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With regards the power thwackbots have,
I would say with Seraph which is probably one of the most successful thwackbots out there at the moment,
the trick is to have as much power transmitted to the arena as you can.
the total power for Seraph is 300 watts but the power is only part of the story if your robot is skidding all over the place this is energy lost to the weapon!
Hence big wheels and bike tyres, the leaver moment is increased, and so the mechanical advantage is better than smaller wheels.
The problem with thwackbots is the issue of accuracy, you can't always get the robot to throw over the sword were an opponent is,
the best way round this is to find a big bunch of them and hit what ever you can! this accuracy problem means that sometime you loose points in fights because control looks a little erratic!
Remember the important thing is to have fun, be inventive and keep improving your design.
this thwackbot idea is running through my head again. what do people reakon would be the most effective way of literally bolting some kind of axe (would be a modified mattock axe) with a fibreglass handle to a box? the other end would have a wedge on hinges
Build a thwack bot using a bar that's offset from the center and then a single tooth at the outer radius.
This will give you a rough indication of what the kinetic energy would be for a given rpm. Bear in mind that the rpm of your body won't be the same as the rpm of your wheels. You need to work out the robots tangential velocity that your wheel rpm gives you and then work out the rpm that the bot will spin at.
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