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2 Speed, 6 CIM Rhino Drivetrain.
Through the bumpers harvester.
115 pounds.
14-03-2016 22:57
Richard Wallace
Very nice!
Love that turret. Leading the field in goal score and third in OPR at Tippecanoe tells me that your high shot is accurate. Did you shoot more from the batter or from the field?
32 RS with 10-2 record says you either (1) didn't miss a breach, or (2) were in on at least one capture during quals. Either way that's solid driving.
How did the Rhino track pulleys hold up?
14-03-2016 23:28
Chris_Elston|
Did you shoot more from the batter or from the field?
How did the Rhino track pulleys hold up? |
14-03-2016 23:35
EricH
Questions:
What is this thing named?
Where are all the rivets hiding? (Seriously, you guys look like you're slipping. I can only see a few...)
14-03-2016 23:42
tickspe15Great robot, it was great competing with/against you!
If you can shoot from anywhere on the field why did you choose to shoot from the least protected place on the field when you did get defended?
14-03-2016 23:50
Akash RastogiI'm sure this is an awesome bot and all, as usual, but I really miss your crazy sheetmetal designs 
15-03-2016 00:37
tindlerootGreat robot, easily one of the most competitive in Indiana. I don't think I saw the drop down collector this past weekend - were you just driving the robot over the boulders to pick them up or is my memory failing me?
I think one of the most memorable moments of Tippecanoe was when you guys shot a high goal from on top of 4103 with a few seconds left in the match. Even though I knew it was a technical as it happened, it was still impressive to watch and I hadn't heard the crowd as excited as they were up to that point.
15-03-2016 08:02
Chris_Elston|
Great robot, it was great competing with/against you!
If you can shoot from anywhere on the field why did you choose to shoot from the least protected place on the field when you did get defended? |
15-03-2016 08:06
Chris_Elston|
I'm sure this is an awesome bot and all, as usual, but I really miss your crazy sheetmetal designs
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15-03-2016 08:15
Chris_Elston|
Great robot, easily one of the most competitive in Indiana. I don't think I saw the drop down collector this past weekend - were you just driving the robot over the boulders to pick them up or is my memory failing me?
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15-03-2016 08:28
carpedav000Man, those pesky defense bots
On a more serious note, is there any particular reason why the boulders spin while you are driving around with one? From what I saw it also happens when the turret isn't tracking.
15-03-2016 08:38
Chris_Elston|
Man, those pesky defense bots
On a more serious note, is there any particular reason why the boulders spin while you are driving around with one? From what I saw it also happens when the turret isn't tracking. |
15-03-2016 08:48
carpedav000|
Ha ha...1741...BTY...I'd like to point out, that was AWESOME that we agreed on the "Sally-Port Agreement". I hope you was able to do that in your next match as well.
Wow...very observant! Actually we call that "pop-corning" the boulder. On Saturday when the boulder was in the indexer and made the ball sensor, it did that automatically. On Sunday, we changed it to only popcorn when we the shooter wheel is spinning, so it was stationary on Sunday. The reason was to eliminate driver error of position the boulder correctly on top and ensure that the boulder was still not captured in the harvesting rollers. So by pop-corning the boulder, it's rolling up on top of the harvesting wheels, frictionless, so when we launch the boulder with our air kicker, it's consistent when it hits the shooter wheel. If it was pinched on the top intake roller wheel, the air kicker will still get it out, but the exit velocity was different. So we found it best to keep the boulder rolling to make sure the shot was consistent each time. |
15-03-2016 08:54
Richard Wallace
15-03-2016 09:17
Wayne Doenges
The robot's name is Invader