Use a single motor and ESC and otherwise ignore Dave, he doesn't know anything, go Hobbyking!
Use a single motor and ESC and otherwise ignore Dave, he doesn't know anything, go Hobbyking!
Yeah what does Dave know about building a decent drum bot
Below are some Cad drawings of the kind of thing I was thinking of.
Some stats:
-Dimensions: 360x265x80mm with 100mm wheels
- 6mm Hardox armour with 5mm sacrificial HDPE over the top
- Frame/Chassis is all aluminium, would try and get a decent grade rather than the cheap soft stuff
- 6S 60C 4000mah lipo, NTM 50-50 brushless and 100A Red Brick esc, TZ85A escs and either GR02 or RangleBox drive
Then the drum would either be 3" Aluminium billet or HDPE;
The aluminium one puts be right on the weight limit without things like wires, connectors and with just 6mm HDPE/polycarb for the lid/base, most likely I would have to pocket some of the aluminium and find other ways of losing weight.
The HDPE drum would leave me with enough weight too have 4mm Hardox for the lid and baseplate and I would still have almost a kilo left spare. The thinking is that theatrically assuming the drum is spinning nothing should ever get to the actual drum as they should be hit by the teeth first, if they do hit it then it will just take a gouge out and not send me flying, I can then easily melt more plastic into the gouge or replace the drum (each one would only cost around £12 and are easy to machine so I would carry a few spares).
So what are people's opinions? Any suggestions for improvements to the design?
Looks alright over all, you need to radius or chamfer those back corners though. Ditch the HDPE over the hardox, if you have 6mm Hardox you won't need it.
Don't use HDPE for the drum whatever you do, it will turn to a black twisted mess the moment it hits anything. Any of the good Alu grades will to: 7075, 6082, 6061, 2014. Check out 720's battle against NST and look at the hole HST made in its 7075 Alu drum! Now imagine if that was HDPE; it would probably destroy your weapon.
GR02's are no longer in production so you would either need to go Ranglebox or Banebots, either of them will do fine though the Banebots are much lighter but more costly.
All this said, Jamie, Dave and Guilherme are the people to go to for proper drumbot advice, they know their stuff.
HDPE drum? Interesting concept and I can understand the reasoning behind it, but....
The teeth may take the impacts rather than them reaching the drum, but the drum still has to be strong enough to put up with the forces that'll be going through it. Regardless of how the teeth are mounted, those forces will transfer some way or another and, over time, will probably cause deformation of the drum.
Also, can't tell from the pics (on my phone) but would you be running the belt from the brushless directly onto the drum body? If so, the HDPE isn't going to enjoy the heat generated from friction.
Looks a compact, solid design overall though.
Which corners do you mean? You mean the 90 degree foods in the armour at the back?
Hmm, I thought the HDPE drum would attract criticism, in some ways you think if an aluminium drum is going to get destroyed you may as well make it out of something easy/ cheap to replace! But obviously if it falls apart during the actual fight its a probes as then odds are you are not going to win the fight, just needs to be strong enough to survive so maybe aluminium would be the way to go, another option I guess would be nylon for increased rigidity but that may be too brittle and still has a lot of the issues.
At the moment the drum is solid material, there is no shaft going all the way through but a separate, 40mm shaft at each end so the plastic ought to be fairly rigid. This does mean I could use the aluminium and just bore a hole through the centre to save weight but ideally I want the walls to be left as thick as possible to avoid the drum getting crushed/punched through.
Perhaps a composite drum could work, metal centre to give rigidity and plastic outside or visa versa.
Yeah I realize the GR02s are out of production so would be a matter of trying to get some second hand ones, depends really on the cost of the RangleBox units which hopefully we will find out soon.
@Jamie: yeah the belt isn't shown but will run directly onto the drum, hadn't thought about the heating issue, didn't realize it would get that hot! And if I were to go HDPE I would have to give some thought to how the teeth where mounted, I was thinking of counterbored bolts in the teeth going all the way through to the other side then into a threaded hole in the tooth on the other side. Alternate bolt direction to keep drum balanced.
I'm by no means a drum/spinner expert but having seen some of the drums at the 2014 and '15 champs i feel i can offer something.
6mm polycarb for a lid is plenty, no axe is getting all the way through it. Having seen what the likes of LH3, No toy and Hatchet actually do to it you'd be completely safe using it. As for a base, you'd be better off with hdpe or even some 2mm ti/Alu, you could use polycarb if the base is non structural (if you've seen Hatchet's 10mm base last year you'll understand), you won't need hardox top and bottom panels, it's really a waste of money/weight.
As for your outer armour 6mm hardox is way overkill, 722 uses angled 3.2 and i believe Drumroll this year used regular steel brackets with hdpe over the top. Spinners are so powerful nowadays that a decent hit on hardox will bend it and you'll never get it straight again being 6mm, if you went down to 3.2 that would save you a huge amount of weight and wouldn't really leave you any worse for wear.
I've had some past experience using plastic drums back in the day, my first attempt used PVC a brittle plastic and was a total noob failure, it was powered by a "gold motor" and instantly cracked on first impact, lucky the end caps kept it all in one piece.
Second attempt was HDPE this proved to be much more durable, granted it only had a hand full of battles and never went up against the spinners of today but I believe it would still be a viable option if I was still building today. Only issue I came across is when little hitter got a perfect hit on the aerial cover and bent the shell into the path of the teeth, the sudden impact from the collision warped the bar and managed to pull a single bolt through the drum. That time it is was powered by a 1.5hp Ev Warrior motor, I believe a better designed bar and correct internal support for the teeth would work better. I did move onto a saw like disk around the drum but never got tested enough, it was fun lots of sparks but not designed for flipping or throwing another bot.
But these examples are from a old featherweight, modern high power and speed brushless motors would add another factor for the design of a plastic drum, I say why not try it.
Last edited by robotic_ants; 20th June 2015 at 19:27.
ha, I remember those robots^ , thanks for making my feel old.
As supreme leader of the drum bots and current champion of champions within the drum bot community my advise is as follows;
The number 1 golden rule- Ignore everything Jamie says, every word he speaks is a lie or hard to understand because he's a dirty scott bag.
The second rule of drum club, is don't talk about drum club.
Third rule, plastic bad - metal good, even if its not up to Alex's standards, 6082 worked fine for me, it took a huge hit from NST and didn't fail, won me the fight... its how you mount your teeth that really matters... and in plastic they are always going to break out.
Final rule, don't base your robot around parts sold by Ellis- i wouldn't want his dangle-box products all over my machine.
Have fun.
Also, couple of modifications made to the CAD:
Main changes are at the front the very front bits are removable so if they get bent I can swap them out and could try out a couple of different shapes for the front to find what works best for getting under people to bring them up into the drum. I've also got rid of the button head bolts and replaced them with countersunk bolts going into a strip of hardox which should mean they wont pull through the HDPE but also should be caught by vertical spinners but it does leave me more vulnerable to horizontal spinners.
But what I have realized was that I had misremembered the density of steel (argh) so all my mass calculations were wrong
So either I have to drop the Hardox down to 4mm with just those front bolt on pieces 6mm or get rid of the HDPE, front bolt on pieces and the hardox strips for the bolts (but these wouldn't be necessary anyway as I could countersink the hardox as the HDPE wouldn't be in the way) then I should just about be able to fit in the 6mm hardox.
Which do you guys think is preferable? The big issue with the 6mm hardox is that if the front wedge bits get bent out of shape there will be very little I can do about it other than replace the entire outer armour.
Bookmarks