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#1
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
The thing that weighs down our robot is the pneumatics. Our solution was to just drill holes in the rams and tanks. No actually we drilled holes in anything that didnt hold a lot of weight, and removed some pneumatics fittings (those are actually really heavy). Another thing was this giant chunk of 5/8 inch plexiglass, which we replaced with marine grade plywood.
Last edited by russell : 27-02-2004 at 11:03. Reason: I forgot something |
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#2
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
when you're done drilling holes in the air tanks, and you're still over, make sure you take that proton-heavy lead out of your battery.
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#3
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
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#4
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
Remember. Your RC is heavy. More specifically, the chips inside your RC are heavy because they contain data, and data is heavy. Open up the RC and drill a hole through each chip. Also, pneumatic tubing weighs a lot. It too can take many, many holes.
In all seriousness, tho, a charged battery weighs a noticable bit more than an uncharged one. 13.5 and 10 lb, respectively, if I remember right... Dosn't make sense to me, tho... Electrons arn't that heavy. Hell, you don't even know where they are/are going. |
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#5
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
Well, if you're really having problems with weight you can do what Greg did for our robot. Drive it backwards off a platform over a foot high and put a hole in the side of our compressor. That worked wonders. *shakes head*
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#6
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
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I'm curious, have you actually weighed the same battery charged vs uncharged? Did you get this information from a source (if so, could you point me towards it)? I'm not doubting you , I'm just trying to figure out what might cause this. Keep in mind that a charged battery has the same number of electrons as a uncharged one.It is possible to lose quite a bit of weight by drilling holes, removing excess wires, and eliminating redundant fasteners. However, if you need to lose any substantial weight you'll probably need to redesign or eliminate a major component. Look at everything on your robot and ask yourself the question "Does this part add any value to my robot?" If you answer "no", cut that part off. It’s really disappointing to have to cut a major (and working!) subsystem off a robot but its often the only way to make the weight limit. Greg Last edited by GregT : 28-02-2004 at 14:55. Reason: can't spell |
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#7
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
Helium? A vacuum? Why not just use a little engineering
our robot weighs in at 84lbs http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=26186 |
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#8
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
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#9
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
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Not all aluminum frame materials are equal. Pick something that is light. This is an area that can make a big difference. Last year we made our bot out of 1.5 in welded aluminum square and we were overweight. This year our robot is at least 4 times more complex and was undereight. We used 1010 series 8020 extrusion. With square round, etc wall thickness is a big factor. wheels suck weight There is no need for giamongous metal rimmed go-kart tires. Avoid anything with metal rims like the plague. resist the hive As goofy as this may sound, wires do take up weight, several pounds of it. Avoid hivelike electrical panels, make things as short and neat as possible. No need for overly beefy gears. I see alot of gears that look like they belong in a bus transmission. avoid gears with hubs. Use keyways, and spacer tubes. We have gearboxes that we direct drive out of with 12.5 in wheels that combine the chips and the drills. They use 8mm wide module 1 hubless steel metric gears and are plenty beefy. Don't be afraid of plastic gears and sprockets either. Timing belts can pften be lighter than chains. swiss cheese it early you cna save alot of weight and frusteration if you lighten parts from the start. If there is any unnecessary, non-structural material on a part, remove it. Stay away from oversized fasteners Fasteners take up alot of weight. Use ones that are the right size. IE: not too long not too wide. In some cases if you are really desperate, you ,ight consider going back and replacing things with plastic equivalants. IE: electrical components. |
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#10
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Re: anti-gravity-gas
Two words....Thinwall Aluminum.
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