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#16
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
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#17
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
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To that end, I might suggest getting in touch with the entities behind the 2009 kitbot. If you can come up with methods of improving future versions, either in durability, versatility, cost, or ease of use, your work may get more use by teams than a separate design posted to CD. The kitbot might go against some of the design sensibilities you or your team relies upon, but what better way to help teams than to help improve the aforementioned baseline? |
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#18
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
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#19
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
I believe the open source chassis would be much more effective if it utilized the kit frame.
The kit frame doesn't out of the box offer a decent 6 wheel, if you guys just make the simplest method of making a 6wd with the KOP frame, people will probably actually use it. Pretty much, use all COTS parts, make some assembly and exploded drawings with complete BOMs, and release that. Dawgma did that a few years back for a non-KOP base (I believe it was the "sub $1k drivetrain"). Sorry to rain on the parade, but a team capable of making the kinds of bases you describe probably don't need or don't want to download a design. Now, the team that meets in a physics room and has no engineering mentors would probably actually use (and be able to use) a 6wd with the KOP frame. Pretty much, if they have the capability, they won't want the design, and if they want the design, they probably don't have the capability. |
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#20
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
I disagree. I am talking about a design that would require very few tools (i.e. a saw and a drill), yet would be simple and competitive. The kitbot is nice, but rather than trying to make it work better for a maneuverable, dependable chassis, it makes much more sense to start with a clean slate. It is surprisingly easy and inexpensive to build a frame that is much more suited to your needs than the kitbot, and I think that doing so will make many teams' lives easier.
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#21
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
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#22
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
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#23
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
Let me define "better".
The people this frame should target is the team building in a classroom with no real tools available to them, an adviser that disallows tool use, or a school that disallows tool use. So, it should be a competitive 6 wheel drive that uses no machined parts, and hand tool operations should be minimal. I really don't see how something else could beat the KOP in this aspect. |
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#24
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
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#25
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
I think you underestimate how simple it can be to build a custom, effective chassis. I have several ideas that would require cutting a few boards of wood, drilling some holes, cutting sheet metal, and screwing/bolting.
That being said, the situation you describe is very specific. I doubt there are many teams that cannot get access to basic equipment (or someone who is willing to do a minimal amount of basic work) for a few simple parts. Last edited by GUI : 07-12-2008 at 22:58. |
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#26
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
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Both good, but Adam is talking about how the kit chassis only needs wrenches to assemble. EDIT: how many teams actually fall into this catagory of only being allowed to use wrenches/screwdrivers/etc.? I also have a design that I'm almost done with one that requires only a saw and a drill to assemble (and is cheap! )Last edited by s_forbes : 07-12-2008 at 23:04. |
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#27
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
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Of course that isn't the point here, so, carry on... ![]() But yes, teams with no real tools or workspaces do exist, and I suppose readily available simple solutions do help them get off on the right start and stick around in the program. Last edited by sanddrag : 07-12-2008 at 23:05. |
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#28
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
The assumption that the kitbot will remain the same is probably not a good one.
Who knows what we may get. Think back to 2004 and prior-when the kit bot was really pretty useless. It might be a regression from what IFI has been offering us, if it's different. It might be better. Who knows. Hopefully if the kitbot is not the same IFI will continue to sell it anyways (assuming it makes sense financially for them). |
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#29
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
I was already beat to the punch on tool use; yes, there are schools that have limits, either procedural or simply for lack of them. So I'll add in another constraint to consider: purchasing.
Not all schools or institutions have FRC-friendly procurement rules; some refuse to let someone go out-of-pocket and get reimbursed, others can only write purchase orders that not all merchants accept, and still others will be glad to cut you a check--Monday mornings between 9:15 and 9:45 AM, for an exact documented amount, if the hand of the bookkeeper that signs such checks hasn't cramped up. (Trust me, I have some interesting state purchasing tales.) If you can cut the number of suppliers down to one or two, the odds of that bookkeeper's hand cramping up is lessened. For 2008, a team with a firm grasp of physics could build an effective (wide-track, for the sake of argument) 2WD robot with one hacksaw, one drill and bit (to enlarge the axle hole to 1/2"), one allen key, one wrench, and four 1/2" nuts and bolts. Even if nobody on the team had them to loan, you could pass the hat around and buy all of that for $100 at any hardware store in the country. (International teams might have more trouble; someone from abroad want to comment on how the IFI frame went together for your team?) Also worth considering, for the folks talking about hacksaw-and-drill approaches, is the risk of That Freshman. (Not all freshmen, mind you, just That Freshman. You know the one.) If your material of choice is available cheaply in big huge sheets, you're probably fine. If That Freshman's mis-angled drilling is going to run a team $20 each time, it's a factor. (And, of course, remember that the kit frame's materials are there for free, whether used for their original purpose or some other; teams may also be able to wheel and deal for more of it from other teams.) If you still think you can beat the kit frame of past or near-future for the above (and let's not forget enough durability to last the season), I'm much interested in seeing. |
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#30
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Re: Community/Open Source Chassis Project
My intent with this was not to make a frame that can replace the kitbot as being easy to assemble with so few resources, but to create more of a library of designs for teams with limited machining and mentor resources. S_forbes posted a design that is very similar to one I was working on here. The materials are readily available, it requires very little machining (biggest task is drilling the bearing holes, which can be doen with a forsner bit on a drill press), and is inexpensive.
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