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This is the complete 113 day journal of the Killer Bees 2011 Robotics Season.
Day by day account of 2011 Logomotion build and competition season as recorded by Jim Zondag - Team #33 - The Killer Bees
Thanks JVN for encouraging me to formalize this.
Killer Bees Robotics Season Journal 2011.pdf
08-05-2011 11:42
Vikesrock
Absolutely fantastic, Jim!
Thanks for compiling and posting this.
08-05-2011 12:33
Chris is meThis is incredibly detailed and awesome. Thanks for posting! I hope this inspires more and more teams to do this kind of analysis.
08-05-2011 15:27
JVNJim,
Thank you VERY much for sharing. I'm sure the FRC community will benefit greatly from learning more about Team 33 and the process you guys use.
I really enjoyed reading it -- it is interesting to hear your account of facing some of the same challenges I faced as team lead of 148. This is one of the coolest things about these build journals -- I hope everyone who reads these recognizes that we're all going through the same things!
Thanks for answering the challenge...
-John
08-05-2011 15:38
Jacob PaikoffThanks for doing this Jim, it was a great read.
Hopefully next year I'll have enough time at the beginning of build season to start a journal.
10-05-2011 09:12
Jared Russell
Read the whole thing. Great, great resource. Thanks Jim!
11-05-2011 13:34
landinwFantastic read. Thank you very much for putting this together and sharing it with us.
This is exactly the kind of data we are looking to collect in the Systems Engineering survey we have posted (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=95109) for a graduate class research project we are doing now. Any other teams have similar documents of their experiences they would like to share?
12-05-2011 16:14
DmentorI really enjoyed reading your paper; informative and gave a unique insight into your team. Clearly your time management skills are amazing. How do you maintain your focus over such a prolonged duration and how do you deal with burnout?
12-05-2011 18:18
topgunOne point I got out of it was the significant advantage of the bag-n-tag events for your first event. We basically had to shut down testing on ship day at noon to get the robot crated for FedEx pickup. Killer Bees worked until 11:30 P.M. before bagging and tagging.
We could have done a lot of tuning and testing during that last day. (And we needed it) 
12-05-2011 19:55
Jim Zondag|
I really enjoyed reading your paper; informative and gave a unique insight into your team. Clearly your time management skills are amazing. How do you maintain your focus over such a prolonged duration and how do you deal with burnout?
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12-05-2011 19:58
AlecMataloniI always wondered where our mentors ran off to after the finals matches...
21-05-2011 01:57
blakeeliasJim, I love how you organize the design process early in the season! Can you describe the role play activity you did on Day 2? It seems like you got a lot out of it, but what exactly did it look like? Were you using the field at all at that point?
22-05-2011 14:32
BJC|
Jim, I love how you organize the design process early in the season! Can you describe the role play activity you did on Day 2? It seems like you got a lot out of it, but what exactly did it look like? Were you using the field at all at that point?
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22-05-2011 20:22
JVN|
Based on our experience we were able to much better determine what was important and how we wanted to play the game.
I highly suggest the exercise to all teams who don't already do something of the sort. |

22-05-2011 20:50
IKE|
Did you have Human Players throwing bagels across the room?
If not... the simulation is flawed. ![]() -John |
. Throwing white ones was kept in our strategy, but we didn't think people would get as good as they did at throwing the blue and red tubes. Ironically with the bagels, the blue-berry (obvious) and pumpernickel (red) flew better than the whites. Ironically, if you have ever tried to throw over-inflated tubes, the blues and reds throw better than the whites because the whites would "potatoe chip" when over-inflated.
22-05-2011 22:19
Cyberphil
Wow. Truly inspiring read. I took so much from this! I would like to now create one for our next season (If I find the time). This is no small undertaking, and you did a great job with it! It is interesting to see some of the things you guys thought were obvious, we completely overlooked, and vice-versa.
Excellent stuff! Please keep it up!