Huge changes to the low bar fabric.
Very interesting.
I can’t say I’m happy at all with the prospect of flaps of material that can now enter my robot and wrap around my rotating shooter wheels. The width mitigates that somewhat, and hopefully the vinyl is of the heavier variety that doesn’t fold easily. I guess we’ll see if it turns out to actually be an issue or not at the competition. We’ll be refitting our competition field as soon as the prints come out.
Inb4 this happens 3 times at a regional and they’re fresh out of replacements again.
If bumper fabric really worked as well as I’ve heard it has, why not just use bumper fabric with red on the red side and blue on the blue side? Or is that too expensive/complicated for FIRST to add? IMO it would actually do more to lend itself to looking like defenses for an alliance that way.
This is pure speculation, but I figure that this might work if it was planned ahead of time. However, given the rushed nature of these shipments they went with the fastest and most alternative they could find.
If the intent of the fabric is to prevent teams from bowling boulders through they should just get rid of it already and add all boulders entering the field must make contact with a robot before crossing the opponents outerworks.
I didn’t hear of any major problems with the removal of the fabric and addition of a foul that many events implemented after issues week 1. Did I miss something?
The removal of the hanging bar makes it difficult if not impossible for many teams, including my own to keep the flaps out of the robot. Many teams designed around using the hanging bar to avoid snags and damage to mechanisms. Why couldn’t the strips have been fastened to the bar on the bottom?
Overall I’m happy and not surprised by the solution. Fortunately any teams that this causes issues for have plenty of time to change things before Champs.
Our robot was designed with explicit features to guide the embedded pipe across the top of the machine. Thinner flaps make that design decision obsolete and puts our robot at risk of damaging the new flaps or, worse, being damaged by them.
I can’t fathom how FIRST believes cable ties will withstand the rigors of competition. The sallyport, already held together in parts using cable ties, fell apart regularly last weekend.
I have more concern about the zip ties. It will be interesting to see how long they last. I am also concerned that the zip ties will catch on robots.
Evidently there will be no pipe on the bottom of the vinyl strips so they should swing easier than the present configuration.
I think that the pipe at the bottom was a major reason why the original design failed. The pipe would hold the fabric taught… and more easily penetrable.
If the fabric could have moved easier… I think much of the damage would not have occurred although sharp objects would still grab the fabric.
We shall see.
This just seems like such a bad idea. There’s so many low bar bots that went with an open middle and rails to guide the pipe over. Now they get to worry about their shooter or turret catching a flap and getting ripped from their robot.
EDIT:
For example, 1114’s bot. That wide over the bumper intake would probably fit two flaps inside. I’m sure they planned to have it down and running when they went through the low bar, but now they have to worry about it eating a flap. It just seems wrong to penalize teams that designed around the field in order to make things easier for teams with sharp pointy things that damaged the field.
I’m glad to see that FIRST decided to do something about the low bar fabric. It was rough at Lake Superior. We had our very own sweatshop on the side of the field cranking out new low bar covers as fast as poorly designed robots could rip them up.
I wish FIRST would’ve followed Lake Superior’s lead and gone with colored flaps made out of bumper material (if the bumper material needs to be rugged enough for the game, you’d think the low bar flap material would be held to the same standard).
A lot of this comes back to good inspecting as well. Robot Inspectors need to be on the lookout for anything that has even the slightest possibility of tearing the low bar fabric. I know I passed a robot that shredded a flap. I felt terrible. I walked the team back to their pit, and we came up with a solution that served it’s purpose well for the rest of the event.
In other news, hey quick exhaust valves are finally legal! Finally you can have the nice crisp pneumatic actuations you’ve always wanted.
THIS is a much better solution. Robots that tear fabric need to be altered so that they do not damage the field. I do think this solution will cause design problems for quite a few robots.
Honestly, this is what I see it coming down to more than anything. R8 is there to prevent exactly the sort of tears that have been happening. Prudent inspection and a slightly tougher fabric (1000D Cordura or maybe ballistic nylon) seem likely to mitigate many of the issues experienced with the flaps, without penalizing teams for spending time to design around a now-deprecated field feature.
My feelings exactly.
So the moral of the story is that if enough teams break the rules the rules will change.
“Bumper fabric” (cordura) is exactly what the low bar fabric was made of previously.
I’m not actually confident that is the case-- the drawings don’t actually specify the material (or at least, I can’t seem to find the specs), and in any case, there are a couple dozen varieties of Cordura out there, and some of them are MUCH stronger than others. In particular, the difference between different deniers of Cordura and the difference between “Classic” Cordura and “Ballistic” Cordura is extremely noticeable. While I didn’t do a lot of touching the fabric on the low bar while doing field reset this past weekend, it did not feel like the type of Cordura that 2220 or 2667 have used or are using for bumpers. Also worth noting is that “bumper fabric” is a pretty terrible specification-- I’ve seen teams use everything from sailcloth to pleather for bumpers.
Just when I thought competing this week couldn’t get any more exciting. We get to be FIRST’s ginuea pigs a second time.