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Thread: Proposals from the RFL

  1. #121




  2. Its interesting to see how the opinions have shifted since 2004, reading back the Encouraging International Competition / Harmonizing Rules Thread.

  3. #126
    Just an off-topic quetion to anyone who knows the answer?

    Robot wars started in America..So thats were the weight rules started. How come the English robot wars rules and the American robot wars weight limits were different to start with?

  4. #127
    http://members.toast.net/joerger/whowon.htmlhttp://members.toast.net/joerger/whowon.html
    They never were really constant......sort of changed and evolved.
    I believe we started out with the same weight as the U.S. had in 1997.....
    http://www.rexx.demon.co.uk/robotwars/wedgehog/Rules.htmhttp://www.rexx.demon.co.uk/robotwar...ehog/Rules.htm
    Finally upped to the new weights in 2001?

  5. #128
    Hiow many combat robots are there in the world? Here is a guestimate. Hard information and informed guesses that help to refine this would be interesting.

    In the USA alone: there are 339 robots of featherweight or heavier which have been active in the last 18 months. This does not include the classes of 1 lb, 3 lbs and 12 lbs which are the most popular classes on the basis of number competing (although not necessarily in audience reaction.) See http://www.botrank.com
    http://www.botrank.com, for a full listing of robots which have fought in the US in last 18 months. There are 557 below 30 lbs, not including 50 ants (150 g). The list of those over 30 lbs is:

    30 pounds - 70 bots
    60 pounds - 74 bots
    120 pounds - 114 bots
    220 pounds - 57 bots
    340 pounds - 24 bots


    total 339

    In Australia there are 72 feathers (30) pounds, plus an unknown number of other machines, which might be zero, its not clear (http://rankings.robowars.comhttp://rankings.robowars.com) if they have other weight classes.

    That gives a total of 411

    I would guess that in the UK we have 50 heavies and 100 feathers which have been active in the last 18 months, for a grand total of 561. To this we need to add robots from the Netherlands, Sweden, Germany and further afield - Korea, Brazil, etc. Say 600 in all. [We might be able to double that figure if we count robots that have not been active in the last 18 months - there were a lot that were built for Battlebots and Robot Wars resting in basements and garages.] There are probably 10,000 sumo robots in Japan but we are only looking at combat machines of featherweight and over here.

    So if we look at the 600 active machines of featherweight and over they are distributed as follows:

    US 57%
    UK 25%
    Australia 12%
    Rest of world 7%

    Total 101% (rounding errors)

    Is this an accurate picture of the world of fighting robots?

  6. #129

  7. #130
    Is this proposal going to be voted on, and if so, when?

    There are voices in the DRG and GRA who would like to have this debate voted on so they can get on with building in the weight limit that is going to be set (one of them being me).

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