2.20.13- Paying Raytheon a visit

Attendance


  • Hunter
  • Evan

Journal


Tasks

  • Travel to Raytheon
  • Expose ourselves to their public relations dept. to one day ask for a sponsorship
  • Talk to engineers about robotics
  • Take a tour of their facility

Reflections

Today Evan, and Hunter traveled from Monrovia to the distant coastal city of El Segundo to pay Raytheon a visit. We arrived under the impression that there would be an entire quad filled with robotics, as suggested by the provided map. This however was not the case. There was us, and one FRC team 707 still using its basketball throwing mechanism. Never the less we still presented ourselves to the various people that passed us on their way to wherever they were going. A while later, we were invited to come into the cafeteria to have lunch and complete a task that was unknown at the time. As Evan and Hunter enjoyed their non vegetarian burgers. Before they could even finish their food, the Raytheon employees put on a little skit to introduce the days challenge. As we would still find out, we had to build a sterling engine out of little other than a coke can and steel wool. After the allotted time was up we had done pretty well, and were off to the tour of their facilities. The first lab that we went to was the ITF (Integrated Testing Facilities) lab where we found a giant capsule that we can take out all of the air(or close to it) and super heat or super cool the chamber to test how optics will react in space. After this we went to a Calibration lab, this was highly dependent on lasers and other sorts of optics. They had a machine that you could create a 3D CAD model of whatever you want using nothing but lasers.

Talking with Say Watt? Robotics 3539, 4311, and 5169

The Say Watt? Robotics FTC teams, who are from New Jersey, recently attended the Russian National Championship in Moscow.  After hearing about this, we sent them email asking how they got their teachers to allow this and how they fund raised for this, and this is what they said:

Hi Fletcher,

I am the coach of Say Watt Robotics.   We are independent of any school, so we definitely had to work.   There were some kids who were not able to make the trip because of mid-terms and missing too much school.   However, we scheduled the trip so they only missed two days of school (we left at noon on Wednesday, so it counts as attending the full day).   All of the parents had to write notes to the school saying that the kids were going to miss those two days.    We also worked with one of the schools so that the kids finished their mid-terms on Wednesday at 11:30, just before we pulled them out to go to the airport.   For this and for World’s, we tell the teachers well in advance.   We minimize the missed school days and the kids have to do the work they miss. Most of the teachers are excited about the team and want to see the kids succeed.

I also write letters to the schools about individual students telling the school that a particular person is critical to the team and that we are going to be competing.

It is not perfect, and sometimes it affects grades negatively, but it is the best we can do.

With respect to funding, we have corporate sponsors and we use some of that money to pay for generic travel expenses, but the kids have to pay many of the travel costs themselves.  Because we are not school-based, many of the parents accompany the team on its trips.   The parents also spend a lot of time trying to arrange the best deals possible for travel.

Regards,

Jim Carr

Coach 3539, 4311, and 5169.

 

This is useful information, and perhaps we can use it in the future to plan a large scale tour of our own.

2.19.13-Getting Ready for San Diego Regionals

Attendance


  • Mark
  • Fletcher
  • Evan
  • Dante

Journal


Tasks

  •  Go over everything we have to do
  • Finish up unfinished posts in notebook
  • Add receipts and business page to notebook

Reflections

We did a lot of planning and reviewing for absolutely everything we have to finish before Saturday.  We went over what was done from the earlier checklist on the twelfth and we have done just about everything.

  • All of the new pages are in the notebook including the business plan, receipts, and code.
  • The TeleOP and autonomous codes are finished with.
  • The display is finished and the fliers are designed and sent out to grade schools
  • We have made a sheet to overview the awards and highlight what we have done for each one

All we have left now is to reprint the notebook, put in all of the dividers, put in the arrow markers in the notebook pointing to highlights for each award, finish adjusting the drawer sliders on the robot, and get all of our consent forms to Mr. Porter.

Mark also worked on the notebook and now everything is up to date and we created spreadsheets for all of our costs and expenses and put it into the notebook.

 

2.14.13-Notebooking and the Field

Attendance


  •  Mark
  • Hunter
  • Evan
  • Fletcher

Journal


Tasks

  • Work on Journal
  • Put field together
  • Driver Practice

Reflections

Today was a day to do some work but also put the field back together so it was functional for the LA FTC Regionals.  This involved scraping off the hot glue on all of the black linings on the walls and fixing the parts of the goals that were broken and putting everything together.

Mark was working on the notebook the entire time because there was a lot of work that needed to be done.  He added a lot to the Our Robot page as well as updated a few of the posts that needed to be updated.  Dealing with the field took everyone else’s time so the notebook was the main and only point of progress today.

 

Talking to the Landroids 4220

After our recent qualification for the San Diego regional championship, we felt that we ought to get some outside help so that we could qualify for world championships.

We asked ourselves, “Who would know about qualifying for worlds?”  Of course, the obvious answer would be the winners of the Inspire award from the previous season, but would they talk to a small team like ours?  They did!

We sent the Landroids a message asking for tips on making our engineering notebook better, and here is what they said:

Hi Fletcher/Suit Bots,

Your website blog is probably one of the best we have seen in years.  Our team doesn’t have time to blog anymore, so our website is in a standstill, but yours have constant new content and reflections, documenting your team’s activities diligently. Very nice!

Printing out the blog pages is very similar to doing an electronic engineering notebook. However, engineering notebook is different from a team journal.  While the notebook can include team’s journal, activities and achievements, a big part of it should be in the engineering designs.  You do have those sketches and video blogs that shows your design process nicely, but the hyperlinks would not be active in the paper copy, which is a major disadvantage to overcome.

While our team might enjoy reading your blogs, the judges really don’t have time to read a long journal entries during the judging session. They flip through the pages quickly, look for the photos that will catch their eyes on your designs.  Tagging the most important entries and add a table of content will help leading them to locate those pages you want them to look at first. Keep the paragraphs short, always have captions below the photos to explain what they are about will help them understand the content quickly.

Another way to see the effectiveness of your engineering notebook is ask yourself these questions:

1.       If there is a potential to patent your design, is the information in the notebook clearly documented the proprietary data?

2.       If someone needs to reconstruct a part of the robot, can that person look at your notebook and be able to recreate what you have made?

3.       If you see another team has a same/similar design, can you pinpoint it in your engineering notebook that your team had perhaps developed this idea first?  (Always happened to our team).

Landroids kept our engineering notebook from the last 5 years (since our FLL days), those were the 3 main reasons why we need to go back to our engineering notebooks constantly.  It is not for the judging award, it is more for our internal design record and patent applications.

Overall, we are very impressed with what your team have done. Keep up the good work, we will see you at the Worlds!

Pearl

 

Clearly, there is some flattery in this email, but it will be extremely helpful for making our notebook better.