- Double Trouble (FIRST)
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Double Trouble Year 1999 Season Information Number of teams 271[2] Number of regionals 8[1] Championship location Epcot Center, Disney World Awards Chairman's Award winner Team 120 - “Scarabian Knights”[4] Woodie Flowers Award winner Ken Patton[3] Founder's Award winner NASA[3] Champions Team 176 - UTC/ Hamilton Standard & Windsor Locks High School & Suffield High School (Windsor Locks, CT)
Team 1 - 3-Dimensional Services & Oakland Technical Center, Northeast Campus (OTC-NE) (Pontiac, MI)
Team 48 - Delphi Automotive Systems & Warren G. Harding High School (Warren, OH)[3]
Double Trouble was the 1999 game for the FIRST Robotics Competition.
Contents
Field
The playing field is a carpeted, rectangular area. Alliances score points by positioning "floppies," their robots, and a "puck" on the playing field.[5] "Floppies" are light-weight, pillow-like objects with Velcro-loop material located in its centre and around its perimeter. The "puck" is a short, octagonal platform that rolls freely on castor wheels. Around the perimeter of the field are four stations for human players, who may throw floppies to each other or onto the playing field. Two additional areas around the field are for the human players who control the robots. At the start of each match, each human player station contains three of the alliance's floppies. Four floppies per alliance are located on the playing field. The floppies are color-coded to identify alliance ownership.
Robots
Each robot can weigh up to 130 lb (59 kg), and must start each match small enough to fit inside a 30" x 36" x 48" space. The robots are powered by two Skil 12 volt rechargeable batteries and use motors from Skil, Delco, Fischer-Price, and Delphi Interior and Lighting, speed controllers from Tekin, pumps from McCord Winn Textron, air cylinders and valves from Numatics, Inc., and a programmable control system supplied by FIRST. Drivers use joysticks from CH Products and switches from Honeywell to remotely control the robots via a radio link which uses RNet wireless modems from Motorola.
Scoring
Each match is two minutes long. Alliances receive one point for each of their floppies that are over the playing field, not in contact with the surface of the playing field, and less than 8 feet above the surface of the playing field. Floppies that are 8 feet or more above the playing field earn 3 points for the alliance it belongs to. Any robot on the puck multiplies its alliance's score by 3. If a puck is entirely on one side of the dividing line that runs through the middle of the field, the alliance whose robot operator stations are furthest from the puck will multiply its score by 2.
Tournament play consisted of seeding and elimination rounds. Seeding was based on greatest number of points scored, not actual number of games won. This led to a dominance of offensive tactics during seeding, and defensive tactics during elimination rounds.
Events
The following regional events were held in 1999:[6]
- Week 1
- NASA Ames California Open - NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
- Motorola Midwest Open - William Rainey Harper College, Chicago
- Week 2
- NASA Kennedy Space Center Open - Kennedy Space Center, FL
- FIRST Southwest Open - Houston Space Center, Houston
- Week 3
- Philadelphia Alliance Open - Temple University, Philadelphia
- Week 4
- UTC New England Open - Meadows Music Theater, Hartford, CT
- Johnson & Johnson Mid-Atlantic Open - Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
- Week 5
- Great Lakes Open - Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI
The national championship was held at Epcot Center, Disney World, Orlando.
See also
- Wikipedia books: FIRST
References
- ^ "FIRST Robotics Competition Information". technokats.org. http://www.technokats.org/documents/1999/99_eventlist.pdf. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
- ^ "2006 Annual Report". FIRST. http://www.usfirst.org/uploadedFiles/Who/Annual_Report-Financials/FirstAnnual06(1).pdf. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
- ^ a b c "http://www.technokats.org/documents/1999/99_results_natls.pdf". technokats.org. http://www.technokats.org/documents/1999/99_results_natls.pdf. Retrieved 16 September 2011.
- ^ "FIRST History". FIRST. http://usfirst.org/aboutus/content.aspx?id=880. Retrieved 12 June 2011.
- ^ "The Game". FIRST-A-HOLICS. http://www.first-a-holics.com/competitions/1999/TheGame.pdf. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
- ^ "FIRST Competition Information". technokats.org. http://www.technokats.org/documents/1999/99_eventlist.pdf. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
External links
Media related to FIRST at Wikimedia Commons
FIRST Robotics Competition Games 1992: Maize Craze · 1993: Rug Rage · 1994: Tower Power · 1995: Ramp 'n Roll · 1996: Hexagon Havoc · 1997: Toroid Terror · 1998: Ladder Logic · 1999: Double Trouble · 2000: Co-Opertition FIRST · 2001: Diabolical Dynamics · 2002: Zone Zeal · 2003: Stack Attack · 2004: FIRST Frenzy · 2005: Triple Play · 2006: Aim High (season) · 2007: Rack 'n Roll (season) · 2008: FIRST Overdrive · 2009: Lunacy · 2010: Breakaway · 2011: Logo Motion (season)
FIRST People Dean Kamen · John Abele · Jon Dudas · Woodie Flowers · Walt Havenstein · Dave Lavery · Amir Abo-ShaeerPrograms Competitions: Maize Craze · Rug Rage · Tower Power · Ramp 'n Roll · Hexagon Havoc · Toroid Terror · Ladder Logic · Double Trouble · Co-Opertition FIRST · Diabolical Dynamics · Zone Zeal · Stack Attack · FIRST Frenzy · Triple Play · Aim High (season) · Rack 'n Roll (season) · FIRST Overdrive · Lunacy · Breakaway · Logo Motion (season)
Challenges: Half-Pipe Hustle · Hangin'-A-Round · Quad Quandary · Face Off · Hot Shot! · Get Over It! · Bowled Over! (current)Challenges: FIRST Contact · Volcanic Panic · Arctic Impact · City Sights · Mission Mars · No Limits · Ocean Odyssey · Nano Quest · Power Puzzle · Climate Connections · Smart Move · Body Forward · Food Factor / Snack Attack (current)Competition: All Your Base/The Best TrajectoryChampionships FIRST Championship · FIRST LEGO League Open ChampionshipsRelated Coopertition · The New CoolCategories:- FIRST Robotics Competition games
- 1999 in robotics
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