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Here's a fantastic photo grabbed from http://www.pnwfirst.org/html/2006_pictures.html showing QF 2-2 at the 2006 Pacific Northwest Regional in Portland, OR.
As part of the chaos, both 1887 and 1839 tipped while, at the opposite side of the field, 753 tipped and, as a result, incapacitated 956. That left 488 (XBot) and 254 (Cheesy Poofs) to fight it out on the ramp. We managed, it seemed, to hold the Poofs off from getting into scoring position, but they managed to fire off a scary volley of balls in the last few seconds, ultimately winning the match and eliminating our alliance.
(By the way, take a look at the referee
)
15-03-2006 13:14
I remember watching this, as it was the match before we went against the poofs. The robots flipping everywhere made driving on the field insane, but both teams still active were able to pull it off quite well.
The struggle at the end had the whole audience on it's toes, and you could hear and even feel the roar as the poofs finally fought their way into scoring postition. I think I have a movie of this match somewhere, I'll try and dig it up.
15-03-2006 13:18
Travis CovingtonIs that Akshay taking a picture? hahaha!
15-03-2006 13:18
Madison
I think everyone on our team would be thrilled to have this match on video. This represents the culmination of a fantastic event for them and is a great demonstration for parents and sponsors alike of the enormous success we've had with our program this season.
Let me know if there's anything I can do to help you to make the video available.
15-03-2006 16:18
activemx
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Originally Posted by Travis Covington
Is that Akshay taking a picture? hahaha!
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15-03-2006 16:27
Rick TYlerWho says nothing exciting happened in Portland? I'd also like to get pics of the match where four out of six robots flipped, and another of the match where 1294 and 1318 are sitting on the platform next to each other, with 1318 pretty much sitting on its rear with its front propped up on the Lexan. You could almost see flames and smoke at the end of both of these matches...
The X-Bot (488) had a slick chassis this year. I want to know where Madison found those tiny omniwheels.
15-03-2006 16:37
Madison
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Originally Posted by Rick TYler
The X-Bot (488) had a slick chassis this year. I want to know where Madison found those tiny omniwheels.
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15-03-2006 21:19
Doug G|
Originally Posted by M. Krass
I think everyone on our team would be thrilled to have this match on video. This represents the culmination of a fantastic event for them and is a great demonstration for parents and sponsors alike of the enormous success we've had with our program this season.
Let me know if there's anything I can do to help you to make the video available. |
15-03-2006 22:05
Sgraff_SRHS06Actually the video was excellent. Four more reasons not to have a high COG.
15-03-2006 22:24
Madison
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Originally Posted by Sgraff_SRHS06
Actually the video was excellent. Four more reasons not to have a high COG.
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15-03-2006 22:41
Sgraff_SRHS06|
Originally Posted by M. Krass
Three, actually. 956 didn't tip so much as they were beached on the ramp. Their drivetrain was a single pair of wheels in the middle and four posts on the corners. I believe they got into a situation wherein neither of their wheels was on the ground.
The video is excellent! Thank you. |
15-03-2006 23:57
Rick TYler|
Originally Posted by M. Krass
The wheels are a sandwich of aluminum and delrin plastic that I designed, while the rollers are 1.25" diameter EPDM rubber available for $.25 ea. from AndyMark. They roll on 1/8" diameter steel pins.
We cut the aluminum "bread" on a Haas 3-axis CNC mill and the delrin "meat" on our carbon-dioxide laser cutter. |
16-03-2006 00:09
Madison
There's probably a handful of sticky ethical and legal issues surrounding the potential sale of things I make on the Microsoft campus. 
In any case, the delrin hub is really an absurd design choice. The rods for each of the EPDM rollers are only 1/8" diameter pins as I mentioned and milling a slot for those on the milling machine just makes me nervous. It's not impossible, I know, but I can only guess how many endmills I'd break while trying to do it. By using delrin, we're able to use a reasonably strong alternative to aluminum, but to do so much more quickly and easily by using the laser cutter. The downside is that delrin is far more expensive. So, even if it's more prone to breaking, we can replace the delrin parts in a heartbeat. It's not a bad compromise, I guess.
16-03-2006 02:58
activemx
The pictures are up, check them out here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/amx/set...7594076466467/
17-03-2006 18:09
!c3b0><|
Originally Posted by M. Krass
I mentioned and milling a slot for those on the milling machine just makes me nervous. It's not impossible, I know, but I can only guess how many endmills I'd break while trying to do it.
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17-03-2006 18:17
Kris Verdeyen
That was an amazing match to watch.
27-10-2006 00:18
tyguy2021I remember that match, I'm the driver for team 1839.I was so ticked when we tipped. Thanks for the video. We were filming also, but our cameraman got too excited and pulled the camera away for a second and when he paned back we were tipped.