edit: several posts were put up as I wrote this, so sorry if I'm simply repeating others!
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The money put into a first time heavyweight would make, with the right person behind it, an explosive high end featherweight easily. It would make several. A fleet of powerful feathers would surely be way more impressive than an inevitably clunky first heavyweight, built in the same time frame and for the same cost.
Also if your goal is to learn about mechanics, you'll undoubtedly have as many challenges in featherweights as with heavies, especially if you build with the featherweight spinner competitions in mind.
Don't think that featherweight combat is any less of a spectacle, in fact I'd say it's several times more impressive to watch. I made a montage of the Gadget Show Live 2013, where the '13 FW champs were held.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_zDLNbwK3k
That is a mere taster. ^
In my opinion it's far more impressive to see your machine withstand the hits from the top FW machines than to take being knocked about and flipped by the heavies. The pace of the feathers is incredible. For example, 720, the small black drum robot you'll see throughout that video, came third this year. The builder is now making the weapon hit 35% harder for next year. You simply don't get that rate of evolution in heavyweights anymore.
What I don't want to do here is put you off anything. Enthusiastic new blood is very very welcome. But if your aim is to learn and impress at the same time, and money is no real object, I can't see the logic in ignoring featherweight combat. You'll learn more building three featherweights than you will by attempting a single heavyweight.
In any case I wish you luck. If you manage to build a competitive heavyweight then I'll happily sit back down.
edit: proof of the fact that robot combat has changed might be in that featherweights have the same or thicker armour than today's heavyweights.
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The money put into a first time heavyweight would make, with the right person behind it, an explosive high end featherweight easily. It would make several. A fleet of powerful feathers would surely be way more impressive than an inevitably clunky first heavyweight, built in the same time frame and for the same cost.
Also if your goal is to learn about mechanics, you'll undoubtedly have as many challenges in featherweights as with heavies, especially if you build with the featherweight spinner competitions in mind.
Don't think that featherweight combat is any less of a spectacle, in fact I'd say it's several times more impressive to watch. I made a montage of the Gadget Show Live 2013, where the '13 FW champs were held.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_zDLNbwK3k
That is a mere taster. ^
In my opinion it's far more impressive to see your machine withstand the hits from the top FW machines than to take being knocked about and flipped by the heavies. The pace of the feathers is incredible. For example, 720, the small black drum robot you'll see throughout that video, came third this year. The builder is now making the weapon hit 35% harder for next year. You simply don't get that rate of evolution in heavyweights anymore.
What I don't want to do here is put you off anything. Enthusiastic new blood is very very welcome. But if your aim is to learn and impress at the same time, and money is no real object, I can't see the logic in ignoring featherweight combat. You'll learn more building three featherweights than you will by attempting a single heavyweight.
In any case I wish you luck. If you manage to build a competitive heavyweight then I'll happily sit back down.

edit: proof of the fact that robot combat has changed might be in that featherweights have the same or thicker armour than today's heavyweights.
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