As we have mentioned many times before, we would rather help you by teaching you how to fix any issues you are having rather than giving you a ready made solution to copy. Let us know what you are having trouble with and we will try to help you. ⚙️⚙️
how did u get it that quick btw wat kind of wheels do you think is best? And my robots wheels keep on sliding to the left or right probably because of the friction or unstable wheels.
Hello Michael. Are you asking how we got the challenge kit so quickly? We registered for this season at the beginning of July and had the kit a week later. When the challenge got released we built and set up the mission models. Then we started immediately to program our robot. As for the tires, as a general rule, we recommend to dust off the mat frequently (with a microfiber towel) and clean the tires (with alcohol wipes). To give a recommendation on which type of wheel to use, we would need to know which robot you are using. We think that the new Spike prime wheels seem to be very sturdy and the tires are molded to the wheels. We do not believe that it is necessary to use the bigger SP wheels for extra speed, as we usually do fine withe smaller ones we use. Good luck. 🍀⚙️⚙️
Hi I have a problem while putting the robot on the map and I need to position it at a certain point and it has to be very accurate any tips to put the robot on the mate faster and make it work just fine?? without messing up the mission ??
Hi Jana. We always try to align the robot the same way every time. We pick a distinctive feature in the launch area (usually a specific line of the grid). If you need a position that is not so easy to remember, try to build an alignment template (of course out of LEGO bricks, any size and shape is allowed, as long as they are unaltered production pieces) that you can put along the wall and have a feature that the robot can align to. You can either build this jig to fit into the launch area to create a temporary reference for your robot. When the robot is aligned, the jig should be removable, as you are not allowed to touch anything in the launch area while the robot is launching. The other option would be to build the alignment jig to reach into the launch area from the table corner (this year you would need one for either side of the table) and set the robot up in reference to the table corner. This version could be left in place while the robot starts, but cannot be touched until the robot has left the launch area. Keep in mind that different tables might have different built tolerances, so the tables at the competition might be slightly longer or shorter, so build your corner alignment jig to be adjustable by adding or subtracting parts to put your robot in the correct spot. Let us know if you need more help with this. Good luck this season 🍀 ⚙️⚙️
As we have mentioned many times before, we would rather help you by teaching you how to fix any issues you are having rather than giving you a ready made solution to copy. Let us know what you are having trouble with and we will try to help you. ⚙️⚙️
It does not say in the rules how you move the connector to the “up”position. So anyway you can figure out how to do it is allowed. Always remember that it says in the rule book on page 16: “All Robot Game wording means precisely and only what it says. If a detail is not mentioned, it does not matter.” ⚙️⚙️
Hi can you please show us a picture of the programing that you used for this challenge it would be highly appreciated thanks for the videos
yes i would like to see the programming
As we have mentioned many times before, we would rather help you by teaching you how to fix any issues you are having rather than giving you a ready made solution to copy. Let us know what you are having trouble with and we will try to help you.
⚙️⚙️
Are you going to the FLL competition, if you are we are dead
Don’t worry. We are no longer eligible to compete and are doing this only for fun and to help others. Good luck this season.
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@@6006TechWarriors Thanks
how did u get it that quick btw wat kind of wheels do you think is best? And my robots wheels keep on sliding to the left or right probably because of the friction or unstable wheels.
Hello Michael. Are you asking how we got the challenge kit so quickly? We registered for this season at the beginning of July and had the kit a week later. When the challenge got released we built and set up the mission models. Then we started immediately to program our robot.
As for the tires, as a general rule, we recommend to dust off the mat frequently (with a microfiber towel) and clean the tires (with alcohol wipes).
To give a recommendation on which type of wheel to use, we would need to know which robot you are using. We think that the new Spike prime wheels seem to be very sturdy and the tires are molded to the wheels. We do not believe that it is necessary to use the bigger SP wheels for extra speed, as we usually do fine withe smaller ones we use. Good luck. 🍀⚙️⚙️
@@6006TechWarriors Thank you. I'll put that into consideration 👌👌
Hi I have a problem while putting the robot on the map and I need to position it at a certain point and it has to be very accurate any tips to put the robot on the mate faster and make it work just fine?? without messing up the mission ??
Hi Jana. We always try to align the robot the same way every time. We pick a distinctive feature in the launch area (usually a specific line of the grid). If you need a position that is not so easy to remember, try to build an alignment template (of course out of LEGO bricks, any size and shape is allowed, as long as they are unaltered production pieces) that you can put along the wall and have a feature that the robot can align to. You can either build this jig to fit into the launch area to create a temporary reference for your robot. When the robot is aligned, the jig should be removable, as you are not allowed to touch anything in the launch area while the robot is launching. The other option would be to build the alignment jig to reach into the launch area from the table corner (this year you would need one for either side of the table) and set the robot up in reference to the table corner. This version could be left in place while the robot starts, but cannot be touched until the robot has left the launch area. Keep in mind that different tables might have different built tolerances, so the tables at the competition might be slightly longer or shorter, so build your corner alignment jig to be adjustable by adding or subtracting parts to put your robot in the correct spot. Let us know if you need more help with this. Good luck this season 🍀
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@@6006TechWarriors thank you so much and good luck to you as well that was helpful and it would definitely help my team thank you
Can you please tell instructions to make and attach arms for it
The tool build directions are actually in the Spike prime App itself. Go to home, build, and scroll down for tools.
Hello. Can you please share the programming?
As we have mentioned many times before, we would rather help you by teaching you how to fix any issues you are having rather than giving you a ready made solution to copy. Let us know what you are having trouble with and we will try to help you.
⚙️⚙️
Do you have a picture of the code
How is that allowed??? The last way
It does not say in the rules how you move the connector to the “up”position. So anyway you can figure out how to do it is allowed.
Always remember that it says in the rule book on page 16: “All Robot Game wording means precisely and only what it says. If a detail is not mentioned, it does not matter.”
⚙️⚙️
@@6006TechWarriors Wow...
imagine being good
or not
confusion