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#16
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
To clarify, I don't think anyone cools their breaker to keep alive...they (or at least we) just do so in order to not start with an elevated temperature due to short match turnaround. An elevated temperature means your breaker will trip under lower current draw than a room temperature breaker.
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#17
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
I doubt FIRST would rule it's use illegal because it modifies performance of the item being sprayed.
That said, I definately believe they might ban it's use for health reasons. Dust Off is difluoroethane, a refrigerant. Here is the "Safety" text from Wikipedia on difluoroethane. Quote:
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#18
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
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#19
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
Shouldint we be trying not to draw more current than the system is supposed to handle rather than stop a safety mechanism from activating? Like turning of a smoke alarm rather than putting out the fire?
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#20
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
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#21
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
I had to show ID to purchase a can of air (to be relabeled as "magic smoke" as a gift for a mentor) as well at a store that will not be named but whose logo is a bullseye. I wasn't yet 18 at the time so they wouldn't let me buy it after seeing my ID. I explained to my dad that canned air "used to be the way teenagers would get high" and then made him go to T**g** and buy it for me.
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#22
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
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#23
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
No teams that I know of used canned air to allow them to draw more current. They use it to cool down the main breaker during quick match turnarounds (such as during the finals) so that they can still draw as much current as they would be able to if the breaker was at room temperature. Running quick match turnarounds without cooling the main breaker off can result in tripping the breaker while not pulling more current then the breaker should be able to handle.
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#24
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
Quote:
Maybe a better question would be is the breaker thermally triggered because that is simply one of the many ways the creator decided to implement it, or is the "left over" heat from previous operation indicative of actual risk? The question would be, what is the case where the breaker trips meant to prevent?
I can't find any documentation stating which is true, but I would guess that it is a combination of all of the above. If so then in the last case (protecting motors and components from excessive heat), then cooling the breaker DOES circumvent the system and add risk. Risk of overheating a motor, controller, etc. because the breaker "thought" that the system was much cooler than it was. Any thoughts? |
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#25
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
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1. 6 cim is more efficient than 4 cim during high loads like pushing and turning (less motor heating, less speed drop under load, robot seems a little stronger) 2. Distribute load between motors to reduce heating for back to back matches 3. Redundancy, we lost a talon last year, robot was still very much driveable other than not driving straight |
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#26
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
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Essentially the goal is to have a high speed which is great for getting across long distances fast and a low speed which is good for fine maneuvering/pushing. If you are having your high speed at 12fps (I think that's what you're saying?) there really isn't much incentive to use shifters anyway. When robots use shifters, its usually because they want to have a really fast gearing that would stall the motors if you tried to push at that gearing. Therefore, its best to be able to downshift so you can hold your own if you get into a confrontation. 12fps isn't much for a high gear, that's usually what people do in single speed setups. |
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#27
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
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Last edited by Cory : 08-12-2014 at 23:55. |
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#28
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
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#29
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
I can see it now - FIRST bans using canned air to cool parts. Teams then begin keeping multiple spare main breakers in a cooler on ice and swap them between elimination matches.
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#30
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Re: Keeping the main breaker from tripping
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If you were to have a short you'd see a huge sudden surge of current, which would cause a solenoid to pull the contacts apart. I assume the one we use features both methods, but I've never looked inside one before. |
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