Team 56 raised $14,000 in two weeks to get to the Detroit championship where we ranked 1st on the Darwin field and made it to the finals on our field.
If you don’t mind, how’d you manage that?
I made it into LTI to study CNC Machining.
4004’s biggest success was the season in a whole.
Jumping on deciding to do our first ever swerve drive, we got our code able to run the day of our first event, where we learned that we were having MANY issues with browning out our bot in Indiana. But that didn’t stop us, we banded together to find workable solutions, and rose the rest of the season to being either a captain for first pick for every event we went to, including our first time competing at Worlds.
With a great season, MARS is excited to launch this season, starting with running our own new FiM District Event!
You completely forgot about the Northern lights auto!
We wrote our own Pure Pursuit implementation that was mildly inspired by 254, allowing us to have a speedy cross field scale autonomous. It was incredibly exciting watching the auto run on the right side for the first time (on the Northern Lights Practice Field AND our school cafeteria, there is a big pillar blocking the right side).
Looking back 2018 was a very successful year for Team 230:
- Undefeated at our first event (week 2 - Waterbury);
- Earned our Double Engineering Award Quinfecta (ie. 2 of each of the 5 engineering awards) when we won the Engineering Excellence award in Waterbury;
- Won an engineering award at the NE DCMP - Innovation in Control Award;
- Had an amazing array of consistently performing autonomous routines to handle every permutation of scoring configurations - which had a significant impact on all the other items listed here;
- Rose 60 places in the rankings on Curie in one day! Started Friday ranked 66th place and ended in 6th place. :yikes:
So proud of what we accomplished.
Shout out to 4557! We were so happy when you won Chairman’s, you totally deserved it. Earning both DCA and EI in a single year is a major accomplishment.
1629 greatest achievement was winning our second District Chairman’s Award and getting to spread STEM to new places throughout Appalachia and the country. On top of that we won the Central Maryland event and the Central Maryland Chairman’s Award. We were Finalists at Greater DC. We were the first pick of the first seed at CHS District Champs. Then at Detroit Championship ranked 3rd which is the highest we have ranked at worlds. And we won our second championship Spirit Award.
Personally I think our team’s greatest success happened during the south florida regional where we took a heavy fall during a qual that severely deformed our wrist, which we hadn’t made a spare part of. We managed to fix it completely within 8 quals and came back strong, winning the next qual. It was a very tough task for our pit crew to fix due to the fact that the entire intake had to be disassembled and the warped metal had to be reshaped and our entire pit crew worked together very efficiently to solve this problem
Building off Ed’s response, my personal greatest success is that I won the Dean’s List Award at Detroit Champs and managed to convince my team and my family that I didn’t until the final ceremony.
Honestly, I think my team’s, 4384, greatest success was managing to bounce back from a very difficult season. In the previous year we endured a great deal of difficulty, losing our head and founding mentor as well as relocating our shop, resulting in failing to qualify for the state championship (although winning a blue banner as a backup bot). However this year, the team made large strides toward sustainability and managed to qualify for the World Champs. We even managed to win EI as well as several other business related awards including Entrepreneurship at the State Champs despite this being the first year for our business team. It was an overall great experience and we even managed to train our freshman and sophomores very well.
Hopefully we can build on this success this upcoming season.
Thank you so much! We worked many long hours of work and outreach to finally hit that goal. None of us were expecting it and we were so excited to finally reach that goal. Congratulations on your great season as well! Always very impressive to see a team like yours go so far and do that well!
My personal biggest success in 2018 was working with a low resource team in week one as an event volunteer to help them place a cube on the scale by week five.
Last year, in week one, I volunteered at the PCH Gainesville Event. I volunteered at Pit Admin, so as the event came to a close, I began to walk the pits watching teams pack up and begin staging to leave. In the hustle to leave that most teams were in, I saw a group of 4 students and a mentor sitting in a mostly bearen pit staring at their robot that had been preforming lackluster throughout the competition. I walked over to find students upset, and a mentor who felt like he had failed the kids. The robot’s giant arm was under-geared, resulting in it being unusable. I came over, worked with the kids, told them their problem, and worked with them to find possible solutions. Fast forward to week five - they are at their second event. The team shows up with a redone arm, and manages to place a cube in the scale on the practice field. They were all overjoyed, and were so happy that they could reliably compete and have fun. The team never made it to DCMP, but the students are absolutely stoked for next season now.
Side note: This is why I volunteer for FRC.
Also, at PCH Columbus, the PCH team was able to setup the entire event in under 5 hours. That was pretty awesome.
We had a great bounceback season after our many failures in Steamworks. To recap, imagine not being able to do the gear in Steamworks or not even trying. My team, much to my protest, decided to purely focus on a shooting robot that year. We did have a gear catcher but it never got on the robot as the ball storage grew and grew in size; then once we got to the competition- our shooting wasn’t effective and was failing. No backup system, no 2nd option. We were a big heavy robot yet on mecanum wheels. So yeah, that was a disappointing season but in PowerUp we made up for that. We had a successful cube intake and lifter. We made it the farthest our team has ever gotten by being picked by the 5th alliance. While we lost, we were happy we made it that far
2771’s Greatest successes this year would probably winning our 5th district Chairmans award, and becoming finalists at 3 events. At our first MI event we were finalists against Stryke Force, at our second MI event we were finalists against Comets and then at the district championship we were finalists against the Michigan state champions, 4003.
I was hoping to pair up with you guys at Forest Hills, but our high rank fell after a few bad matches. Congratulations on your success this year (especially at IRI, captaining an alliance to the Semi’s at IRI is a great accomplishment).
SOBOTZ’s greatest success for the season was 100% winning Rookie All-Star for Tesla-Carson. We also grew our team from ~30 people at the end of 2017 to almost 100 members right now.
Whoa, that’s amazing as a rookie team. We’re running a large team now, and if you’re looking for any insights on managing a team that size, let us know.
It was fun seeing your win at CVR. I traded for 2 shirts for my in-laws in LA after seeing your accomplishments! Being able to ally with a team that you graciously hosted during the year was great!
1678’s greatest accomplishment for winning an award this year was winning Chairman’s for the first time at Sacramento (and discovering avocados are a citrus fruit…) We followed up at CVR to win our first Entrepreneurship. Our greatest overall accomplishment was expanding our youth robotics program and engaging the wider community in our county.
I can more than relate. We made the same mistake for Steamworks even though I very clearly remember the team agreeing that gears were the first priority during initial planning.
Happy that you guys were able to bounce back though!
Building our first cascaded elevator (and having it work)