Visible Progress during a FIRST robotics build season is not linear. Sometimes you have students working very hard over keyboards and complex wiring. It does not photograph well. Then, you power up the robot and magic happens. I call the first full function successful test the "Von Frankenstein Moment" for obvious reasons.
We were really close at the end of our long Saturday session. But the robot just decided to be stubborn. Better now than later. But still, a steady week's work with no major setbacks. (fingers crossed there). There should be more to show in a day or two.
In the meantime....
We have a swell new "pit cart". It is designed to hold everything we could potentially use for robot repairs. Ideally nothing much more than the official Pit Crew card deck in the top drawer. But if necessary there will be all manner of tools, spare parts, etc.
You actually have to take a lot of things to a robotics tournament. We'll have one side of the cart with a white board for cartoons and messages. Maybe the required fire extinguisher can be mounted on one side. A fun little side project made entirely from scratch. Some of the lumber we got for free.
We have the "hopper" attached. The red tool box (the pit cart was designed to carry these) is where the launcher will be. The polycarbonate hopper extends out over the intake system. We were hoping to be able to carry 40 of these little "lemons". Looks like we might hit 50!
Lots more coming soon. In addition to the new pit cart we have a new robot transport cart. It's off being powder coated. Now, when I saw this thing I told the students that it was about the size of the car I was driving back in college. So where are we going to park all this? That is actually the question I spent six hours working on.
There's a back closet in the tech ed area. It is full of stuff that has been jammed in there for a very, very long time. Pet projects of teachers long retired. Ham radio stuff. CO2 powered cars. Elaborate wind up airplanes and model rockets. Boomerangs. As our high school team works out of the middle school shop area I can but marvel at the prospect of 6th through 8th graders being allowed any access to boomerangs. Also, text books.
These are old. That's not per se bad, some of them that deal with manual milling and machining of wood and metal are first rate. But in the 21st century students are mostly not working from these archaic things called "books". Most of the copyright dates are from the 1990's. But a few went further back. How far back?
Oh my. And yes that is the date of this edition. The first edition was listed as 1938.
For reference I was born one year earlier.
And there were other things to be found. A whole batch of heavy, high quality mirrors. Maybe for astronomy? Dozens of cool wooden model kits where you can peg together little round balls and make models of atoms. I had found mousetraps on the floor and assumed there had been an attempt to trap critters. then I found a big box labeled "Mousetrap cars". All this stuff is of debatable use. The various car, rocket and airplane stuff has been reorganized and put on shelves appropriate for the priority. The textbooks and such have been piled up for the tech ed teachers to rule on. Of course any they deem still useful will be put back on the shelves.
There were other things in there too. Robotics team stuff had also been haphazardly jammed in various places. This makes it difficult to find, which is a problem independent of the "parking space" issue of the carts. Sometimes you find mysteries. I'll conclude with this item. Let your imagination run wild....





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