Go to Post Including the Kinect in the kit a parts is actually an evil plan. The programers are going to spend all their time playing with the Kinect. In competition the robot is just to sit there because it will not have a program. :ahh: - FrankJ [more]
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Unread 24-06-2002, 00:47
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Re: Pot Gyro

Posted by Thomas A. Frank at 2/13/2001 3:24 PM EST


Engineer on team #121, The Islanders/Rhode Warrior, from Middletown (RI) High School and Naval Undersea Warfare Center.


In Reply to: Pot Gyro
Posted by Jason294 on 2/13/2001 11:36 AM EST:



: Just wondering if anyone had fooled around with this idea. I attached about a 4 inch long piece of aluminum bar with a small weight on the end to a pot and used the feed back as a good gyro




Actually, it's called a pendulum, not a gyro. That is in fact important, because you will need to look at the speed of response of your sensor (see below).

I am looking at it, but I'm not sure it is worth the trouble/risk, as the drivers are doing fine without any artificial aids, and the risks associated with complex software are perhaps not worth the benefit.

Please prove me wrong :-)

Please remember that there is a time constant associated with a pendulum:

time/swing T = pi * sqrt of (length/g), units having to be consistant (ie: meters and 9.8 m/sec^2). A 1 meter pendulum rod is the classic one second beat clock. So if you make the rod 0.1 meters long, you have a 0.317 second pendulum, which results in some interesting results if you look at the possibility of oscillation.

Also keep in mind that the above equation assumes a massless rod - the Cg of the system is in the bob. If not, then the whole thing appears "shorter", with a resulting higher frequency.

Hope that was helpful.

Tom Frank


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