Rather than having the robot run all over the table attempting to accomplish the missions, our team used wind-up motors to push various objects into place. Through six wind-ups, we have developed solutions to seven of the missions. These contraptions, together with our robot, make it possible for us to attempt more missions within the allotted time. For missions too complex for a wind-up, we designed specialized attachments for our robot. These designs are unique to our team and are created to efficiently and effectively accomplish a specific mission. Once we had developed an attachment, we would modify it in order to connect it to our robot. Our next step would be to write, through trial and error, a program that incorporated the attachment and allowed it to solve part of the challenge. Overall, this combination of wind-up motors and unique attachments has led to our team's successful accomplishment of many missions. We just need to practice to maintain the consistency of our success.
Research
Our team first collaborated to choose which building to analyze and then learned all we could about the Junior High’s energy efficiency opportunities. We learned that, although the Junior High, being a modern structure, was designed to be efficient, it could benefit from use of an alternative power source. After much research and analysis, we determined that using solar power, in conjunction with other energy saving techniques, would be the best option for the building itself. Through our environmentally-themed Christian Emphasis Week, we plan to ask for student donations to purchase solar panels, as this can be an immense initial expense. We then decided to move beyond our original goal of making just the Junior High more efficient to lessening the environmental impact of the entire
Our team found out early on in the year that two members of our team,
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Technical Notes:
-use inertia triggered hammer to capture uranium, corn, and truck
-use detachable hammer on a pullback to get oil barrels off platform
-robot will run up under back of this pullback, raise the forklift, and tow it back to base
-drive robot in ark and tap coal trigger with one fork of the forklift
-pullback pushing box plants two trees, delivers a wind turbine, and triggers the satellite
-another pullback delivers the second wind turbine to a different community
-robot pushes dam into place
-pullback is pushed by robot to deliver hydrogen car, place the solar panel with a hammer, and fling the wave turbine over the house
-robot pushes power lines, coal, two trees, and green uranium to power plant with aid of a box
-power lines run across three communities
More technical notes:
-used hammer for uranium,corn and truck because the programming is very simple (forwards and then back) and the hammer has a large margin for error.
- previous truck attachment was very long, so there was trouble fitting it in base, and it was very hard to aim. The hammer is much easier.
- for the oil retrieval, the hammer could not be used because the contraption had a pullback motor, and you cannot pull it back. Therefore, we had to find someway to lift up the pullback motor and pull the contraption back.
-after qualifiers, the length of the forklifts was shortened.
-also, when we built new attachments to the forklifts, we built them a little smaller so they would fit in base better.
-the treads were originally taken off because with the weight of the robot, the treads folded under the robot whenever it tried to turn.
-treads were put back on because the robot was very inconsistent, and with the new missions, it did not need to turn.
- the back treads were taken off because it allowed to robot to turn, and it was easier for the hammer missions to have the robot leaning backwards instead of forwards.
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