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Thread: We were all noobs once...

  1. #1
    Well I happened to find some very old pictures the other day while clearing out, and I thought that as people complain about the stats of now a days, I would demonstrate that I myself wasnt any better.

    I give you...
    The first http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k4...mer.jpgSlammer

  2. #2
    Guest
    ROFL!

  3. #3
    Our first real robot had to go on a crash diet too, with the robot weighing in at 98kg without a single millimetre of armour on at the Robotwars workshop.

    It was hardly surprising though for we had 4 weapons mounted at the time.

  4. #4

  5. #5
    quote:

    and, of course, when does a crusher work on an axlebot?

    TAN! TAN! TAN!

    of course, my first attempts were way better

    no... wait... they werent...

  6. #6

  7. #7
    yeayea, I think most of us know who this writer is Chrisso :wink:

  8. #8
    What is an axlebot?

  9. #9
    A robot which is primarily made up of only wheels and weapons, everything being mounted across the axle instead of in the chassis. Usually most of the electronics are within the wheels.

    Stinger is the archetypal example, but stuff like wheely big cheese also counts.

  10. #10
    Another prime example is The Master from the US.

    Just my personal opinion, but I wouldnt count WBC. I consider an axlebot to be a machine in which most of its components revolve around a main axle with the axle remaining stationary while the wheels drive themselves around it - in most cases all its drive components, batteries, controllers etc are contained in the wheels, with the axle connecting the wheels. Weapons then attach either modularly to the axle (like The Master) or are fixed to the axle (like Stingers arm) and rely on the braking force and rapid direction reversal to swing the weapon over to cause damage.

    Leo, for a closer-to-home example, I consider DeBiel to be an axlebot. Its components arent contained in its wheels but they rotate around the shaft that runs the width of the robot. The axe weapon is connected to the shaft and the reversing motion of the drive swings it over much in the same way as Stinger does

    To me Wheely Big Cheese has a chassis (the small box at the back) with the motors going into gearboxes and driving the wheels attached to separate output shafts, which is bascially the same principle as most other robots

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