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#1
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Wood robots
We have hooked up with a local company that makes large dies for cutting corrugate.
The will supply us material for free and laser cut whatever we want. The plywood they use is high grade maple in 3/8" 1/2" and 5/8" thicknesses. Looks like we will be building a wood robot ![]() Anyone have any helpful tips and tricks for this kind of construction they would like to share? |
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#2
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Re: Wood robots
Team 2471 has made a few robots that have been predominantly plywood. They may be able to offer some insight.
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#3
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Re: Wood robots
A couple of things come to immediately-
gusset, gusset, gusset everything. RAGE, Team 173 is known for their wood drive bases. PM me and I'll send along contact info for their mentors. Also, a few years ago I saw a team from Maine that built their complete robot from very high end plywood, I think it was 7 or 9 ply baltic plywood. I cannot remember the team number....anyone else?? |
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#4
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Re: Wood robots
Quote:
Steve |
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#5
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Re: Wood robots
95 has made many wood chassis robots. We found the most robust way to attach the panels together was with bolts and 90deg angle aluminum. The angle brackets can be drilled on a drill press, clamped in place on the plywood, then just match-drilled through. Our recipe was 1/2" plywood with 1"x1"x1/8" angle brackets and 1/4-20 fasteners, CNSK heads on the outside for a nice smooth finish, and hex-heads with washers everywhere else. 3"-4" of space between each bolt, FWIW.
Have fun! Edit: we also used the 7-layer baltic plywood, it is good stuff. |
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#6
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Re: Wood robots
If you are doing a plywood robot - "heck yea" on using baltic birch !!
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#7
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Re: Wood robots
Check with Jim, Team 1726...they make great wooden bots.
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#8
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Re: Wood robots
Team Paragon 571 has been thinking "inside the wooden box" for 10 years !!!
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#9
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Re: Wood robots
Team 1771 created an excellent wood chassis.
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/34907 |
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#10
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Re: Wood robots
1726 frames are awesome and a great inspiration to anyone making wood frames.
If you don't like cantilevering wheels, 1771 also makes fantastic rigid frames. I saw that thing in Atlanta and it was solid as a rock. Maybe a little heavy but with so much material the frame could take anything. Baltic Birch!!! |
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#11
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Re: Wood robots
We only made one mostly wood robot, it worked well. We glued/stapled the main chassis structure, taking time to figure out how to make the thickness of the different parts so they'd be strong where needed, and light where we could get away with it, and also be able to attach the parts together--for example using thicker wood where staples needed to go into the edge.
Also baltic birch is strong, but it's kind of heavy, you might find that there are places in the robot where it would be better to use a less dense, thicker piece of plywood. 1771's construction method is really neat, with the interlocking tabs. Like an R/C airplane fuselage... |
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#12
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Re: Wood robots
I second the interlocking tabs.
My father (nor 92) owned a company that did die-cutting of cardboard. Back then, it was all hand-cut, but some of those dies are amazing. For those unfamiliar, you first cut a thin line through plywood, then fill the space with a strip of razor steel "rule". Squish the finished die onto a piece of cardboard, and viola', you get cutouts. Think jigsaw puzzle. They used to get something like $10 an inch, decades ago. A typical 22 x 34 die might have 1000 inches of rule... Consider using thin plywood with a fiberglass/epoxy coating where strength and low weight are a consideration. Do the math correctly, and wood can be pocketed like metal for weight savings without strength loss. |
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