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Too much Mech

joeweber

By: joeweber
New: 09-10-2009 23:11
Updated: 09-10-2009 23:11
Views: 1303 times


Too much Mech

Too much mechanum wheels but what a fun idea. Is this more traction or a loss of power? (ball differential at the center omni wheels).

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10-10-2009 01:18

swamp_child


Unread Re: pic: Too much Mech

I don't get this at all.



10-10-2009 01:33

EricH


Unread Re: pic: Too much Mech

I do. There are pictures of a prototype in CD-Media. The basic idea is that you can have 6 wheels on the floor, even when climbing a ramp (put a hinge point at the center axle), but still go any direction you want to.

How's that prototype coming, Joe?

Wait--is that 3 mecanums side-by-side in each corner? Which would make it 6 omnis per side in the middle...

I think that we need a slight physics review here. More surface area, in theory, does not equal more friction, and therefore more traction. There are reasons for more surface area in areas such as drag racing when using rubber tires, but very few of those conditions apply in a FRC match.

You'd need to tune the wheels in each corner to have identical traction characteristics, which is in fact doable, but it takes a while. Otherwise, you're likely to get interference while going sideways, which can throw you off a bit.

It's doable, but I'd try it out in the offseason versus the original version and the original version's 10-wheel cousin before trying it in a competition. Then again, demo robots... imagine having three robots that could climb over each other, push each other, etc. evenly--and they're all different. How's that for a demo?



10-10-2009 06:32

IndySam


Unread Re: pic: Too much Mech

I'm sure AndyMark would love it. That's almost $2000 in wheels!



10-10-2009 15:19



Unread Re: pic: Too much Mech

Allow me to politely inquire... Why?



10-10-2009 17:03

Brandon Holley


Unread Re: pic: Too much Mech

Quote:
Originally Posted by EricH View Post
I think that we need a slight physics review here. More surface area, in theory, does not equal more friction, and therefore more traction. There are reasons for more surface area in areas such as drag racing when using rubber tires, but very few of those conditions apply in a FRC match.
There are some pretty interesting dynamics occurring between wheel tread and a floor surface in FRC. Yes "theoretically" more surface area =/= more traction, however when you are dealing with surfaces interlocking (ie: velcro) it is a different scenario. When we use tread that has "teeth" in FRC,you gain some of this effect, obviously not like velcro, but its still something to be accounted for.

Brando



10-10-2009 19:15

joeweber


Unread Re: pic: Too much Mech

Quote:
Originally Posted by IndySam View Post
I'm sure AndyMark would love it. That's almost $2000 in wheels!
We actualy build our mechanum wheels using ruber stoppers and bolts for axels. It really cuts down on the price. We also use rubber tubing for the omni wheels. The rubber stoppers really have good traction on the carpet.

vidio - http://www.team1322.org/ideas.htm

Pictures - http://www.team1322.org/ideas.htm#Omni Direction



12-10-2009 11:48

JesseK


Unread Re: pic: Too much Mech

I would say that it would be an addition of traction on carpet if the corners had paired mecanums. The pairs would be aligned with a slight offset in order to fill each others' gaps more effectively, much like the way one offsets a pair of omni wheels that are bolted together. I believe a pair of mecanums is still wide enough to allow you to mount the CIMs the same way as well, so you'd still have the same space-saving design as seen above.

Three mecanums side by side is a power loss unless the surface has small bumps that are very close together (like diamond plate). In a bumpy case, it's difficult to predict angle and surface area of contact, so more is probably better to assure the bot gets full traction.

This is still a fun design to ponder, even if some of its iterations are impractical on the FRC field.



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