11.19.2012

Repositioning

In a unanimous vote, we have decided that our current placement of the motor controllers is ridiculous and silly; as such, I have endeavored to devise a new, improved strategy for attaching them, involving one plexiglass sheet, some screws and – by popular vote – some velcro. It should do several things: make the wires neater and more accessible  provide additional support for the arm, and allow for there to be velcro on the robot. All is right with the world.

Weekend Recon

Casey, Travis, and I took a road trip up to Tampa in order to watch the FTC competition at Hillsborough Senior High School, as we have several new members and wanted to become familiar with the event before its our turn to compete.







11.13.2012

One String to Rule Them All

After no school on Monday, we reconvened today to finally finish up our string system, only to instead attempt to use one string for the whole system, creating a whole new set of problems to solve. The strings would slip on the axle, so we had to tie it through the collar in the middle of the axle. After getting everything strung and ready for testing, we found that a single string would spool too much and become tangled, making all our work pointless. Back to our original two string idea...

11.09.2012

In a Bind

Stringing the robot has proved a much more daunting task than previously believed. Travis built a string separator out of plastic and I reconstructed the assembly, only for my knots to come undone. Casey then attempted it a second time with the exact opposite outcome of knotting it too well and rendering it completely immobile. In response I've researched methods of tying knots and have hopefully solved the problem for Monday, as its too late to get anything else done today.

Working for the Weekend

Casey, Travis, and I stayed very late after school today to continue working on the lift system for our robot. The string system Nik worked up earlier became tangled after a couple of uses, rendering it useless. Primarily we need to work on keeping it untangled and making sure it can lift the slide.

Switch 'Em Out

While the old end-effecter was fairly decent, any room for improvement must be seized. We drew up a SolidWorks for a new ring grabber, and it looks promising. Construction starts Monday.

11.08.2012

30 Minutes or Less

The parts that we ordered finally arrived today, greatly increasing the resources that we have at our disposal and allowing us to build bigger and better robots. These new parts will be stronger that the parts we currently are using and will provide us with better performance. 
 

Silly String

 Nik and Pierce troubleshooted our lift system and decided to scrap the string being wound on the side, as it would not wind correctly and started to destroy the string. Instead, the string was moved to an axle beneath the arm that is turned by a gear attached to a motor. This arrangement prevents the string from stretching when the arm is lowered- another problem we encountered- and provides more torque for raising the lift, making it a much better solution.