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Pic from build season.
28-01-2005 15:40
phrontist
Looks like a heavy bot, with that extrusion frame, scissor lift, AND treads. Why did you decide to go with the treads? Seems like they'd be more suited to a game in which you have to do a lot of climbing. Won't they cause issues with riding up on tetras? Or maybe you've got a cunning defensive strategy involving the inside of the goals... 
28-01-2005 15:45
kpugh
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Originally Posted by phrontist
Looks like a heavy bot, with that extrusion frame, scissor lift, AND treads. Why did you decide to go with the treads? Seems like they'd be more suited to a game in which you have to do a lot of climbing. Won't they cause issues with riding up on tetras? Or maybe you've got a cunning defensive strategy involving the inside of the goals...
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28-01-2005 16:06
Paul H
I was gonna say....that looks a lot like that robot that won the Canadian regional next year! 
28-01-2005 16:09
tkwetzel
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Originally Posted by Paul H
I was gonna say....that looks a lot like that robot that won the Canadian regional next year!
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28-01-2005 16:22
Yan Wang
Sorry for the confusion. I thought that titling it "639's 2004..." and putting it in the 2004 Robots picture gallery would be enough 
The pictures were posted in order to give away some ideas to teams that considered using scissor mechanisms to stack tetras and for teams that wanted to slide parts by using the slots in the extrusion (see Lift picture 2). If you want more details, you can always PM me.
| How is stability of the scissor lift? |
| Looks like a heavy bot, with that extrusion frame, scissor lift, AND treads. |
28-01-2005 23:32
russell
Is that 30mm square aluminum extrusion? How heavy was your chassis?
29-01-2005 17:29
Yan Wang
It's 1" square aluminum extrusion. The frame weighed *around* 20lbs.