I have to say looking at all the pictures, I have never seen this many solid, well built designs… ever. From the lowest numbers to the highest rookie numbers. Great job to all the 2006 teams. Can’t wait for the regionals to start. Each year the bar is raised so high yet so many people rise to the challenge.
Yes, I totally agree. Great point, Matt.
I strongly feel that this is the #1 ingredient to growing the FIRST program.
If the general public (or the media) sees a “box on wheels” scoot 3 feet and team members cheering, they just don’t get it. However, if people see a team working on a robot that can do amazing things, then things are different. The robot suddenly is an attracting force for people not involved with FIRST. Crowds gather. Team members swell with pride. Team supporters work harder to fundraise. FIRST fever gets contagious.
A well-working FIRST robot can be charismatic. People are attracted to it. Teams rally behind it. Little kids stare with wide eyes. Relatives say to their friends “look at what my niece helped invent”. This is an awesome thing.
I really hope that these robots will work as well as they appear. I hope that it’s not just teams 25, 118, 86, 968, and 1523 who can toss in 10 balls in 10 seconds. The GDC has given FIRST a good game. Now, it’s the teams job to make it show well on the playing field. People will gravitate to FIRST if these robots can do what they appear to be able to do. Let’s keep working hard to make it so.
Good luck,
Andy Baker
Yeah there are alot of nice bots this year but for all the teams that have posted here there are hundreds that haven’t and are a total mystery.
This year’s game seems to be more challanging interms of robot design than last year’s game and I suspect alot of teams are going to have bots that won’t be up to the standards of many of the bots posted here and it’ll really show in the smaller regionals where they have to be taken as an alliance partner and they could be anything from adequet to a weak link to an alliance’s downfall.
So let’s keep it in perspective.
Going along with Andy’s point… he’s even memorized the teams who have posted videos of their robot working on Chief Delphi. Now imagine all the teams who don’t post here.
Ed is right on this note. In all honesty only a small percentage of teams really post there designs/robots on here.
In all honesty only a small percentage of team memebers really post here at all. And some teams don’t even know anything about this resource.
Many of the teams that post here tend to be the upper echelon of FIRST. The smaller newer teams do not have the resources and manpower to build as dynamic robots as the “haves” and those are the bot that people need to see even more than the established teams.
I am continually amazed at how many different designs spring from a few tasks given in the games. No more than a half-dozen things to do, sometimes only 2 or 3 things - and we get hundreds of differing designs. It amazed me through 6 years now of FLL, and 2 years of FRC.
Some of the solutions seem so simple, you wonder why our team didn’t think of it. Others are completely unique - clearly “out of the box” thinking.
And we’ve only seen a hundred or so here - the competitions will be a thrill. And I get one of the best seats in the house - well, best stand-ups in the house - as I’ll be working queuing at GLR and Detroit.
Hey Andy!! What’s wrong with an (ice) box on wheels? lol
These are some of the finest robots I have ever seen also…
I am quite anxious to see them perform…
cya at the Boilermaker…
Bob
This year is most definately the most challenging.
If you’re a shooter, there are so many things you have to worry about to get a fast and consistant shooter.
If you’re a ball horder then you have to build it really well and sturdy as to not be moved while unloading into the goals.
I think the center goal is way more than three times the work for three times the points, but it sure is impressive to see a robot launch a ball like that.
We dropped the jaws of the entire wrestling team at our school when they saw our robot.
Our school had a dodgeball tournament…we were going to bring in the launcher prototype, put it on a lazy susan and just POUND them, but we had to take it apart to build the real thing…pity