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It was being stuborn when it was mounted on or near anything metal, so we isolated it.
10-03-2006 17:56
Tim566Correct me if I'm wrong, but is that a zip-tie web created to hold your radio in place? if so very cool.
10-03-2006 19:24
Joe J.
Its blue electrical tape. It passed inspection at Great Lakes without being questioned.
12-03-2006 20:52
dlavery
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Originally Posted by Philmont629
Its blue electrical tape. It passed inspection at Great Lakes without being questioned.
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12-03-2006 22:48
pathew100We will ask, but it is only wrapped around the radio and the serial connector to cover the exposed metal on the connector (which is at ground potential, nice place for static electrical potential to jump to.). The electrical tape is not used in any way to secure the radio to anything. It is being used to electrically insulate the connector.
We were having problems with random radio dropouts before shipping and noticed that it would happen either randomly during operation or when the robot was disabled and someone would walk up to the robot and touch the metal. This discharged a large static charge that was built up (large spinning plastic wheel, foam balls, foam rollers, pvc = nice Van DeGraf generator). When discharged into the person touching the metal robot frame it would also generate this radio dropout.
12-03-2006 22:58
ChriszumaIt looks like you've gone to great lengths to prevent static there. As for rule-breaking, you could (probably successfully) argue that the tape is being used for electrical insulation, since it really is.
13-03-2006 02:09
Rombus|
Originally Posted by Chriszuma
It looks like you've gone to great lengths to prevent static there. As for rule-breaking, you could (probably successfully) argue that the tape is being used for electrical insulation, since it really is.
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