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  • Using Helium to reduce your weight!

    Ok, so I've thought about whether this would be allowed for a long time, and often dispelled it without further thought, but figured I'd get other opinions.

    The idea is simple, but helium filled pockets inside the robot, to reduce it's weight (since helium is lighter than air, it'll rise, counteracting the effects of gravity.) I do believe the robot's mass will remain the same, although my Physics is a little rusty...

    Obviously this has issues, volume to lift of helium is pretty low (talking grams from a single balloon) and they can be prone to popping. So don't know whether this would be effective or legal in the rules.

    Just occurred to me since a lot of people seem to be putting magnets into their robots, producing the opposite effects of the balloons, increased mass, same weight, but offers an advantage withing the rules.

    Any thoughts?

  • #2
    Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

    Mass is the constant ...weight varies with gravitational pull..and helium balloons .

    You could reduce the weight of the robot with helium balloons but not the mass.

    IF you made a 200kg bot and added 100kg of lift then under the rules it should be legal as it would weigh 100kg....however ANY reduction in lift ...ie a leak or popped balloon would instantly render the bot illegal.

    To get lift from helium balloons you need volume ...

    Helium has a lifting force of 1 gram per liter. So if you have a balloon that contains 5 liters of helium, the balloon can lift 5 grams.

    1000 liters = 1 kg of lift ...etc

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

      Personally I'm waiting on people to discover there's steel in the weighing scales

      The added thing about helium would be you'd need to keep the wheels on the ground as no flying robots are allowed currently.

      Could someone explain to me, why these magnets are legal?

      I mean asides the obvious safety hazard of a machine dropping onto a Steel/Hardox floor & an avoidable stray magnetic field in a Tx area - surely that machine would breach the 30 pound weight limit as stipulated in the rules.

      Bear this in mind for the responses:
      Despite the presence of a unit of mass in the rule- it doesn't mention mass anywhere in the rules.
      There is a unit of force that would still be valid, due to weight being a firce.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

        Mass is the constant ...weight varies with gravitational pull..and helium balloons .

        You could reduce the weight of the robot with helium balloons but not the mass.
        That's what I said wasn't it?.........

        To get lift from helium balloons you need volume ...

        Helium has a lifting force of 1 gram per liter. So if you have a balloon that contains 5 liters of helium, the balloon can lift 5 grams.

        1000 liters = 1 kg of lift ...etc
        So 200 balloons for 1kg..... Hhhhhhmmmmm.

        Could make a robot like a Zeppelin! Then I would call it Lead Zeppelin!

        Thanks,

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

          @psychostorm

          My plan with the Helium is to just reduce the weight, not completely remove it, so it would still be on the ground.

          As for no flying, surely 360 breaks that rule? It never has all 4 wheels on the ground! *jokes*

          I could always use Hydrogen instead of Helium, more lifting force.........

          The magnet thing is tricky, the scales don't take into account the additional down force of the magnets, which does increase the robot's weight.

          I think it's a neat solution, if a little sneaky.......

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

            That's what I said wasn't it?.........
            I didn't disagree did I ? .........

            The magnet thing is tricky, the scales don't take into account the additional down force of the magnets, which does increase the robot's weight.

            I think it's a neat solution, if a little sneaky.......
            I agree ....

            Eventually... after DM regularly trashes the oppostion... this loophole in the rules will be closed.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

              Originally posted by PJ-27
              @psychostorm

              My plan with the Helium is to just reduce the weight, not completely remove it, so it would still be on the ground.
              What happens if a spinner reduces the remaining mass to less than the uplift of the gas?

              As for no flying, surely 360 breaks that rule? It never has all 4 wheels on the ground! *jokes*
              360 doesn't fly, it lands in a prolonged & unorthadox manner.

              I could always use Hydrogen instead of Helium, more lifting force.........
              No you couldn't. Risk of explosion. You may as well call it the Hindenbot!

              The magnet thing is tricky, the scales don't take into account the additional down force of the magnets, which does increase the robot's weight.

              I think it's a neat solution, if a little sneaky.......
              Well you could measure the down force. Just stick iron underneath the weighing platform.

              I think it's ungallant. Using it as in 540, to stop people flipping you, enhancing your pushing ability & to resist the opposite reaction of the spinner is IMHO unsportsmanly.

              Then the war of attrition will start. more down force will be added until the apparent weight of these robots are superheavyweight

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

                Helium wouldn't work, so little upforce that it's pointless.

                Magnets as far as i'm concerned aren't a problem. There should possibly be a few rules writing about safety with them but I don't see a problem with their use. You can talk all you want about unfair advantages but then in my opinion having no weapon on your robot gives you an unfair advantage as you can use more of the weight of your machine for armour.

                You would never be able to use more than the magnets that 540 will be using as the motors, speedos, batteries etc have to be upgraded to be able to handle the extra strain of the additional weight so no you would never get a superheavyweight type machine in the featherweight class. I say it's just being creative with the environment you are fighting in, i could equally say that a wedge running along the ground gives you an unfair advantage but that's always been accepted.

                O and sticking iron under the weighing platform would do little to nothing as the magnets force is applied over a relatively short distance.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

                  @ Woody
                  I didn't disagree did I ? .........
                  Sorry misunderstood.

                  Eventually... after DM regularly trashes the oppostion... this loophole in the rules will be closed.
                  DM?

                  @ psychostorm

                  HindenBot! I love it.

                  The magnet things is interesting, but you do have a point, the magnets will add their own weight, plus the robot being heavier (due to the magnet's pull) means it'll have to be more powerful to be able to move itself around. So there are trade offs, whether these equate to not having magnets I don't know.

                  How about you put polar opposite magnets in your own robot that repel the others! Brain = melt.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

                    now you're going into the realms of trollscience http://trollscience.com/troll/view/1255

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

                      haha, brilliant!

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

                        DM ...David Moulds ... Mouldy

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

                          AKA... me.

                          Ive got magnets in my new featherweight as seen here;

                          http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=coeZuPhgXec

                          rules of safety regarding droping the robot on your feet etc? .... Come on your not that stupid? If you drop any featherweight on your foot etc its gonna hurt....

                          And should we ban all magnets? like the ones in your drive motors?

                          Theres nothing in the rules saying magnets carnt be used... and im not the first person to of done it.... i dont break the rules i bend them

                          Also - its easy to weigh 540- just balance it on the scales so the magnets not facing down... the magnetic field isnt that large, and it deffinetly wont effect anyones radio signal.. my RX is mounted 40mm away from the magnet... and its litrally touching my sidewinder.

                          And yeah- suppose 360 could be classed as a hover bot.... but not intentionaly... so who cares....audience love it.

                          Come on guys stop rule bashing.... if theres nothing saying you carnt do it... think outside the box and give it ago.. instead of trying to stop other people making things more interesting.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

                            Originally posted by mr_turbulence
                            AKA... me.

                            Ive got magnets in my new featherweight as seen here;

                            http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=coeZuPhgXec

                            rules of safety regarding droping the robot on your feet etc? .... Come on your not that stupid? If you drop any featherweight on your foot etc its gonna hurt....

                            And should we ban all magnets? like the ones in your drive motors?

                            Theres nothing in the rules saying magnets carnt be used... and im not the first person to of done it.... i dont break the rules i bend them

                            Also - its easy to weigh 540- just balance it on the scales so the magnets not facing down... the magnetic field isnt that large, and it deffinetly wont effect anyones radio signal.. my RX is mounted 40mm away from the magnet... and its litrally touching my sidewinder.

                            And yeah- suppose 360 could be classed as a hover bot.... but not intentionaly... so who cares....audience love it.

                            Come on guys stop rule bashing.... if theres nothing saying you carnt do it... think outside the box and give it ago.. instead of trying to stop other people making things more interesting.
                            what strength magents do you use (mind me asking)? but they are obviously strong

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Using Helium to reduce your weight!

                              N45 Grade Neodymium 50x50x25mm

                              1mm base then 5mm ground clearance gives around 38kg of pull, plus the 12kg of robot and it works out to be around 50kg total robot downforce in weight.... not mass.

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