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#31
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
Thanks for posting this. (Some days I love the WORLD wide web)
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#32
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
There was a robot that had a rapid fire and reload mechanism for shooting balls. It must have been for Aim High. It used a cam arrangement to pull the latex tubing back into tension. Anyone remember it?
It seems something like that, with a pause before firing because we aren't rapid loading this year, would pull the kicker back into the FRAME PERIMETER within the 2 second limit. |
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#33
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
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#34
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
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#35
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
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The robot I was thinking of had a rotating boot, and there was some kind of a cam and latex tube arrangement to give extra ooomph to the downward swing. But the more I think of it, the less suitable I think it might be. This year's kicker would be a pendulum, not a circular motion. And it wasn't 1523's either, but it must have been somewhere in the South because I recall a video shot outdoors. |
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#36
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
I'm sorry but I do not quite understand the first method. Is the piston pressurized, and then you guys pull against the pressure causing it to kick out?
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#37
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
Glad to see a working pneumatic prototype. My team has been trying straight up pushing as well as lever arms using pneumatics without compressing them partially and have had no good results yet. They were supposed to try something similar to the first method tonight but seeing as I am not in the same city I don't know the results...
Because of the relatively slow speeds that all the pneumatics extend at I expect to see very few (if any) successful kickers using pneumatics that do not jam a partially compressed cylinder or use surgical tubing as an aid. |
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#38
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
Great GP/sharing for this video! Gotta watch the "air" under the ball though. If you get one outside the field (over the railing OR end zone) it'll be a serious penalty. yellow card?
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#39
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
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Has anyone considered using a small bore cylinder (and thus fast extension) to push a lever near its fulcrum? Or would the small cylinder be unable to provide the "oomph" necessary? |
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#40
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
To figure out roughly how big of a cylinder you need based on how much "oomph" you need, figure out how much energy the ball needs as it begins it's trajectory..then figure out how much energy you can get into a cylinder. You only have 60 psi and max 2" bore to work with.
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#41
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
My read of the rules is that you only get a yellow card for an intentional shot of the ball outside of the arena
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#42
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
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Pneumatic pistons have to drive the air in front of them out of the cylinder as they accelerate within it. This often restricts their peak velocity, depending on the orifice size of the cylinder's air exit hole. I don't know if it is allowed, but pulling a vacuum on the cylinder ahead of the piston would effectively give a 15LB pressure boost and seriously increase peak piston speed. The CFPM capacity of the KOP air compressor also seems much too low to allow very many high power shots. Perhaps using a motor to drive a piston back into a sealed cylinder to built up the air pressure inside to the legal max would allow for both more frequent and stronger shots to be taken in a match. -RRLedford Last edited by RRLedford : 18-01-2010 at 04:10. Reason: non-swear verb was flagged/blocked as swearing noun. |
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#43
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
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#44
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
Thank you so much for posting this! 1071 is looking also into both designs however are pneumatics were not to successful. We are probably going to end up trying a kicker similar to the 2'nd one shown in your video. Thanks again!
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#45
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Re: Video of Kicker Prototypes
Nice!
About the first method- Is the piston fixed to a point on the lever? If I'm understanding this correctly you're not actually actuating the piston with the valve, but rather using the lever to compress it mechanically. So in effect, it's like a spring (correct?). Our team has been trying out designs including one with a spring-loaded shooter, but we don't yet have a simple reloading mechanism for it (which I see as the main drawback of such a design).. Hm. |
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