1 / 48

Introduction to Robot Subsystems

Presented By: Lynbrook Robotics, Team 846 John Chai, David Liu, Aashish Sreenharan, Michael Wachenschwanz, and Toshi Tochibana Available online at lynbrookrobotics.com Tech > Resources > “WRRF Presentations”. Introduction to Robot Subsystems. Talk Outline. Pneumatics

jacob
Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to Robot Subsystems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Presented By: Lynbrook Robotics, Team 846 John Chai, David Liu, Aashish Sreenharan, Michael Wachenschwanz, and Toshi Tochibana Available online at lynbrookrobotics.com Tech > Resources > “WRRF Presentations” Introduction toRobot Subsystems

  2. Talk Outline • Pneumatics • Sensors and Electronics • Electrical Components • Robot Drive Train Design

  3. Michael Wachenschwanz and Toshi Tachibana present… Pneumatics

  4. Pneumatics • Can you feel the pressure • Pneumatics is the use of pressurized air to achieve mechanical movement. • Air tends to move from high pressure to low pressure • Important note: There is no such thing as a negative pressure

  5. Compressor • Where it all starts • The compressor takes air from the surrounding atmosphere and compacts it via pistons. • Comes with a release valve attached to it

  6. Pressure Switch • Better safe than sorry • Safety Mechanism • Turns the compressor off at 120 psi and turn it back on at 115 psi

  7. Tubing and Fittings • Keeping connected

  8. Tank • The more the merrier • Tanks allows more air in the system. • When air is lost, psi drop is mitigated by larger tanks

  9. Plug Valves • Done for the day • Releases all the compressed air in the system. • Must be release manually • Be sure to release the stored air when done with the system

  10. Regulator • Stay in control • Regulators regulate the pressure. • Uses air from input to maintain the pressure of the output • Usually kept at 60 psi for FIRST competitions

  11. Electric Valves • Handling the pressure • Single and double solenoid valves are used • Controlled by the control board via electricity • Double solenoids exposes one port to pressure and the other to the surrounding atmosphere

  12. Actuators • Use the force • Actuators convert the difference in air pressure to mechanical motion • Linear actuators, or cylinders, are the more common actuators. For the competition, they come in 3 bore sizes: ¾, 1 ½, and 2 inches • Rotary actuators are also allowed

  13. Notes on Actuators • Force = Pressure x Area • Area= pi x squared radius • radius = diameter (bore) / 2 • Retracting force is less than extending force

  14. Flow Rate Valve • Control the flow • Simply a fitting that widen or narrows the flow path of the air • Used to slow the air movement, thus slowing mechanical movement • Does not take away from the net force. • Must be adjusted manually

  15. Aashish Sreendharan presents… Electrical Components

  16. Motors - CIM • Used to drive robot

  17. Motors – Van Door • Powers doors on mini-vans

  18. Motors – Fisher Price Motors • Used on Fisher Price Toys • Made by Johnson Electric or Mabuchi.

  19. Power Distribution Diagram

  20. Power Distribution Explained • Battery (12V, Lead-Acid Battery)‏ • Main Circuit Breaker • Power Distribution Block • Components: • Victors (ESC)‏ • Spikes • Controller

  21. Power Distribution Picture

  22. Spikes Relays • Control direction. • Two single pole, double throw relays. • Forward = 12V to M+ and M- grounded. • Reverse = 12V to M- and M+ grounded. • Neutral = M+ and M- grounded, or 12V applied. • H-Bridge.

  23. H - Bridge • 4 Switches. • Combination of switches on to drive motor.

  24. Electronic Speed Controllers • Known as: Victors. • Use Victor 884's. • Control speed and direction. • Uses PWM.

  25. Pulse Width Modulation • Two Types: • Power Delivery • Control Signal

  26. David Liu presents… Sensors and Electronics

  27. Pulse Width Modulation • Two types • Power transfer • Between speed controller and motor • Signaling • Between controller and speed controller

  28. Potentiometers (Pots) • Sensor for measuring position: • Rotation, distance, etc.

  29. Potentiometers Simplest type: Slider Acts as a Voltage Divider Slider is connected to output. +5V +5V +5V 0V 5V 2.5V 4.2V 3.3V Output 10 KΩ GND GND 9 KΩ 3 KΩ GND 3.5V 0.5V 7 KΩ 1 KΩ

  30. Reading the Value • Analog voltage level • Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) • Converts to number • 0-1023 for 10-bit ADC

  31. Pots: Uses • Sense position: e.g. lift • How to sense the lift position? • Travel length is 6 feet • No linear pot long enough • Rotary Pots

  32. Pots • Multi-turn pot: • Screw with wiper resting on threads • Usually 3, 5, or 10 turns • Alignment is important! • Continuous rotation: use encoder

  33. Optical Encoders to controller to controller Optical Sensor Optical Sensor

  34. Optical Encoders to controller to controller Optical Sensor Optical Sensor

  35. Optical Encoders • Determining Distance Travelled • Count pulses • Example: • Given: Encoder stripes = 128 • Given: Wheel diameter = 6” • Given: counted 85 pulses = 12.52 inches

  36. Optical Encoders • Determining Speed • A. Count pulses per interval • Example: in 1 second, 256 pulses. Speed = 2 revolutions/second • Inaccurate and slow • Analogy: On a bicycle • Mark the wheel • Count passes in a minute

  37. Optical Encoders • Determining Speed • B. Measure time between pulses • Example: time between two pulses = 3.9ms • Only requires observing two consecutive pulses

  38. Ultrasonic Sensors • Determine distance • Send pulse of sound • Measure time until echo

  39. Johnathan Chai presents… Robot Drive Train Design

  40. Required Capabilities • Speed • Point-to-point Movement • Turning in place • Controllable

  41. Skid/Tank Steering • Power left and right sides independently • Joystick control

  42. Ackerman Steering • Limited turning due to geometry Team 34’s Design on Chief Delphi

  43. 4 Wheels • Fast but slides on ground when turning • Wide vs. Long base

  44. 6 Wheels • Center wheels dropped about a quarter inch • “Rock” on center when turning

  45. Swerve Drive • Maneuverability • Time costs Craig Hickman’s Design on Chief Delphi

  46. Wheels • Rubber • Roughtop • Mecanum • Omni-wheels • Tank Treads AndyMark Wheels

  47. Conclusion

  48. Conclusion • Covered major components of FIRST robots • Slides available at lynbrookrobotics.com • Tech > Resources > “WRRF Presentations”

More Related