Go to Post FIRST is not all about the robot, it's about the experience. Don't sour yours by whining about it later. - StephLee [more]
Home
Go Back   Chief Delphi > FIRST > General Forum
CD-Media   CD-Spy  
portal register members calendar search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read FAQ rules

 
Reply
 
Thread Tools Rating: Thread Rating: 4 votes, 5.00 average. Display Modes
  #1   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 19-04-2014, 15:26
safiq10's Avatar
safiq10 safiq10 is offline
Registered User
FRC #2950 (DEVASTATORS)
Team Role: Mechanical
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: Waco tx
Posts: 528
safiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond reputesafiq10 has a reputation beyond repute
Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Now in an effort to learn more about FRC and better understand it we are currently conducting research about the pros and cons on drivetrains. We want to understand why teams use a certain drivetrain.

Currently we are stuck on West coast drive... We are absolutely stumped on what benefits it gives and why we see some of the more elite teams using it?
__________________

2014 Dallas Semi-Finalist (Thanks 3847 & 231)
2014 OKC Semi-Finalist (Thanks 2341 & 2461)
Reply With Quote
  #2   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 19-04-2014, 15:32
Abhishek R Abhishek R is offline
Registered User
FRC #0624
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Rookie Year: 2012
Location: Texas
Posts: 892
Abhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond reputeAbhishek R has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by safiq10 View Post
Now in an effort to learn more about FRC and better understand it we are currently conducting research about the pros and cons on drivetrains. We want to understand why teams use a certain drivetrain.

Currently we are stuck on West coast drive... We are absolutely stumped on what benefits it gives and why we see some of the more elite teams using it?
The live axles and cantilevered (meaning the axles are only supported on one end) wheels allow for more freedom of space and much easier maintenance.
__________________
2012 - 2015 : 624 CRyptonite
Team Website
Reply With Quote
  #3   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 19-04-2014, 15:38
Thad House Thad House is offline
Volunteer, WPILib Contributor
no team (Waiting for 2021)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Rookie Year: 2010
Location: Thousand Oaks, California
Posts: 1,092
Thad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond reputeThad House has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

One of the best ways to improve stability of any object is to move the contact patches as far to the outside as possible. On a robot, this involves moving the wheels as far out as possible. Because on a WCD the wheels are cantilevered, there is no need for an outer frame rail. Because of this, the wheels can be as close to the edge of the allowed perimeter. This allows for a stabler robot.
Another advantage is because the wheels are on the outside of any frame, and usually on live axles, remove a wheel only requires removing 1 clip or screw, and the entire wheel pulls off the side. This allows a wheel to be changed very quickly, usually without having to adjust chain tension, or remove alot of robot parts to get to it.
__________________
All statements made are my own and not the feelings of any of my affiliated teams.
Teams 1510 and 2898 - Student 2010-2012
Team 4488 - Mentor 2013-2016
Co-developer of RobotDotNet, a .NET port of the WPILib.
Reply With Quote
  #4   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 19-04-2014, 15:42
EricH's Avatar
Happy Birthday! EricH EricH is offline
New year, new team
FRC #1197 (Torbots)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: SoCal
Posts: 19,780
EricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by safiq10 View Post
Currently we are stuck on West coast drive... We are absolutely stumped on what benefits it gives and why we see some of the more elite teams using it?
It's a very balanced drivetrain.

For reference, a "true" WCD is 6 wheels, cantilevered outside of the frame, with the center wheel directly driven off the gearbox and the rest powered by belts or chains, with the center wheel dropped some fraction of an inch--oh, and it uses live axles. I'll be talking about the general 6WD drop-center (as opposed to a 6WD with corner omni wheels and the 6WD scrub turn), rather than a true WCD.

First, it's dirt simple. About the only thing simpler is a 4WD, and it's not that hard to swap it down to that. However, it has a shorter wheelbase, due to the dropped center wheels, so it turns much more smoothly than the "Mexican jumping bean" that I've heard the 4WDs compared to. If one or more of the wheels are directly driven, you just about can't lose half of your drivetrain in one mishap (or you'd have lost it anyway). It's easy to turn when you want it to turn, but not quite as easy as a corner-omni configuration.

The true WCD adds ease of maintenance--the wheels are easy to yank off when you want to swap 'em--but also adds complexity of machining (or increases the cost as you buy the parts).

As a note, the WCD has been in use for 10 years or more. It might not be as maneuverable as a swerve or mecanum, but it's pretty effective, and is likely to be sticking around another 10 years or more.
__________________
Past teams:
2003-2007: FRC0330 BeachBots
2008: FRC1135 Shmoebotics
2012: FRC4046 Schroedinger's Dragons

"Rockets are tricky..."--Elon Musk

Reply With Quote
  #5   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 19-04-2014, 16:11
Oblarg Oblarg is offline
Registered User
AKA: Eli Barnett
FRC #0449 (The Blair Robot Project)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Posts: 1,081
Oblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by safiq10 View Post
Now in an effort to learn more about FRC and better understand it we are currently conducting research about the pros and cons on drivetrains. We want to understand why teams use a certain drivetrain.

Currently we are stuck on West coast drive... We are absolutely stumped on what benefits it gives and why we see some of the more elite teams using it?
It offers a wider wheel base, which is more stable, and easy wheel access (as wheels on high-traction drives tend to wear a lot, this is very helpful for facilitating maintenance).

On the down side, it makes maintaining the belts or chain a bit of a pain as they're generally run off pulleys that are mounted inside of the gearbox.
__________________
"Mmmmm, chain grease and aluminum shavings..."
"The breakfast of champions!"

Member, FRC Team 449: 2007-2010
Drive Mechanics Lead, FRC Team 449: 2009-2010
Alumnus/Technical Mentor, FRC Team 449: 2010-Present
Lead Technical Mentor, FRC Team 4464: 2012-2015
Technical Mentor, FRC Team 5830: 2015-2016
Reply With Quote
  #6   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 19-04-2014, 18:52
Joseph Smith's Avatar
Joseph Smith Joseph Smith is offline
Persistence alone is omnipotent.
FRC #3539 (Byting Bulldogs)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Rookie Year: 2011
Location: Romeo
Posts: 183
Joseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant future
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

I have experience with two different drivetrain styles. #1 is closed frame 6WD/8WD similar to last year's kitbot drivetrain. #2 is West Coast Drive.

#1. Closed frame (8WD) using 1" x 1" x .125" square aluminum tubing. This is the style my team used in 2011 and 2012. We cut and welded the drivetrain frame together before anything else. This method uses dead axles with all six/eight wheels driven by chain from the gearbox.
PROS: very simple design
Low maintenence
Proven and reliable
Robust
Flexible Design

CONS: Medium to heavy weight depending on wheels
All wheels are chained- no direct drive, so it's possible to throw a chain and lose control of one side
Takes up more space
More difficult to swap wheels/tread

#2: Standard West Coast Drive. We used this style in 2013 by necessity in order to package our wide intake under the bumper. We liked it so much that we decided to use it this year as well. It's 1" x 2" x .125" aluminum tubing, riveted together with Vex VersaGussets with a Vex 3-CIM ballshifter. The center wheels are directly driven and the outside wheels are chained.
PROS: Simple to design
Direct Driven center wheels
Easy maintenance
Fast swap wheels/tread
Lightweight design
Robust Design
Widest possible wheelbase
Less space consumed

CONS: Bearings on cantilevered axles need to be well supported and aligned, though the VexPro VersaBlocks are awesome for this.
Requires more machining capability

I love the WCD and don't see any reason not to use it, due to it's low weight and super easy maintenance as well as the benefit of a maximum width wheelbase and direct driven wheels.
__________________
Design/fab team 2011-2013
Design/fab mentor 2014--
There are three types of people in the world:
1. Those who make things happen
2. Those who watch things happen
3. Those who wonder what happened.

Reply With Quote
  #7   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 08:36
Ether's Avatar
Ether Ether is offline
systems engineer (retired)
no team
 
Join Date: Nov 2009
Rookie Year: 1969
Location: US
Posts: 8,071
Ether has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond reputeEther has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph Smith View Post
Widest possible wheelbase...

maximum width wheelbase...
Just to be clear: wheelbase is the distance from the front to rear axles (length). trackwidth is the distance between the two front (or rear) wheels (width).


Reply With Quote
  #8   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 12:34
theCADguy's Avatar
theCADguy theCADguy is offline
Design Team Student Leader
AKA: Sean Gibbons
FRC #0020 (The Rocketeers)
Team Role: CAD
 
Join Date: Apr 2013
Rookie Year: 2013
Location: Clifton Park, New York
Posts: 85
theCADguy has a spectacular aura abouttheCADguy has a spectacular aura about
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
CONS: Medium to heavy weight depending on wheels
All wheels are chained- no direct drive, so it's possible to throw a chain and lose control of one side
Takes up more space
More difficult to swap wheels/tread
Actually, throwing a chain does not cause a loss of control on one side. At the WPI regional in 2013, we (Team 20), lost a chain in our west coast drive during a finals match, and had no time to replace it before our next match, so we played that match without a chain, and we experienced was very little loss of control. In fact, it was impossible to tell (from the stands) that we had lost a chain.

We had a similar situation this year at the Tech Valley regional, were we smashed a drive train bearing, and had to remove the affected wheel, as we had no time to fix it. Our WCD performed just as well with 5 wheels as it did with 6, and we won that match.
Reply With Quote
  #9   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 13:28
Joseph Smith's Avatar
Joseph Smith Joseph Smith is offline
Persistence alone is omnipotent.
FRC #3539 (Byting Bulldogs)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Rookie Year: 2011
Location: Romeo
Posts: 183
Joseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant futureJoseph Smith has a brilliant future
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by theCADguy View Post
Actually, throwing a chain does not cause a loss of control on one side. At the WPI regional in 2013, we (Team 20), lost a chain in our west coast drive during a finals match, and had no time to replace it before our next match, so we played that match without a chain, and we experienced was very little loss of control. In fact, it was impossible to tell (from the stands) that we had lost a chain.

We had a similar situation this year at the Tech Valley regional, were we smashed a drive train bearing, and had to remove the affected wheel, as we had no time to fix it. Our WCD performed just as well with 5 wheels as it did with 6, and we won that match.
I think you misunderstand me... Throwing the chain from the gearbox to the wheels in design #1 would result in losing power to the wheels on that side. Of course this depends on how the chain is run, but it's assuming that you have one chain from gearbox to the center wheel and from there the wheels are chained to each other. Also, one of the benefits of WCD that I listed was that throwing a chain wouldn't cause you to lose power on that side because the center wheels are direct driven from the gearbox (in our design at least.)
__________________
Design/fab team 2011-2013
Design/fab mentor 2014--
There are three types of people in the world:
1. Those who make things happen
2. Those who watch things happen
3. Those who wonder what happened.

Reply With Quote
  #10   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 15:43
Oblarg Oblarg is offline
Registered User
AKA: Eli Barnett
FRC #0449 (The Blair Robot Project)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Posts: 1,081
Oblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph Smith View Post
I think you misunderstand me... Throwing the chain from the gearbox to the wheels in design #1 would result in losing power to the wheels on that side. Of course this depends on how the chain is run, but it's assuming that you have one chain from gearbox to the center wheel and from there the wheels are chained to each other. Also, one of the benefits of WCD that I listed was that throwing a chain wouldn't cause you to lose power on that side because the center wheels are direct driven from the gearbox (in our design at least.)
Note that one can direct-drive center wheels on a non-WCD 6WD setup (a la AM14U), so this isn't strictly a WCD benefit.
__________________
"Mmmmm, chain grease and aluminum shavings..."
"The breakfast of champions!"

Member, FRC Team 449: 2007-2010
Drive Mechanics Lead, FRC Team 449: 2009-2010
Alumnus/Technical Mentor, FRC Team 449: 2010-Present
Lead Technical Mentor, FRC Team 4464: 2012-2015
Technical Mentor, FRC Team 5830: 2015-2016
Reply With Quote
  #11   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 16:48
EricH's Avatar
Happy Birthday! EricH EricH is offline
New year, new team
FRC #1197 (Torbots)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: SoCal
Posts: 19,780
EricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph Smith View Post
Of course this depends on how the chain is run, but it's assuming that you have one chain from gearbox to the center wheel and from there the wheels are chained to each other.
Back when I was a student on 330 and we were using that type of setup, we never ran just to the center. The gearbox was independently chained to the center and the back wheels; center wheel chained to front wheels. That way, we'd have to jam a chain when it was thrown, or throw two chains, to lose the side.
__________________
Past teams:
2003-2007: FRC0330 BeachBots
2008: FRC1135 Shmoebotics
2012: FRC4046 Schroedinger's Dragons

"Rockets are tricky..."--Elon Musk

Reply With Quote
  #12   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 17:06
Oblarg Oblarg is offline
Registered User
AKA: Eli Barnett
FRC #0449 (The Blair Robot Project)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Posts: 1,081
Oblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond reputeOblarg has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by EricH View Post
Back when I was a student on 330 and we were using that type of setup, we never ran just to the center. The gearbox was independently chained to the center and the back wheels; center wheel chained to front wheels. That way, we'd have to jam a chain when it was thrown, or throw two chains, to lose the side.
This sounds like it'd introduce a lot of frictional losses over just direct-driving the center wheel and chaining to the two outer wheels.
__________________
"Mmmmm, chain grease and aluminum shavings..."
"The breakfast of champions!"

Member, FRC Team 449: 2007-2010
Drive Mechanics Lead, FRC Team 449: 2009-2010
Alumnus/Technical Mentor, FRC Team 449: 2010-Present
Lead Technical Mentor, FRC Team 4464: 2012-2015
Technical Mentor, FRC Team 5830: 2015-2016
Reply With Quote
  #13   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 17:18
EricH's Avatar
Happy Birthday! EricH EricH is offline
New year, new team
FRC #1197 (Torbots)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: SoCal
Posts: 19,780
EricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond reputeEricH has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

Quote:
Originally Posted by Oblarg View Post
This sounds like it'd introduce a lot of frictional losses over just direct-driving the center wheel and chaining to the two outer wheels.
Not too much. And it helped with our weight distribution (we tended to run with the CG aft of center whenever we could). The gearbox was between the center and rear wheels, so we had two short chain runs.

This was back in the day when if you wanted to direct-drive your center wheel, you had to make your own output shaft, if not your own gearbox--we didn't have that type of capability, then. Besides, we were a dead-axle team--that is, at the time we did NOT go live-axle if we didn't absolutely have to. (In my time on the team, I can think of maybe 4 live axles that weren't in a gearbox, none in drivetrain--they were all reduction stages in arms or shooters,)
__________________
Past teams:
2003-2007: FRC0330 BeachBots
2008: FRC1135 Shmoebotics
2012: FRC4046 Schroedinger's Dragons

"Rockets are tricky..."--Elon Musk

Reply With Quote
  #14   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 21:27
topgun's Avatar
topgun topgun is offline
Registered User
FRC #2846 (FireBears)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 229
topgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant futuretopgun has a brilliant future
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

What about the weight of the bumper mounts? That needs to be added into the weight of the frame as well.

We used a 6 wheel center drop dead axle (JVN axle tube style) and the outside edge of our wheels were within a .5" of the frame perimeter. I am not going to worry about that last inch of width but that is important for some teams.

WCD would have the edge in quickly replacing a wheel, though we could change a wheel pretty quick if needed.

We also used HTD timing belts between wheels which are a lot lighter than chains. We used a short #35 chain between the gearbox and the first wheel.

Part of the appropriateness of the drivetrain is what your team can build, and should be a key part of your decision. Determining that is a good offseason project.
__________________
-T

Reply With Quote
  #15   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2014, 21:33
MrRiedemanJACC MrRiedemanJACC is offline
Registered User
FRC #2611 (Jacktown Vectors)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Rookie Year: 2011
Location: Grass Lake, MI
Posts: 151
MrRiedemanJACC will become famous soon enough
Re: Learning and Understanding different drivetrains

For those of you with WCD I have several questions:
1) How do you locate the wheel in the axial direction? Both inwards and outwards?
2) If you are using the 3 CIM ball Shifter,
a) Do you use the 3rd stage from Vex?
b) Do you only use the support from the bearings in the gearbox or do you add additional support?
3) Is there a set wheel width that you use? (narrower to be able to move the gearbox outward further? ie 1" traction vs a 2" traction?)
4) How much drop do you use for the center wheel?

Thanks! I'm sure as we look into it, I'll have more detailed questions!!
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:24.

The Chief Delphi Forums are sponsored by Innovation First International, Inc.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi