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#16
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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However, if a team buys an 8' long piece of aluminum tube and uses only 3', they can account for the price of a 3' piece instead as aluminum tube is commonly available at shorter lengths. Our team has an SLA machine on its way to the lab we borrow, so now I'm curious what sort it is and what material it uses to see if it'll be at all helpful to us. |
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#17
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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If a company who sells the service of making rapid prototypes can give you a quote for making 1 piece for under $400, and that is the commercially-accepted price, then a team could make a custom part on one of these machines. For instance, I made our first plastic Omniwheel for AndyMark on a dimensions 3D printer that used ABS plastic as the material. The company who made this part for me charged me $250 for each side of the omni wheel. This cost covered their material usage, labor, and overhead costs. Anyone off the street could take a similar design, of similar size and get approximately the same price. As long as it's done during the build season, this would be legal, in my interpretation to the rules stated above. Andy B. |
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#18
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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I should start looking for a free-lance SLA operator that can fabricate with the same resin that Emerson uses, and is willing to quote parts. |
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#19
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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this is a very common issue with electronic parts. you can get the gyro sensors that many teams use from places like Digikey. If you buy one they are $50. If you buy 10 they are $45 each. If you buy a thousand they are $20 each. The rules are saying you cannot take adavantage 1 thousand quantity pricing and only charge $20 to your BOM, you have to use the lower quantity pricing if you only use one. But its still pro-rated by the amount (number) you actually use. If they only come in a box of ten for $450, and you only use one, then you only used $45 worth the parts on your robot. Last edited by KenWittlief : 19-10-2006 at 15:21. |
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#20
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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This example is very clear: Example: A team purchases a 4' x 4' sheet of aluminum, but only uses a piece 10” x 10” on their robot. The team identifies a source that sells aluminum sheet in 1’ x1’ pieces. The team may cost their part on the basis of a 1’ x 1’ piece, even though they cut the piece from a larger bulk purchase. They do not have to account for the entire 4’ x 4’ bulk purchase item. I don't see any room for interpretation. If he uses one teaspon of his 10 kg drum, it doesn't matter. He can only get them in 10 kg drums, and therefore must account for an entire 1 kg drum. Quote:
Last edited by Cory : 19-10-2006 at 15:26. |
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#21
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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If I have to buy a box of ten gyros, and I only use 1, I can sell the other 9 on ebay to get the money back, or I can sell them to other teams, or I can use them for spares, or I can use them next year. The BOM represents the cost of building one robot, the one that is on the field. If I have to keep buying off the shelf parts to replace after every match, that cost is not accumulated into the BOM. If wire only comes in 100 foot spools, and I use 1 foot of wire, then I dont have 100 feet of wire on my robot - why would have to account as if I did? Prorated means the cost of the whole sheet times the percent used. On the basis - means based on the price of the smaller sheet, not on the largest sheet you can find. look at it this way: If gyros only come in boxes of ten, and I buy ten, but use one, but I have to put the cost of ten on my BOM, then why not use ten gyros on my robot? accounting that way makes no sense from an engineering perspective - the value (cost) of having ten gyros on my robot is clearly ten times the value (and cost) of only having one. The fact that Digikey decides to sell them on cut tape with ten per order, or 100 per reel, has nothing to do with the functionality or value of that part, except for establishing the price per part. Last edited by KenWittlief : 19-10-2006 at 16:19. |
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#22
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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#23
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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I guess its time for some CD searching to clear this up. |
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#24
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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If my boss tells me to build a motor tester, and that tester requires three inches of 3/4" diameter shaft stock, then I might have to buy a foot of shaft stock in order to get what I need. Will I then tell the boss I bought three inches so he can reimburse me for that, while I pay for the whole foot? No, I won't. The cost of completing the assignment included buying the minimum quantity of that material. |
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#25
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Re: Carbon Fiber
The way I see it is that most teams' cost accounting sheets are so poorly done that all this argument isn't even relevant. We need teams to actually do their accounting before we ask them to do it perfectly.
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#26
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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or to put the cost of 10,000 gallons of SLA GobblydeeGoop on their BOM, when they only used 4 ounces for one part. Remember, FIRST wants us to show students all this neat technology. Why would they cripple us with a non-prorated rule for materials usage. Prorated means only listing the actual amount used, not the size of the drum it comes in. |
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#27
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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#28
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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The cost of items purchased in bulk or large quantities may be prorated on the basis of the smallest commonly available unit that satisfies the need for the item. Note that it doesn't say "on the basis of the quantity used". You can list the amount used based on the cost of smallest amount commercially available, rather than the cost of the amount you purchased. You do not get to list it based on only the amount you used, if that amount is less than the minimum available. |
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#29
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Re: Carbon Fiber
The word prorated seems to contradict the rest of the rule really. Prorated would mean, I think, that you just divide the price by how much you use, but the rest of the rule, especially the example, make it pretty clear that they mean just substituting the price of another product that could've replaced the part on your robot for the price of the larger product.
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#30
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Re: Carbon Fiber
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