses would limit your robot and multiple transmitters in series (Battery to dist block, dist block to Victors, Victors to motors, etc) would cut your power even more. While I think your idea is novel, and would win you an engineering award, I don't think it would provide a viable robot on the field. |
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#9
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Re: witricity legality?
Quote:
as previously said, i dont think your idea is exactly feasable. It could potentially win you an award, but youll probably be impeded by rules, physics, losses, etc. Something also tells me that transmitting 400W of power with EM radiation is a really bad idea... |
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#10
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Re: witricity legality?
I too am looking forward to seeing a sweet crap drive!
![]() Seriously, Take a shot at energizing a sensor or two (a few tenths of a watt) that are on the extremities of your robot. Then, maybe graduate to energizing a coprocessor out on one of those extremities. You can graduate to transmiting serious power after successfully getting a few watts to coprocessor. Along the way you can navigate the safety and other rules. Blake |
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#11
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Re: witricity legality?
Quote:
Edit: I misread the original post, and thought they were talking about 'sending' additional power to the robot from the pits/stands/etc. Last edited by Bongle : 27-03-2008 at 23:01. |
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#12
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Re: witricity legality?
From what I can tell, they are not proposing to use this system to generate power, but to transmit power (presumably from the 12v battery). I don't think there's anything illegal about it, but... why, exactly, do you (the original poster) need it? Not that that's ever a good reason not to try something new, but there seem to be some disadvantages to this system...
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#13
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Re: witricity legality?
Quote:
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#14
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Re: witricity legality?
I think it maybe illegal per <R53>
Quote:
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#15
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Re: witricity legality?
Induction is cool for short distance low current applications... but I don't think it would work very well (excluding rules) for running a robot. Tesla devoted a lot of his work to wireless energy transmission, and never really got anything that was very efficient over much of an appreciable distance, plus when he tried to market some of his more long-range methods of transmitting large amounts of energy to the U.S., they were deemed unsafe.
But don't mistake me about him... nothing against Tesla. He did a TON of work with EMF that we use all the time today, it's just that long range energy transmission never really worked out for him (or anyone else for that matter). Also, let's say the frequency you were using for transmission was somewhere up in the microwave spectrum, and let's assume your transmission in 100% efficient (it wouldn't be, it decays at the square of the distance your antenna is from your source, but just for fun). Also, let's say you want to run four CIM motors at up to 40A. 40A*12V= 480W, 480W*4motors=1.92kW. As much fun as a 2kW microwave sounds, I don't think I want to be anywhere near it (unless lead shielding was provided for the operator stations). Fun idea though... q |
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