Team 610's Best Match at Waterloo

It’s been a pretty wild ride (sorry Wil) from Semis at GTRE to winning Waterloo. We managed to add high goal capability and a high goal auto, running it successfully on the field.

We’re thankful to all the teams at Waterloo for a fantastic competition, especially to our alliance partners 1241 and 3560, who were a pleasure to work with.

We’d like to showcase what we believe was our strongest match, QF-1 (1241,610,3560 vs 5406,4917 and 4525).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6P0UgHEt1GY

Thanks for watching, and we’ll see you all at Championships in St. Louis!

Link is broken. Looks like it should only have http:// once.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6P0UgHEt1GY - Fixed link

What modifications were added to gain the high goal capability?

Why

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610 has always the “capability” they just hadn’t used it much in a match, probably due to lower accuracy levels than they wanted. I can’t speak to what changes they made to make it realistic for them to high goal regularly in a match.

Realy happy for you guys! Loved being with you in your 1st regional win in AZ back a few years. Hope we are in the same division at champiosnhips! Say hey to Mr. lim!

Love the hangshot. You guys have a set strategy and you stick with it. Consistency and amazing robots win matches, as you guys showed this weekend. Great job and congratulations. Good luck at worlds!

We designed the claw on our robot to have the capability to shoot high, but as Brennan said, we chose not to use it. Judging from our the sessions on our practice field with our 2013 robot playing heavy defense, we thought that shooting from the courtyard wasn’t feasible. So we tried to go for a batter shot but found several issues, namely having to position the claw in code (lacking a mechanical hardstop) and the really tough geometry of the goal at that perspective.

Before ONWA we rebuilt the pivot mechanism that rotates our claw up and down as we were smoking motors often at GTRE (I think we switched motors 5 times). We added counterbalance that ensured that our claw would remain on the mechanical hardstop while in the shooting position (it wouldn’t flop up and down as it would before). On practice day at ONWA we tried to get the batter shot down but found that there was too much error in our claw positioning for the shot to hit with anything greater than 65% accuracy.

We took some inspiration from our good friends over at 1241 and tried to find a supershot: a shot calibrated such that the apogee was in the goal while we had our wheels on the ground and about a foot off the batter. This effectively creates a zone where the top part of the parabolic trajectory of the shot will go into the goal (throwback to Aerial Assist), but that’s not all… The best part is that when you drive onto the batter, the angle of the shot changes and the ball will still go in. We found a very specific speed with the claw on our hardstop in the shooting position, where we could shoot 4ish feet away from the batter to having two wheels on the batter and still have the ball go in.

To prevent defense from screwing with our shot, we yet again took a page out of 1241’s book and used the diamond plate of the opposing driver station as a hardstop and to prevent defense from altering the angle of our shot.

TLDR: We made our claw pivot better and took some lessons in high goal shooting from 1241 :] :] :]