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"Paul Burridge" wrote in message ... On 2 Aug 2003 16:24:24 GMT, Allodoxaphobia wrote: You might try a section from a steel tape measure. (Just don't select one of the cheap, Made-In-China plastic/mylar ones. HI!HI!) Additionally, try to mount the antenna in a "well" on the robot. Even a well of 5-10 mm will help out. Not sure about the tape measure suggestion, but mounting in a well is something I'd not considered and am most grateful for the idea of! Thanks... Does it have to be a whip antenna? Why not try a horizontal circular loop? Since you are working line of sight to the robot, the signal loss from going from vertical to horizontal shouldn't matter much unless your transmitter is extremely low power. A loop could be mounted inside a wooden or fiberglas body and be pretty safe from attack. Is there anything in the rules forbidding your installing a jammer transmitter to cause the other bot to lose its command channel? Probobly a poor use of what little electrical capacity the onboard battery holds, but it would be one way of causing the other bot to freeze in place and become like a deer in the headlights. thanks, John. KC5DWD |
On Sat, 2 Aug 2003 18:24:44 -0500, "john graesser"
wrote: Does it have to be a whip antenna? Why not try a horizontal circular loop? Since you are working line of sight to the robot, the signal loss from going from vertical to horizontal shouldn't matter much unless your transmitter is extremely low power. A loop could be mounted inside a wooden or fiberglas body and be pretty safe from attack. If I believed this idea was workable I'd have implemented it by now. You need to bear in mind that immediately beneath the polycarbonate surface armor, there's a hulking great metal framework. Consequently, sandwiching the antenna between the armour and the frame is going to lead to unacceptable loss of radiated energy, I'd have thought. Unless anyone knows differently.. Is there anything in the rules forbidding your installing a jammer transmitter to cause the other bot to lose its command channel? Probobly a poor use of what little electrical capacity the onboard battery holds, There's a considerable amount of battery power on board, actually, since the peak current draw is well over 100 Amps at times. A few milliwatts for a local jammer would therefore be a negligable drain on resources. *However* as you've already guessed, jammers are banned, as are EMP pulse type weapons and such like. The reason for this is very sound, when you think about it: it makes for really bad TV. The producers want to see as much *action* as possible. You ain't gonna get that if everybody's disabled everybody else's robot! -- "I believe history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill |
On Sat, 2 Aug 2003 18:24:44 -0500, "john graesser"
wrote: Does it have to be a whip antenna? Why not try a horizontal circular loop? Since you are working line of sight to the robot, the signal loss from going from vertical to horizontal shouldn't matter much unless your transmitter is extremely low power. A loop could be mounted inside a wooden or fiberglas body and be pretty safe from attack. If I believed this idea was workable I'd have implemented it by now. You need to bear in mind that immediately beneath the polycarbonate surface armor, there's a hulking great metal framework. Consequently, sandwiching the antenna between the armour and the frame is going to lead to unacceptable loss of radiated energy, I'd have thought. Unless anyone knows differently.. Is there anything in the rules forbidding your installing a jammer transmitter to cause the other bot to lose its command channel? Probobly a poor use of what little electrical capacity the onboard battery holds, There's a considerable amount of battery power on board, actually, since the peak current draw is well over 100 Amps at times. A few milliwatts for a local jammer would therefore be a negligable drain on resources. *However* as you've already guessed, jammers are banned, as are EMP pulse type weapons and such like. The reason for this is very sound, when you think about it: it makes for really bad TV. The producers want to see as much *action* as possible. You ain't gonna get that if everybody's disabled everybody else's robot! -- "I believe history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill |
Zak wrote:
Paul Burridge wrote: Just one point, though: is stainless steel a reasonable radiator of RF energy? Stainless steel is awful at conducting electricity - so it won't make a very efficient antenna. But how much it really matters, I don't know. So's my body, but I get a decent TV picture if I touch the aerial input ;-) |
Zak wrote:
Paul Burridge wrote: Just one point, though: is stainless steel a reasonable radiator of RF energy? Stainless steel is awful at conducting electricity - so it won't make a very efficient antenna. But how much it really matters, I don't know. So's my body, but I get a decent TV picture if I touch the aerial input ;-) |
"Active8" wrote in message k.net... In article , says... "Paul Burridge" wrote in message ... On 2 Aug 2003 16:24:24 GMT, Allodoxaphobia wrote: You might try a section from a steel tape measure. (Just don't select one of the cheap, Made-In-China plastic/mylar ones. HI!HI!) Additionally, try to mount the antenna in a "well" on the robot. Even a well of 5-10 mm will help out. Not sure about the tape measure suggestion, but mounting in a well is something I'd not considered and am most grateful for the idea of! Thanks... Does it have to be a whip antenna? Why not try a horizontal circular loop? Since you are working line of sight to the robot, the signal loss from going from vertical to horizontal shouldn't matter much unless your transmitter is extremely low power. A loop could be mounted inside a wooden or fiberglas body and be pretty safe from attack. Is there anything in the rules forbidding your installing a jammer transmitter to cause the other bot to lose its command channel? Probobly a poor use of what little electrical capacity the onboard battery holds, but it would be one way of causing the other bot to freeze in place and become like a deer in the headlights. thanks, John. KC5DWD i always thought jamming would be a great weapon, but i bet it's illegal. i'd like to see the rules for some of those competitions. i'd think it would be fun to try sometime. i wan't to smash jay leno's bot. come on. "chinkilla"? who writes his lines? Paul's restricted to two bands, which i think stinks. he's probably not allowed to jam. The band restriction i really don't like since it's a bot competition not a DX contest. I have a friend who competes. I suggested jamming to him; he said it was not allowed. Besides, they're not really robots. All of them are just RC toys. I'll be more impressed when they are autonomous. |
On Sun, 3 Aug 2003 11:40:55 -0400, "Bob Lewis \(AA4PB\)"
wrote: Stainless steel is awful at conducting electricity - so it won't make a very efficient antenna. I doubt that the difference in resistance between stainless and copper is going to cause any significant additional losses in a whip antenna. That difference will be small compared to the other losses. Stainless is often used for whip antennas because of its mechanical properties. Yes, I've several proprietory s/steel whip antennas that give excellent results. But a question springs to mind. If a s/steel antenna has slightly higher resistance, does that appreciably lower its Q? -- "I believe history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill |
On Sun, 3 Aug 2003 11:40:55 -0400, "Bob Lewis \(AA4PB\)"
wrote: Stainless steel is awful at conducting electricity - so it won't make a very efficient antenna. I doubt that the difference in resistance between stainless and copper is going to cause any significant additional losses in a whip antenna. That difference will be small compared to the other losses. Stainless is often used for whip antennas because of its mechanical properties. Yes, I've several proprietory s/steel whip antennas that give excellent results. But a question springs to mind. If a s/steel antenna has slightly higher resistance, does that appreciably lower its Q? -- "I believe history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill |
On Sun, 3 Aug 2003 10:19:55 -0700, "Richard Henry"
wrote: Besides, they're not really robots. All of them are just RC toys. I'll be more impressed when they are autonomous. That's not entirely true these days. Autonomy in certain areas of control is becoming increasingly prevalent. It'll be interesting to see how this particular aspect of design develops over the coming years... -- "I believe history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill |
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