Jaguar problem?

We just have the jaguars hooked up to the cRIO board and we’re having some trouble with the Jaguar. We hooked the Jaguar’s output to a multimeter to test our circuits.

For some reason the code is not working.

/*----------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/* Copyright (c) FIRST 2008. All Rights Reserved.                             */
/* Open Source Software - may be modified and shared by FRC teams. The code   */
/* must be accompanied by the FIRST BSD license file in the root directory of */
/* the project.                                                               */
/*----------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
package frc.t4069.robots;

import edu.wpi.first.wpilibj.IterativeRobot;
import edu.wpi.first.wpilibj.Jaguar;
import edu.wpi.first.wpilibj.Joystick;
import edu.wpi.first.wpilibj.command.Command;
import edu.wpi.first.wpilibj.command.Scheduler;
import frc.t4069.utils.GameController;
import frc.t4069.utils.math.Point;

/**
 * The VM is configured to automatically run this class, and to call the
 * functions corresponding to each mode, as described in the IterativeRobot
 * documentation. If you change the name of this class or the package after
 * creating this project, you must also update the manifest file in the resource
 * directory.
 */
public class The2012Robot extends IterativeRobot {

	Command autonomousCommand;
	GameController gc = new GameController(new Joystick(1));
	Jaguar j;

	/**
	 * This function is run when the robot is first started up and should be
	 * used for any initialization code.
	 */

	public void robotInit() {
		// instantiate the command used for the autonomous period
		// autonomousCommand = new ExampleCommand();

		// Initialize all subsystems
		// CommandBase.init();
		j = new Jaguar(2, 1);
	}

	public void autonomousInit() {
		// schedule the autonomous command (example)
		// autonomousCommand.start();
	}

	/**
	 * This function is called periodically during autonomous
	 */

	public void autonomousPeriodic() {
		Scheduler.getInstance().run();
	}

	public void teleopInit() {
		// This makes sure that the autonomous stops running when
		// teleop starts running. If you want the autonomous to
		// continue until interrupted by another command, remove
		// this line or comment it out.
		// autonomousCommand.cancel();
	}

	/**
	 * This function is called periodically during operator control
	 */
	public void teleopPeriodic() {
		Scheduler.getInstance().run();
		Point rightStick = gc.getRightStick();
		System.out.println(rightStick.y);
		j.set(rightStick.y);
	}
}

The GameController code is verified to be working, and rightStick.y is a value between -1 and 1

and our Jaguar is connected to PWM1

Try removing the slot from your Jaguar object.

Jaguar j = new Jaguar(1);

Wouldn’t hurt to try. We had a similar problem getting our drive train to work, and this seemed to fix it. I’m still not sure how the new cRIO slots work yet… so I guess I’ll have to get back to you on that.

If you have the old cRIO, any module in slots 4-3 is module 1, regardless of the slot and and module in slots 5-7 is module 2 regardless of the slot. Any module in slots 1-3 of the new cRIO is module 1 and the module in slot 4 is module 2 even though it’s in slot 4. The code defaults to module 1 (slot 1, 2 or 3) unless you say otherwise. Thus, getting rid of the slot number in the code should work. It’s confused a fair number of people here from what I can tell.

No effect…

and I’m also on the new cRIO

Also prehaps I should clarify that the multimeter doesn’t show anything other than 0.

We’re having the same problem. There is already some discussion about the same issue in this thread.