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#1
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Welded Frame Horror Stories
Ok, our team is considering a welded frame and cantilevered drivetrain for next year, but I've heard many horror stories regarding broken welds, permanently bent frames and destroyed drivetrains because of a dent in a frame member. Tell me your horror stories, what happened, and if it can be avoided. Are welds prone to break in a certain style of game and can less-than-aerospace quality welds withstand tough play, especially if braced properly? Is 1/8" tube capable of an aggressively defensive style of play, and how badly do drivetrains suffer when you're somewhat out of square?
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#2
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
As long as you design your fram right with welded members, you won't have any issues. The materials we use is 1/8th inch wall 1x1 box extrusion. It's never let us down.
The only time we broke it was when the bot tipped over and got rammed 8 timed by a tank tread bot. But that was a whole different issue. So design it smart, and you'll never go back. |
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#3
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
116 has welded our frame for longer than I can recall, and we've never really had any problems with it. The closest thing to anything you're describing we've encountered, that I know of, would be taking about a 1" dent after a vicious ram (while we didnt have bumpers attached). But that didn't really effect us in the long run, as the dent didn't effect our chain. Plus, had we been using bumpers, it would have been a non-issue.
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#4
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
We've used 1"x2" 1/8" wall aluminum tubing the last few years, with great success.
Put a couple cross braces in the center, and you're good to go. We got the heck bashed out of us all year long, and the frame is just as square as the day we had it welded. Haven't had a single issue. I suppose it helped that a professional welder did all the welds on our frame, but as long as you design the frame properly, you shouldn't have a problem. Last edited by Cory : 30-09-2006 at 19:09. |
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#5
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
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#6
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
How to stop deformation from game use? Simple, decent welding and GUSSETS. So many teams never reinforce their joints, and sure that may work for a non stress application, but whenever you get two or more robots colliding, gussets prevent the welds from damaging forces.
Just my $.02 |
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#7
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
MAKE SURE IT'S NOT TOO BIG!
Ours wasn't welded, persay. The main frame, we desighned and got it cast. When we got it back it was a half inch too long. We hade to take a grinder to it. (UGH) |
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#8
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
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#9
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
We use welded frames and we have had no problems, except when we pre-drilled the bearing holes and they warped
. The frame was put to the test when we were auto programming and the robot was setup backwards then went forwards at full speed into the cement curb; lets just say the curb lost. |
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#10
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
6063 Aluminum 1/8" wall box tubing TIG welded for past 3 years never had any problem worth doing something about.
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#11
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
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Additionally, if you pop a weld in competition, whats the best way to fix it? Carrying a TIG welder in with us is not especially convienient. |
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#12
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
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#13
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
Here are a few lessions learned from the ONE year we welded...
- Don't let you welder learn on the robot frame - Don't let you welder learn TIG welding as his first kind of welding - Don't let you welder learn on aluminum - Don't let you welder learn on 1/16" thick aluminum - Don't let someone grind off all the "ugly bumps" on the surface after you are done welding. We made some mistakes. Huge mistakes. But if you have a skilled weldor on the team, you should be OK. And here is my thinking on bent frames. "Assume" that your frame will bend. Now how does your robot work? Try to think of ways to design so that it will work WITH damage. Because if you are anything like our team... you are going to eventually run it into a wall at top speed, fall over, or drive it off a cart at some point. |
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#14
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
Get some practice! Especially if you want to use aluminum, we have had a professional machinist do some of our welding, and the first time he did it it broke (luckily before it got out of the shop) and he's been welding for at least 40 years...and small mistakes happen a lot with aluminum, any one will tell you that. Anyway, he hasn't had a problem since then, but he always does a test run with the same alloy before you weld.
If your looking for an alternative to welding thats still light and easy to fix, my team has been very happy and slightly fascinated by the latest rage in the facing industry, Screw Rivets! (Look up Rivet Nuts on McMaster for more info) Kind or works like this /off topicness |
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#15
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Re: Welded Frame Horror Stories
I thought the fastening 306 did this year was a neat idea just really machine work intensive, I talked to one of your mentors about it at Philly.
We use 1"x1"x1/16" AL 6061 box for our frame and had no issues with breaking anything. We planned for a high impact game last year and built a properly reinforced ladder frame to handle the load. The only damage that our frame showed after 2 regionals, the championship and Battlecry was on the front where there is a slight indent (~1/8"). I don't believe cantelievering will be an issue if you support it right but I don't reccomend unless you protect you wheels well. A couple other comments: Don't pre-drill your mounting holes before welding. Assume you will have some misalignment/warping from the heat of welding. TIG! Drill vent hole to allow hot gas to escape when closing a box. Bolt to the frame properly. I.E. don't put a bolt all the way through the box and crush it, use rivnuts. 1x1x1/8 angle weighs the same as 1x1x1/16 box. Sounds stupid, but people forget. Also 1x1x1/8 weighs almost the same as 1010 8020 extrusion. |
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