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#1
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Keeping the Pits Streamlined
So, this season team 20 has had some issues with too many people in the pits. There would be 10+ people in the pit, with just as many hanging out in the aisle in front of the pit. of course everyone should have a chance to check out the robot after a stellar match, but how do you draw the line? We have a pit crew that tries to get work done (and does an excellent job), but with no policy in place, it is difficult to deal with such crowds. Thus, we are looking to implement a policy for next season. I have several ideas, but I wanted to see what other teams do first. So, my question for you is, does your team have a policy as to how many/who gets to be in the pit? If so, what is the policy? Do any other teams stick out as having an effective policy?
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#2
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
Our team has a simple rule of, if you're not working on the robot or supervising the robot. Stay outside of the pit. It's okay to stand in front of the pit though, just don't get in the way of other robots/teams.
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#3
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
First, make sure your pit is organized and planned out before you get to the event. An organized pit holds more people.
Second, assign only a few competition roles to the pit. Take shifts if you want, or only have your most technically oriented / charismatic students in the pits (Mechanical / Electrical captains, etc) at a time. Have a pit boss student or mentor that manages who's in the pits all the time, making sure they kindly turn away students who don't need to be there. Our team has, at any time, the safety captain, a few mechanically oriented students, programmers, the drive team, and (if we need it) team reps to talk to other teams and judges in the pits. Most of these roles overlap, and many of the roles don't actually require people having to stand in our pits the whole time, so in reality we'll end up with like 6 or 7 people in the pits at the time. If you have a different job or no reason to be there, as a team we say ahead of time to avoid being in our pits for an extended period of time. So in short, plan ahead, assign roles, and work together. |
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#4
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
Quote:
A system I have contemplated implementing is "Pit Passes" in control of a mentor. The Pit Crew would have Pit Passes for the whole weekend and others may be granted temporary passes as necessary. Only those with passes would be allowed in the pit for more than a few minutes. |
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#5
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
Quote:
Quote:
Make sure students also have roles in the stands. |
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#6
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
We TechnoKats set a schedule every year and if you aren't on the schedule, then you are in the stands. The scouting group has a similar schedule as to make sure we have scouts at all times, yet no one person scouts all day.
Actually I disagree with this and every year i try my best to kick all TechnoKats in front of the pit out if they aren't susposed to be there. Imagine this, you are at BoilerMaker regional, and your team, and every other team has 3-5 people standing outside of the pit. Since BMR has very limited space in the aisles, there is no room to get through. This is bad if you are running late and need to get the robot through, or if the people outside of the pits are messing around and they block judges. If I had one thing to ask of all teams, please don't stand in front of your pit. |
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#7
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
It's generally known that our team runs to the pits after a match. The scouts hang around waiting for their next assignment from the scout leader, the builders all rush back to make sure everything still works, the safety captain is almost always there, and everyone wants to talk to the drivers to makes sure that things went well during the match and no major issues came up.
So for me, or anyone else on my team, to tell people on my team to stay in the stands would be unfair. They have a full right to come down and check out the robot, talk to people, get status updates, etc. And it's understandable that right after a match is almost always the worst, but it generally clears out. The only thing I can suggest is to make sure the pit crew know who they are. The pit crew need first priority. As far as people standing in the aisle, we generally let them hang around for a few minutes but we generally encourage them to move to stands. |
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#8
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
This year i instituted a 5 min rule. If you weren't part of the pit crew or doing something "helpful" you had 5 min to be near our pit at any one time. That didn't mean they couldn't be in the pits, they just couldn't be crowding our pit.
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#9
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
@ Vikesrock - I agree with you 100% but the head mentors feel differently. I'd love to have a system where only a select few get to be in the pit, but they want everyone to have a chance.
@ Schnabel - I also agree, people standing in front of the pit is not ok. I feel that if someone is standing in front of the pit, rather than in the pit, they most likely aren't doing anything useful. @ ttldomination - This is exactly what happens with our team One other thing I'd like to ask about. I was considering opening the pit during lunch hour, as there will be less activity, except at one of our regionals this season judges came by the pit during lunch. We'd like to keep pit crowds to their lowest when judges come around, so is this the exception, or should we plan on judge visits at any time? |
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#10
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
One thing some teams do (I don't know how many, but every team I've been on / near in FRC / FTC has done it) is that if there are judges in the pits, keep walking unless it's vitally important (like, say, bringing the robot to a match). If you weren't involved with the construction of a particular component and a judge would ask you about it, it would put you in a weird situation. I mean, we don't tell people "never talk to judges" or something, but if the pits full of judges, then the pit's full, you know? A crowd swarming the judges isn't really a good idea; we love judges but we're not here to crowd surf them
![]() Judges normally don't come around in lunch unless they got interrupted by a match or you're doing something very right. If people want to stop by the pits, lunch would be the time to do it. You can still have everyone get the chance to be in the pit, but is there really that much to do other than "fix the robot" and "talk to teams" (which is better done walking between pits)? It's not a terribly exciting place to be most of the time. Do you have everyone on your team assigned to a role at competition? Our team helps get around the problem with stand scouting; we basically don't have enough people between stand scouting, pit recon, and the other competiton jobs to _have_ anyone who's free to stand around for more than a half hour or so, and those people on break usually want to check out other robots. Last edited by Chris is me : 17-05-2009 at 13:43. |
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#11
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
Our team sometimes has problems with this too. We basically say that if you're not scouting or doing something else in the stands, you can come to the pits for a few minutes as long as you don't get in anybody's way while they are working. We also encourage students to go around and look at the other robots and watch matches to get a better understanding of the other robots. This typically keeps the crowding to a minimum on our team.
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#12
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
I noticed about six or seven of my teammates hanging around 'supervising' in the aisle at competition, so I took a moment to ask each one, "what are you doing?" and if they answered 'nothing' or mumbled some BS answer, I sent them to the stands.
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#13
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
Quote:
I try this also, but since the head mentors had the "anyone can see the robot" policy, I never got very far. |
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#14
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
Nice thread Dan
If I may add something, Dan, myself and another pit captain were thinking about having 'pit credits' where a student that participates during the build season is given a credit by the mentor he/she was working with. This credit is worth, say, 15 minutes in the pit. This way the students that did the most during the build season would be able to reap the benefits of their hard work However, this system seems a bit complicated to me. We have quite a large team, so managing who has what # of credits could become confusing, and if we gave the credits out as pieces of paper kids could lose them ... Anyone have any ideas on how this system could be improved? |
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#15
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Re: Keeping the Pits Streamlined
I think our system of pit credits is a good idea, the only problem is that our team isn't good at keeping record of things. However, instead of handing out the credits as pieces of paper, maybe coins would be a better idea (emulate the safety credits at each competition, maybe?). Maybe have each student write their initials on a piece of masking tape and put it on the coin itself. When they visit the pit, they can just hand in their coin in a bag.
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