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 Organizations / United States / SMART / *546 (-5)
Subject: 
October 29th, 2011 SMART Meeting
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.smart
Date: 
Fri, 21 Oct 2011 20:46:00 GMT
Viewed: 
22305 times
  
For the upcoming SMART meeting (in just over a week!) your task is to build a
robot that can do Pumpkin Chuckin! Throw any LEGO element or elements as far as
possible, without doing any damage to our facilities! Your device must be built
entirely out of LEGO. If you want something more robotic, have it aim for a
target. The robot must be able to sense the target, and aim.

See you in a week!

--
  David Schilling


Subject: 
SMART's BrickCon Display
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.smart, lugnet.robotics, lugnet.events.nwbrickcon
Followup-To: 
lugnet.org.us.smart
Date: 
Wed, 12 Oct 2011 01:07:11 GMT
Viewed: 
37947 times
  
I want to thank everyone who participated in this year's SMART display at
BrickCon. It was absolutely amazing! We couldn't have done it without everyone's
help. Every element was crucial, and worked amazingly! Named "BallMageddon"
because either it was going to be a catastrophic failure, or a spectacular
exhibit that everyone who saw it would remember for a LONG time! I'm very
pleased to say it was the latter!

Here's who contributed:

Gus designed the display and an amazing 'wave' that carried the balls in front
of the display.

Kyle built the final lift that brought the balls into the display, as well as
the sorter that took the balls coming out of the display, and returned them to
their proper bins.

Andrew built the "rainbow stairs", one of the two most commented on parts of the
display, which took the balls coming out of the display and gave them their
initial lift to get them rolling towards their destination.

Sean built a wonderful ball escalator that took the balls from near ground-level
and got them all the way to the top of the bins where they got sorted by Kyle's
sorter.

Of course the wonderful and beautiful hoppers built by Dan were essential. I'm
not sure how many versions he built before creating one that wouldn't jam. Now
he understands the many ways that balls will form voids when you try to pull one
out of a pile. I'm not sure that he entirely believed us when he volunteered to
build the hoppers. Also worth mentioning here is Doug's interesting pattern to
stretch bricks to allow such large bins to be built with a limited supply of
parts. And equally important was Alex's contribution of building pushers to get
the balls onto the conveyors! Thanks to this vital improvement, we didn't have
to stir the balls constantly to make sure that we had the constant supply of
balls we needed!

I built the display generator, and want to thank Craig for the suggestion of
rejecting balls by default.

Craig built one of the other much-commented on part of the display: a wonderful
rotating loop that lifted balls. He took the advice that the public loves to see
interesting motion, and that the most interesting part of the display is the
motion the balls go through to get to the display, which only provided a
rationale to the balls movement.

Craig also built a wonderful arm that took the rejected balls and returned them
to be sorted. Unfortunately we couldn't get this working on Saturday, as there
were so many other problems that needed to be solved first, but Craig got the
arm working very quickly on Sunday, and it worked like a charm!

One part of the display that didn't officially make it into the display proper
was Mark's balancing, ball-carrying robots. Originally the intent was that these
robots would carry the reject balls from the display generator back to the
sorter (a role that was taken over by Craig's arm). But Mark wisely recommended
that with two extremely complex and error in-tolerant displays, it was better to
separate them and get them working independantly. At some later date we can
combine them. In any case, Mark DID get his balancing robot display working, and
it was equally interesting to watch! I look forward to seeing how this part of
the display evolves in the future.

With a display like BallMageddon, the balls need to be 100% reliable on their
path from the generator to the display board. One lost ball will shift the
entire display, and just two lost balls will result in an incomprehensible mess.

So I want to provide a final and very heartfelt THANK YOU! to Gus for all the
debugging in getting the display working reliably over the weekend. It started
off requiring constant human help to continue working. By early Sunday, though,
it would run for hundreds of balls without any error at all.

Thanks again, to everyone who participated, and all your wonderful devices! I've
thrown together two videos of our display. Please check them out:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jeioJzvNe8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITt-zFTKFXI

--
  David Schilling


Subject: 
SMART STEM outreach this Wednesday
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.smart
Date: 
Tue, 16 Aug 2011 01:05:53 GMT
Viewed: 
23267 times
  
This Wednesday SMART is doing a STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math)
outreach to help some of our younger members that have won a spot in Phase Two
of this years MoonBots competition. Public hours are from 5:30 to 7; we can
start setting up at 4:30. The location is the gym at Westminster Chapel, 13646
Northeast 24th Street in Bellevue.

If you have any ball lifting mechanisms, or any of the other parts to our
BrickCon display that you'd like to show, please bring them on Wednesday. If you
have any other robots you'd like to show, please bring these as well!

Looking forward to see you this Wednesday!

--
  David Schilling


Subject: 
Re: July 23rd, 2011 SMART Meeting in Woodinville library
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.smart
Date: 
Thu, 21 Jul 2011 22:14:17 GMT
Viewed: 
23011 times
  
Just a reminder about the SMART meeting this Saturday where we’ll start putting
together our new display, figure out all those interesting interactions that we
never would unless we try first, and hopefully get blown away by how cool this
is going to be! See you around 2pm in the Woodinville library!

--
  David Schilling

In lugnet.org.us.smart, David Schilling wrote:
In order to have enough time to work out the kinks in our contraption, at the
last meeting we decided we'd get together again this month to test how things
work make any necessary changes to the interfaces between units. So I've
reserved the Woodinville library for July 23rd from 2pm til 4:30. Same place we
met last month. This is a definitely a build and play meeting. Bring not only
your devices you've made, but also extra LEGO so that you can make improvements,
and perhaps even build extra devices while we're there.

If you're just catching up now, read previous posts in this thread for details
on the interfaces and what sort of devices we're building.

Happy July 4th tomorrow, and see you in 3 weeks.

--
  David Schilling


Subject: 
July 23rd, 2011 SMART Meeting in Woodinville library
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.smart
Date: 
Sun, 3 Jul 2011 21:39:21 GMT
Viewed: 
20941 times
  
In order to have enough time to work out the kinks in our contraption, at the
last meeting we decided we'd get together again this month to test how things
work make any necessary changes to the interfaces between units. So I've
reserved the Woodinville library for July 23rd from 2pm til 4:30. Same place we
met last month. This is a definitely a build and play meeting. Bring not only
your devices you've made, but also extra LEGO so that you can make improvements,
and perhaps even build extra devices while we're there.

If you're just catching up now, read previous posts in this thread for details
on the interfaces and what sort of devices we're building.

Happy July 4th tomorrow, and see you in 3 weeks.

--
  David Schilling



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