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An Iso view of our final design for our swerve modules. They have already been made, and are being assembled right now.
27-01-2009 22:34
Dave McLaughlinEach module is about 5.5 lbs. fully assembled. Any and all questions are welcome
27-01-2009 22:35
Hal9000after facing several problems we are currently in the process of deciding what to use as an alternative to keyed shafts
27-01-2009 23:00
Greg Needel
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after facing several problems we are currently in the process of deciding what to use as an alternative to keyed shafts
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27-01-2009 23:03
=Martin=Taylor=|
after facing several problems we are currently in the process of deciding what to use as an alternative to keyed shafts
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27-01-2009 23:10
Dave McLaughlinHal was a bit quick to insist that we are looking for an alternative to keyed shaft. We encountered a small problem with holding one of our keys in place, but we have already figured out a way to address the problem. Thank you for the quick suggestion of hex shaft, but we intend to stick with the keyed shaft we have now.
27-01-2009 23:35
=Martin=Taylor=|
Hal was a bit quick to insist that we are looking for an alternative to keyed shaft. We encountered a small problem with holding one of our keys in place, but we have already figured out a way to address the problem. Thank you for the quick suggestion of hex shaft, but we intend to stick with the keyed shaft we have now.
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27-01-2009 23:38
Dave McLaughlinThank you for the advice, I think the approach that our drive team concocted is very similar to the one you proposed 
28-01-2009 18:17
jimbotIs very cool, I wish we could build a swerve drive, but are you really going to use swerve this year?
28-01-2009 18:28
Dave McLaughlinWe asked ourselves the same question during brainstorming. Our answer is yes. We believe the ability to employ "thrust vectoring" (there is your arbitrary aviation connection of the day) will allow us to maneuver better than a differential drive. While we may not spend all match "strafing," the ability to use transverse friction for braking by orienting the wheels perpendicular to the direction of motion, and put all of our power into turning, rotating or driving makes us believe a swerve is worth the turmoil that usually comes with building one.
30-01-2009 21:41
5n1p3rcool, i'd like to see what else you've done on inventor
01-02-2009 11:45
Sam N.|
We asked ourselves the same question during brainstorming. Our answer is yes. We believe the ability to employ "thrust vectoring" (there is your arbitrary aviation connection of the day) will allow us to maneuver better than a differential drive. While we may not spend all match "strafing," the ability to use transverse friction for braking by orienting the wheels perpendicular to the direction of motion, and put all of our power into turning, rotating or driving makes us believe a swerve is worth the turmoil that usually comes with building one.
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07-02-2009 16:45
megaman_22201OMG!!!!
we have a concept just like that...but its a little different than that 