
Франкенщайн ЛЕГО робот с противоположни мотори
Инструкции за робот, построен от ЛЕГО Mindstorms EV3. Казва се Франкенщайн, тъй като двата мотора са противоположни.
- #77
- 28 Feb 2016
- 1
Инструкции за робот, построен от ЛЕГО Mindstorms EV3. Казва се Франкенщайн, тъй като двата мотора са противоположни.
Инструкции за построяване на основа за робот от ЛЕГО Mindstorms EV3, която може да се използва във FIRST LEGO League, World Robotics Olympiad или други състезания по роботика.
Building instructions for a LEGO Mindstorms Base Chassis with a reversible motor
Note: This robot contains wheels that are from the NXT set.
При това шаси за робот от ЛЕГО Mindstorms EV3 брик-ът е вертикално разположен. Това е една интересна идея, която може да бъде много полезна.
Шаси за робот от ЛЕГО Mindstorms EV3, при който колелата са отпред. Тъй като това шаси е построено с комплекта EV3, можете да го използвате за основа, която да надградите с приставки.
Инструкции за основа за робот от ЛЕГО Mindstorms EV3 с гуми 56mm, вариант 1. Тази основа може да се използва в състезания по роботика като FIRST LEGO League, World Robotics Olympiad и други.
Разновидност на състезателния робот от EV3, при който отпред има сензори за светлина.
Инструкции за ЛЕГО Mindstorms EV3 робот, който може да се построи за три минути. Можете ли да се справите? Опитайте.
Използваме този робот, когато трябва да направим нещо бързи за демонстрация или малко състезание. Просто прикрепете моторите и сте готови. Бързо е, нали.
Building instructions for a LEGO Mindstorms EV3 Multi-axles mechanism
The chance of a “serious” meteoroid hitting earth in our lifetime is extremely low, but it’s not zero, and the devastation could truly wipe us out. How will scientists and engineers keep us safe?
Mission
From west of the free-line, send one or both meteoroids independently to the meteoroid catcher. “Independently”: see also M01, Section “Scoring Requirements”.
Scoring Requirements
(mission descriptions source https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
Incredible engineering accomplishments like space travel come about in steps. And many huge, progressive sub-goals need to be met before we can forever leave earth and live to tell about it!
The robot needs to send payload rockets (carts) rolling down the space travel ramp. The first cart is preset and ready to go, but the robot needs to load the other two from the base.
(mission descriptions source https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
Solar panels in space are a great source of energy for a space station in the inner solar system, but since things in space are always moving, aiming the panels takes some thought.
Solar panels need to be angled toward or away from you, depending on strategy and conditions.
Both solar panels are angled toward the same field: 22 (for both teams)
Your solar panel is angled toward the other team’s field: 18
Possible scores: 0, 18, 22, 40 as shown below and seen from above your north border, facing north.
“Your” solar panel is the one on your west end of the table.
(mission descriptions source https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
Space is quiet and beautiful, but with almost no heat, air, nor air pressure, it could freeze, suffocate, and boil you all at once! Help our spacewalking astronaut “Gerhard” get to safety.
The robot needs to get Gerhard’s body into the airlock chamber.
Scoring Requirements
(mission descriptions source https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
Though spacecraft travel crazy-fast, even the shortest trips involve a lot of time for the traveller’s body away from labour and recreation, which is bad for the heart and lungs.
Mission
The robot needs to repeatedly move one or both of the exercise machine’s handle assemblies to make the pointer advance.
Scores
Soon after a launch, rocket engines often separate away from spacecraft by design, but that’s long before the spacecraft leaves the pull of gravity. So why doesn’t the spacecraft fall back to earth?
The robot needs to impact the strike pad hard enough to keep the spacecraft from dropping back down.
Scoring Requirements
(mission descriptions source https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
FIRST® LEGO® League mission requirements need to be achieved by your robot through its programs and its use of equipment. You’re allowed to hand-rescue your robot, but that does cause this penalty. Be sure to pay extra attention to the rules where they talk about “Interruptions"
(mission descriptions source https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
To live away from earth, it would help if we were good at detecting and mining resources under the surfaces of other planets, moons, asteroids, and even comets.
The robot needs to get all the core samples out of the core site model, then it has options for what to do with them as described here, and in mission M03.
(mission descriptions source: https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
It is amazingly expensive to send heavy stuff like construction material into space, so scientists and engineers are instead learning how to print what they need in space, using available extraterrestrial elements.
The robot needs to get a regolith core sample and place it into the 3D printer, which will cause the 2 × 4 brick to pop out. The ejected 2 × 4 brick can then be delivered elsewhere for more points.
(mission descriptions source: https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
If a satellite doesn’t have the correct velocity and distance from earth, it can fall, drift away, fail to function or get destroyed by debris. Propulsive adjustments need to be performed with precision.
The robot needs to move one or more satellites to the outer orbit.
(mission descriptions source https://www.first-lego-league.org/)
Gardening is easy, right? You just need a truckload of rich soil, some rain, sun, fertilizer, helpful bugs, CO2 and a rake but what if you were orbiting Neptune, in a room the size of a minivan?
Move the push bar the right distance at the right speed, to get into the green scoring range.
(mission descriptions source: https://www.first-lego-league.org/)