One for each robot, and one for a field controller for each robot.
Unless I am mistaken. I am think along these lines. Where the IFI OI, RC, and radio pack is defined as:
A method for controlling a robot competition within an arena having a plurality of robots engaged in competition therein, said method comprising:installing at least one device for engagement by contestants of the robot competition; allocating, by the at least one device, a plurality of channels for communication of signals to the robots during the robot competition; assigning a unique channel to each contestant engaging the at least one device; and conducting the robot competition with the engaged contestants.
The method according to claim 24, wherein the at least one device is an arena controller
Or would it be 7, One for each robot, and one for 1 field controller for everyone.
Yes and No. At most regionals with only 1 field yes, you could have 40 robots at a time running with little to no data loss.
The channel issue becomes a problem when you go to nationals and many fields can be running at one time. The fields are also close enough in proximity that it would not be possible to re-use channels.
It’s important to note that your robot will not respond to another teams Operator Interface. Your team number is entered at both the Operator Interface and Robot Controller and is used to filter bad radio data. However, if both teams were using the same channel it could result in some loss in data causing erratic problems with robot command and control.
Given the current radios, it is possible to have 5 fields at nationals with 6 robots on each field simultaneously.
In theory, yes. In practice, not really. Some experimentation that we’ve done with the radio modems shows that if two radios are on adjacent channels they will interfere with each other. Assigning consecutive channels to robots on the same field would likely lead to intermittent data links (and thus erratic robot behavior). Plus, I imagine that when IFI sets up a competition, they try to stay away from the 5 channels that are user-selectable in case someone happens to be using one of those channels in the pits.
It is important at this point to remind everyone that you may not use radio control in the pits at any competition. What interference you can cause may ultimately result in personal injury so use the tether everywhere except when on the field.