Hey everyone, I'm excited to finally share this video with you all! I actually finished filming this video back in May, but the editing ended up taking sooo long (like ~150 hours spread over 2 months). I had so much footage to go through, but I hope the end result made it all worth it. If you want to build your own self-driving RC, you can check out some of the links I put in the video description. Until next time 👀
Nice video, you did great! I have an idea concerning the localization issue. My idea might sound crazy at first, but I think it will work on a race track. What if you don't have a map? Just try to go as straight as possible. You would need a Gyro so you can detect unwanted spins. If the wall is far away, go fast; if it is near, slow down. That won't result in the fastest route, but I think it will work. The biggest downside is that it won't work in a normal environment like an office. I have programmed and competed at robotic competitions myself, so I really like seeing other people's ways to approach a problem. Keep going!
I just noticed something about 5:56 minutes in. My past life I was a driving instructor and the number one thing new students do, is not look far enough ahead. They typically end up looking not far off the front of the vehicle, within 2-3 car lengths. That's really close and dangerous because it doesn't provide enough time to process what is occurring and to react. So we reinforce how to look far ahead - very far and to use pereferal vision to be aware of everything in between. Your car is driving like a new student - it is only aware within that white box, so it's looking directly in front of the vehicle. It's possibly a sensor limitation, but is there a way to feed your car long range information? Keep what you have as that is likely higher resiltiuon data, but can you augment long-range data as well so it can begin processing what is approaching, sooner?
I make a self racing drone if you are interested we can do something, it's an original design. I'm using a jetson i'v been doing the project for years.
Don't use RRT, use ERRT[1,2] which is intended for exactly these problems; I published it 21 years ago and it has been used by RoboCup (robot soccer) teams ever since. Section 4.3 in [2] has a good description, including plan-head simplification (pretty much required for any sampling planner) which is a generalization of what you were doing at 6:55, see [2] page 82 top paragraph. Hit me up if you have questions. FWIW, [2] Chaper 5 solves the problem you don't know you have yet, and has also been used in RoboCup for years by at least 3 teams. [1] Bruce, James, and Manuela Veloso. "Real-time randomized path planning for robot navigation." IEEE/RSJ international conference on intelligent robots and systems. Vol. 3. IEEE, 2002. [2] Bruce, James Robert. "Real-time motion planning and safe navigation in dynamic multi-robot environments." Ph. D. dissertation (2006).
I gotta say, I'm a 31 year old software engineer who also does robotics as a hobby, and you are absolutely killing it. I hate to sound like an old man, but being this far into the field when you're so young is amazing. Keep kicking ass, your videos make me excited to get back to work on my own machines!
I feel they could also use a MUCH better track boundary, that doesn't get pushed around, and isn't something thats very difficult for anything digital to see
Ye, the competition track felt kinda unprofessional / no shits given, especially compared to the time ppl put into their cars. They could have used gym benches for barries or somthing if they wanted a low effort solution.
Dont be discouraged Steven, you did your best effort and you were all alone in it. The track was pretty janky but one may argue that the algs should be smart enough to update the map on the fly. I think what could have made a difference is to practice on a map similar to the competition map since it was much narrower and might require some tuning to get working right, as well as corner cases like reversing once you have realized you are stuck. The tire grip also played a huge part and I think sticky tires would have helped. WD-40 degrades tire rubber to make it pretty sticky. But regardless, great effort and great content, thank you for sharing.
I'm wondering if the car could localise off of the ceiling (what with it being a static feature), but use the realtime LIDAR input from track walls/other cars to deal with collision avoidance - like how a human following a GPS is technically route finding using triangulation with satellites, but is avoiding crashing (mostly) by looking out of the windows.
You probably don't even have to update the map on the fly but just increase the measurement (and motion) model uncertainties in your positioning algorithm so that it trusts the map less and is able to model those inconsistencies. Out-of-the-box lidar-based stuff is most likely tuned to trust the map way too much. To be honest, that track looks so simple that it could be driven around with a local planner only (no global map). Of course you would lose your race lines and probably lose track with some catastrophic odometric failure, such as spinning, but with low enough speed the local planner should be able complete laps. In any case, super interesting video. Failures and difficulties make it interesting. Keep up the good work.
If this was done professionally then yes you would expect the cars to be able to deal with track variations but this presumably isn’t the first time they have done this competition, so they know what to expect in terms of car capabilities and they should make the track in such a way to maximise competitiveness. It’s not much of a competition when only one or two teams are able to reliably go around the track. In pretty much any other kind of racing, the track will not change, so at this stage, this competition shouldn’t be any different. Changing to a rigid track would make it more competitive and it would change the winning criteria from whose algorithm can deal with changes in a janky track, to whose algorithm can go around the track the fastest. The best algorithms would still have the speed advantage.
i race rc cars at our local race tracks and i often help build/change carpet tracks and dirt. we race with transponders, all data loged and i must say it cant be anywhere close to fair with the track changing as everyone goes around.
Man, i'm surprised at how uncontrolled the environment was when I first saw it. Its insane what you achieved with your resource and time constraints as a solo.
I thoroughly enjoyed watching and getting to be part of this journey! And although you did not win you still gained a ton of experience, knowledge and "rivals". Maybe a shorter wheelbase would have helped with the car's turn radius, and if their barriers were semi-permanent the localization could potentially have worked more reliable, but hindsight is always 20/20. Again watching your journey has been fun and today's video has not been disappointing xD
The barriers / track limits changing lap to lap seems a fairly steep challenge on its own. Track limits are permanent in real life... imagine if every time a race car left the track the officials had to re-paint the white track limits line... during the race. Heckuva job facing some very difficult challenges! ETA: My approach as an official would have been to at least put painter's tape on either side of the barrier to give a solid reference point when resetting. Another approach would be to anchor the tubing every "X" inches. I'd suggest painter"s tape under the barriers (to protect the surface), then glue the barriers to the tape. FWIW, painter's tape has a pretty good shear adhesion strength, and is often used in combination with CA glue to anchor pieces when woodworking
As a robotics engineer and a person who has competed in such competitions I can relatet to all your feelings and I thoroughly enjoyed this series! You are so good man, you not only put all your effort into this project but also actually spent the time making these videos to inspire others which is even better than winning the competition. Good luck with uni and your future as a robotics engineer my guy!
I have never been so emotionally invested in a project before! This was not a fare race! A real fare race has a fixed track that does not change, with the main focus being speed and overtakes. You rock man, I'm am so proud of you!!
I am an old man into technical and mechanical stuff who got into RC airplanes. Veteran flyers seeing my frustrations at the field (crashing) gave me good advice and this “Everybody crashes”. After a few months of crashing and epiphanies I finely got it right in my mine and plane. You are well on your way to many epiphanies in your life, just remember, everybody will crash. Enjoy the ride.
as software developer and rc hobbyist, all I could say is I enjoyed your unit testing which consisted of yourself running behind the car lol amazing job btw
I participated in FRC robotics for almost a decade. This is so similar haha, I love seeing you compete and try hard and seeing the difference between the teams with shit loads of money vs the teams with almost nothing, keep going! You will crush them next year!
Great job man! This is seriously one of the coolest engineering project series I’ve seen. It sucks to put all those hours in and be a bit disappointed in its performance at competition, especially when it feels so out of your hands, but either way your final design was beyond impressive! Not to mention the best video creation on the side that we get to enjoy
Love to see my Penn Engineering boys winning :) Fantastic job to all participants - you all did a fantastic time driving (heh) this field forward that day!!!!!
Eventhough you might not have won, the video is really entertaining, you (probably) learnt a lot and inspired a lot of people (like myself). Great job!
forget the race man, you've won the hearts, i became a fan of your work, this single video that popped onto my feed is a blessing for me to know that there are people like u dedicated to grow and learn with a blazing passion, i hope in future i get to collaborate on such similar endeavor with you, thank u so much for this video bro, this made my day. Once again steven, it would be an honor for me to share a platform or a project with u.... if possible.
After teaching FTC robotics for 5 years and judging FTC Championships for 5 years, I'm very impressed with this effort by 1 guy without mechanical engineering skills to go with his coding and algorithm development. The challenge you couldn't overcome was likely exacerbated by inconsistent traction, which caused difficulty for the steering algorithm. As the car drifted wildly on the slippery floors, it made it harder for localization and obstacle avoidance. If you instead cleaned your tires after every run, and used tires with low lateral slip, the processing load is reduced because there's much less fishtailing. While it's possible to overcome this with adequate AI training and optimization of response time, servo rates, and optimizing weight distribution, with one person it's very hard to optimize given the time and budget. Great effort!
It's hard and disapointing enough to be eliminated, but you managed to make a video out of it and post it here. I wish you the best for your future projects !
Man, that was a brilliant set of videos! It was so interesting watching you solve problems. I was so thrilled to watch each step of your journey and can't wait for your next mission. Loved the ending too - so funny!!
Respect for trying. I hope you learned allot and had fun too. And one against teams of four. And also my respect for sharing you story. Your experience is a victory.
Hello Steven. You are obviously a very smart guy. You have a surmountable challenge. That is what will keep you going for the WIN. DO NOT GIVE UP. You are a winner because you qualified for the competition.
You did a great job recording this whole steps. I thought I was in the competition with you. I really enjoyed following you along for this whole thing. Thanks.
Whoever ran the competition needs to rethink how they layout tracks. No real track changes run to run. I can imagine your frustration. I would have raised absolute hell. Great video, fun work, wish I could participate, too.
it is not a failure if you had fun trying, learned stuff, and made new friends. It sounds like you are not giving up on your car, tires are everything in a race. good work keep it up.
I don't know how I got recommended your video, but I watched the entire thing. I grew up in the 80's building my own RC models from Tamiya and Kyosho. I still have many of the RC cars on display. But never in my wildest dream would I have thought to see them race by themselves. Your drive and curiosity to push yourself is inspirational. You have a bright future. Don't give up. Keep pushing that boundary and don't stop tinkering! I wish you the best. You just gained a new subscriber!
Steven, this was amazing, from the editing to the explanation. As a one-person team getting the fastest lap time during qualification was extremely impressive. Also, love the final race video back at Waterloo. Keep up the fantastic work.
Thank you so much for doing this content. I'm from portugal and I started this year studying ros2 from the internet (we don't talk about this subject at the uni) and this is exacly what makes me study every day.
I am lost for words, that outro. And as you already stated, it was a great learning experience, without the race in mind you would never had the motivation to learn all that.
You know mate? you need to upload separate videos or an entire series dedicated ONLY to Man vs. Machine car races and stuff that we'd enjoy. I wish you all the best and stay on top! Cheers!
Really interesting video. As someone that put an ESP8226 on a remote control car, and added a web app on iphone with tilt for steering, I'm in awe about the complexity of your project. Amazing. Keep going 👍
7:20 - OOOH!!! nice! I've made a racing game prototype for study once, this were my choice to path the AI adversaries. The game didn't get through the point of actually making the collision avoidance, but the field were ready! I'm still proud I've managed to come up with an actually well thought out base for the game, I did waste time on it :)
wow...... this is amazing, well done for the good hard work you have put into the race preparation , the experience you got from this race will go a long way in helping you prepare for other races
Super cool! I'm a Master student studied SLAM. During my time in school, I've worked on mostly solo projects, so I can relate the frustration of working alone. The cool thing is, I actually learned the most and was able to do all of them by myself!! Keep it up, love the content!
This was a fun ride. Steven, if I could do anything after watching this video, it would be to encourage you to never give up on your dream. As a programmer, you already know the drill code, test, adjust, test, adjust, test, etc. Keep your eyes and ears open and, yes, network!
Between the lack of traction, the tight track, the moving walls, and their beam-dump-like qualities, I'm surprised anyone did well, tbh. The fact that you could make laps at all was really good.
While you did Max a bit dirty, that was funny. Tbf though every F1 champ ever has had to drive a bit dirty at times, that’s just the ruthlessness you need to win
The black walls are a kill, why didn't you use as backup ultrasonic sensors ? As well add a function which will run the track without tracking only avoid obstacles if detected like other cars or deforming walls.
I know what it feels putting in hours of work only to get held up... but,, you've learnt so much to quit,, keep on pushing... that's all you need to do.. keep on pushing. from Africa, with love and respect for your work. cheers, and all the best buddy.
Managing to qualify solo is a win by itsel for a such young person you are mate, gotta admit, as a 30 y.o. electronics engineer, i would have similar results for my first try. Keep at it, you are goot at what you are doing!
Great video! I don't know anything about autonomous racing, but I do Formula SAE, and this was incredibly interesting. Also great editing, kept it entertaining.
Great channel!! I'm finishing my PhD in Autonomous Vehicle Perception and I'm loving your content. It's really hard to find that kind of content on RUclips, and you make it really good. Congratulations on your channel and the advances in your project. It's not easy to cover all the environments that the vehicle can be in, but its results are really impressive. Have you considered using a camera to help the "vision" of the RC car? Love your channel, hope you have greats achievements.
I would have thought that a body or wrap-around bumper should have been used to protect the exposed wheels to minimize suspension breakage. I used to roam those halls back in the late 80's. Congratulations on your achievements, simply amazing. Cheers.
I feel like having a non static track should've been specified in the rules or something. I would be livid if this was me. Also you freaking blue balled me. I was waiting for that in-depth code explanation! Not even kidding lmao! I don't code anymore at my current job, but I dabble here and there for some stuff I personally need lol. But back to the track, like why not use wood or something since it seems this layout was already predetermined? Idk I'd be pissed. I'm also surprised only one team took the generative AI approach. It looks like it was better in the end since I'm guessing it was constantly learning every single run it did. Looking forward to seeing more from you! Keep it up!
20:13 You said it yourself; it came down to the map while the rest of your system is good. You know what that means? It means you have a massive advantage for next year's competition since you can focus on fine-tuning other parts of the system and are getting closer to the win. Remember, failure is part of success as long as you leverage the learning productively. Keep tuning and pushing for those final percentage points of performance and consistency-- the wins (whether it's autonomous racing or not) will come with time. Basically, you have to get your ass kicked a couple of times before you master learning how to kick other people's asses. You got this homie
Hey, very cool video! Well edited. I wrote that particle filter, fun to see it's still getting some mileage years later :) Unfortunate to see the map changing on you, particle filters definitely don't like that. I hope range_libc didn't put up too much of a fight
Hey everyone, I'm excited to finally share this video with you all! I actually finished filming this video back in May, but the editing ended up taking sooo long (like ~150 hours spread over 2 months). I had so much footage to go through, but I hope the end result made it all worth it. If you want to build your own self-driving RC, you can check out some of the links I put in the video description. Until next time 👀
Nice video, you did great! I have an idea concerning the localization issue. My idea might sound crazy at first, but I think it will work on a race track. What if you don't have a map? Just try to go as straight as possible. You would need a Gyro so you can detect unwanted spins. If the wall is far away, go fast; if it is near, slow down. That won't result in the fastest route, but I think it will work. The biggest downside is that it won't work in a normal environment like an office. I have programmed and competed at robotic competitions myself, so I really like seeing other people's ways to approach a problem. Keep going!
I just noticed something about 5:56 minutes in. My past life I was a driving instructor and the number one thing new students do, is not look far enough ahead. They typically end up looking not far off the front of the vehicle, within 2-3 car lengths. That's really close and dangerous because it doesn't provide enough time to process what is occurring and to react. So we reinforce how to look far ahead - very far and to use pereferal vision to be aware of everything in between. Your car is driving like a new student - it is only aware within that white box, so it's looking directly in front of the vehicle.
It's possibly a sensor limitation, but is there a way to feed your car long range information? Keep what you have as that is likely higher resiltiuon data, but can you augment long-range data as well so it can begin processing what is approaching, sooner?
I make a self racing drone if you are interested we can do something, it's an original design. I'm using a jetson i'v been doing the project for years.
you should make drift for sharper corners, more rotation and style points
Don't use RRT, use ERRT[1,2] which is intended for exactly these problems; I published it 21 years ago and it has been used by RoboCup (robot soccer) teams ever since. Section 4.3 in [2] has a good description, including plan-head simplification (pretty much required for any sampling planner) which is a generalization of what you were doing at 6:55, see [2] page 82 top paragraph. Hit me up if you have questions.
FWIW, [2] Chaper 5 solves the problem you don't know you have yet, and has also been used in RoboCup for years by at least 3 teams.
[1] Bruce, James, and Manuela Veloso. "Real-time randomized path planning for robot navigation." IEEE/RSJ international conference on intelligent robots and systems. Vol. 3. IEEE, 2002.
[2] Bruce, James Robert. "Real-time motion planning and safe navigation in dynamic multi-robot environments." Ph. D. dissertation (2006).
I gotta say, I'm a 31 year old software engineer who also does robotics as a hobby, and you are absolutely killing it. I hate to sound like an old man, but being this far into the field when you're so young is amazing. Keep kicking ass, your videos make me excited to get back to work on my own machines!
I am 39 and hadn't even started the hobby o am dreaming about...so i am the old man here :))))
I'm 50 and have no idea! Do I win? 😅
Haha looks like you're the winner for now, but you're young enough that someone could still beat you! Glad to know we're all here together!
I am 93 and just started programming. It’s a great way to spend my time.
Yah dude, fucking TRUE! 37 years robotics and engineering nerd reporting in, you're doing great! Keep it up. 😄
A high gloss basketball court was a cruel choice of venue for this competition. Great job, Steven!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherical_cow
I feel they could also use a MUCH better track boundary, that doesn't get pushed around, and isn't something thats very difficult for anything digital to see
Ye, the competition track felt kinda unprofessional / no shits given, especially compared to the time ppl put into their cars. They could have used gym benches for barries or somthing if they wanted a low effort solution.
@@ledorfYeah, the track was tight and made of *round RIDGED tube*… 🤦
lack of traction = emotional damage
Dont be discouraged Steven, you did your best effort and you were all alone in it. The track was pretty janky but one may argue that the algs should be smart enough to update the map on the fly. I think what could have made a difference is to practice on a map similar to the competition map since it was much narrower and might require some tuning to get working right, as well as corner cases like reversing once you have realized you are stuck. The tire grip also played a huge part and I think sticky tires would have helped. WD-40 degrades tire rubber to make it pretty sticky. But regardless, great effort and great content, thank you for sharing.
I'm wondering if the car could localise off of the ceiling (what with it being a static feature), but use the realtime LIDAR input from track walls/other cars to deal with collision avoidance - like how a human following a GPS is technically route finding using triangulation with satellites, but is avoiding crashing (mostly) by looking out of the windows.
You probably don't even have to update the map on the fly but just increase the measurement (and motion) model uncertainties in your positioning algorithm so that it trusts the map less and is able to model those inconsistencies. Out-of-the-box lidar-based stuff is most likely tuned to trust the map way too much.
To be honest, that track looks so simple that it could be driven around with a local planner only (no global map). Of course you would lose your race lines and probably lose track with some catastrophic odometric failure, such as spinning, but with low enough speed the local planner should be able complete laps.
In any case, super interesting video. Failures and difficulties make it interesting. Keep up the good work.
If this was done professionally then yes you would expect the cars to be able to deal with track variations but this presumably isn’t the first time they have done this competition, so they know what to expect in terms of car capabilities and they should make the track in such a way to maximise competitiveness. It’s not much of a competition when only one or two teams are able to reliably go around the track. In pretty much any other kind of racing, the track will not change, so at this stage, this competition shouldn’t be any different.
Changing to a rigid track would make it more competitive and it would change the winning criteria from whose algorithm can deal with changes in a janky track, to whose algorithm can go around the track the fastest. The best algorithms would still have the speed advantage.
@@conorstewart2214thats basically the tiny mouse robot challenge where the track is just tape on the floor
Doing this solo is f-ing nuts. To me this is far from failure. From one engineer to another, you did really well!
easy-to-move track boders seems like a massive oversight for something like this
Or a good way to test algorithm robustness? Most interesting robotic applications happen in more or less dynamic environments.
I’m sure there is a level of fairness, for example - masking tape outlining the course so the marshals can put it back to its original shape.
the map changing should not be a random variable, if its going to change at all it should be a new track for each run to test how a car learns a track
i race rc cars at our local race tracks and i often help build/change carpet tracks and dirt. we race with transponders, all data loged and i must say it cant be anywhere close to fair with the track changing as everyone goes around.
@IlariVallivaara except these are RC cars, worth hundreds, not NASA rovers worth billions.
you aren't going to catch a marlin with a trout rod
Man, i'm surprised at how uncontrolled the environment was when I first saw it. Its insane what you achieved with your resource and time constraints as a solo.
4:54 The easiest way to adjust the gears is to put a slice of regular paper in between them and then tighten them.
yupp
As a former FIRST Robotics Competition winner, this is exactly the attitude you need. Keep up the good work!
I thoroughly enjoyed watching and getting to be part of this journey! And although you did not win you still gained a ton of experience, knowledge and "rivals". Maybe a shorter wheelbase would have helped with the car's turn radius, and if their barriers were semi-permanent the localization could potentially have worked more reliable, but hindsight is always 20/20. Again watching your journey has been fun and today's video has not been disappointing xD
You did excellent! You were right on pace with the other drivers, and this was your first shot.
On top of that your video editing is top notch!
Dude, the "Max v paper strategies" bit made me spill my drink, nice 💯
The barriers / track limits changing lap to lap seems a fairly steep challenge on its own. Track limits are permanent in real life... imagine if every time a race car left the track the officials had to re-paint the white track limits line... during the race. Heckuva job facing some very difficult challenges!
ETA: My approach as an official would have been to at least put painter's tape on either side of the barrier to give a solid reference point when resetting. Another approach would be to anchor the tubing every "X" inches. I'd suggest painter"s tape under the barriers (to protect the surface), then glue the barriers to the tape. FWIW, painter's tape has a pretty good shear adhesion strength, and is often used in combination with CA glue to anchor pieces when woodworking
That wouldn't have helped the poor and tight design of it in the first place. Those RC cars have a lot of mass and power, they would rip tape
As a robotics engineer and a person who has competed in such competitions I can relatet to all your feelings and I thoroughly enjoyed this series! You are so good man, you not only put all your effort into this project but also actually spent the time making these videos to inspire others which is even better than winning the competition. Good luck with uni and your future as a robotics engineer my guy!
I have never been so emotionally invested in a project before! This was not a fare race! A real fare race has a fixed track that does not change, with the main focus being speed and overtakes. You rock man, I'm am so proud of you!!
I am an old man into technical and mechanical stuff who got into RC airplanes. Veteran flyers seeing my frustrations at the field (crashing) gave me good advice and this “Everybody crashes”. After a few months of crashing and epiphanies I finely got it right in my mine and plane. You are well on your way to many epiphanies in your life, just remember, everybody will crash. Enjoy the ride.
The last race human versus code was insane. I hope you keep going and compete again soon
Awesome presentation of the material! Very interesting, informative, humorous! A great illuminated idea! Good luck and thank you so much for sharing!
as software developer and rc hobbyist, all I could say is I enjoyed your unit testing which consisted of yourself running behind the car lol amazing job btw
Good job, my guy. I had a lot of fun watching you progress. Thanks for the video
super fun to watch, interesting, inspiring
editing was definitely worth it
Steven, you're awesome! You did all of this work by yourself and you held your own against well funded large teams. Way to go man!
Absolutely loved watching your progress from the first design to this one!
This whole project was super inspiring! Great achievement participating in this competition. Wish you the best!
I participated in FRC robotics for almost a decade. This is so similar haha, I love seeing you compete and try hard and seeing the difference between the teams with shit loads of money vs the teams with almost nothing, keep going! You will crush them next year!
I love that you're making robotics fun and accessable. Keep up the great work!
Absolutely amazing. What dedication to set out and achieve. My hat is off to you. Keep it up. Just by being in it you are a winner.
The part with Max make me laugh a lot. Subscribed
don't be sad man, you've done a very good job and you have tried your best !
Great job man! This is seriously one of the coolest engineering project series I’ve seen. It sucks to put all those hours in and be a bit disappointed in its performance at competition, especially when it feels so out of your hands, but either way your final design was beyond impressive! Not to mention the best video creation on the side that we get to enjoy
You have my respect for the will of competition and creating this awesome video!
Love to see my Penn Engineering boys winning :)
Fantastic job to all participants - you all did a fantastic time driving (heh) this field forward that day!!!!!
Eventhough you might not have won, the video is really entertaining, you (probably) learnt a lot and inspired a lot of people (like myself). Great job!
forget the race man, you've won the hearts, i became a fan of your work, this single video that popped onto my feed is a blessing for me to know that there are people like u dedicated to grow and learn with a blazing passion, i hope in future i get to collaborate on such similar endeavor with you, thank u so much for this video bro, this made my day. Once again steven, it would be an honor for me to share a platform or a project with u.... if possible.
Your editing has improved so much, great job dude
thanks zac :))
Very good video, thank you for uploading! Waiting for the next update
After teaching FTC robotics for 5 years and judging FTC Championships for 5 years, I'm very impressed with this effort by 1 guy without mechanical engineering skills to go with his coding and algorithm development. The challenge you couldn't overcome was likely exacerbated by inconsistent traction, which caused difficulty for the steering algorithm. As the car drifted wildly on the slippery floors, it made it harder for localization and obstacle avoidance. If you instead cleaned your tires after every run, and used tires with low lateral slip, the processing load is reduced because there's much less fishtailing. While it's possible to overcome this with adequate AI training and optimization of response time, servo rates, and optimizing weight distribution, with one person it's very hard to optimize given the time and budget. Great effort!
Your enthusiasm and levity makes the subject that much more enjoyable.
Pretty cool!
The las part of the video where you went against the self-driving car, *was epic!!*
It's hard and disapointing enough to be eliminated, but you managed to make a video out of it and post it here. I wish you the best for your future projects !
The final scene had me guffawing out loud. Great job!
Man, that was a brilliant set of videos! It was so interesting watching you solve problems. I was so thrilled to watch each step of your journey and can't wait for your next mission.
Loved the ending too - so funny!!
I liked the race you put at the end really put in perspective how fast the cars were going.
Respect for trying. I hope you learned allot and had fun too. And one against teams of four. And also my respect for sharing you story. Your experience is a victory.
Thank you so much for being the first person to pull the "nobody cares" joke but then actually still give us the code
Hello Steven. You are obviously a very smart guy. You have a surmountable challenge. That is what will keep you going for the WIN. DO NOT GIVE UP. You are a winner because you qualified for the competition.
You did a great job recording this whole steps. I thought I was in the competition with you. I really enjoyed following you along for this whole thing. Thanks.
so incredibly awesome! love this! would love to see a tutorial on all of this
Whoever ran the competition needs to rethink how they layout tracks. No real track changes run to run. I can imagine your frustration. I would have raised absolute hell. Great video, fun work, wish I could participate, too.
5:08 building an RC robot with macOS is insane
You are so hard on yourself. What you have done is more than amazing. Congrads!
it is not a failure if you had fun trying, learned stuff, and made new friends. It sounds like you are not giving up on your car, tires are everything in a race. good work keep it up.
Nice video!
Dude this was amazing! Especially that ending race, clipped audio and visual mashups 🙌🏽
I don't know how I got recommended your video, but I watched the entire thing. I grew up in the 80's building my own RC models from Tamiya and Kyosho. I still have many of the RC cars on display. But never in my wildest dream would I have thought to see them race by themselves. Your drive and curiosity to push yourself is inspirational. You have a bright future. Don't give up. Keep pushing that boundary and don't stop tinkering! I wish you the best. You just gained a new subscriber!
do not disappoint at all....there is winning or Learning.....There is no loosing...in your case it's there but again....do not disappoint....cheers!
Steven, this was amazing, from the editing to the explanation. As a one-person team getting the fastest lap time during qualification was extremely impressive. Also, love the final race video back at Waterloo. Keep up the fantastic work.
Term?
@@Term-0 sorry team 😅
@@KamalCarter Lmao, tbh i only really said it because my name matches with the word term, otherwise i wouldn't have mentioned anything lol.
Thank you so much for doing this content. I'm from portugal and I started this year studying ros2 from the internet (we don't talk about this subject at the uni) and this is exacly what makes me study every day.
great video! cool to be along for the ride (literally and figuratively)
I am lost for words, that outro.
And as you already stated, it was a great learning experience, without the race in mind you would never had the motivation to learn all that.
You know mate? you need to upload separate videos or an entire series dedicated ONLY to Man vs. Machine car races and stuff that we'd enjoy. I wish you all the best and stay on top! Cheers!
I love it the way you create story and suspense. Definitely I will see the code aswell.
Really interesting video. As someone that put an ESP8226 on a remote control car, and added a web app on iphone with tilt for steering, I'm in awe about the complexity of your project. Amazing. Keep going 👍
amazing project and editing, the ending was so cool to see too, way to go!!
This was an incredible effort. Well done! So enjoyable to see such progress and thinking.
Great video, the edit was hilarious yet amazing. The project is astonishing. Just keep on going.
7:20 - OOOH!!! nice!
I've made a racing game prototype for study once, this were my choice to path the AI adversaries. The game didn't get through the point of actually making the collision avoidance, but the field were ready!
I'm still proud I've managed to come up with an actually well thought out base for the game, I did waste time on it :)
Great production quality on your video. Was very entertaining to watch. Nice work. :)
wow...... this is amazing, well done for the good hard work you have put into the race preparation , the experience you got from this race will go a long way in helping you prepare for other races
Super cool! I'm a Master student studied SLAM. During my time in school, I've worked on mostly solo projects, so I can relate the frustration of working alone. The cool thing is, I actually learned the most and was able to do all of them by myself!! Keep it up, love the content!
This was a fun ride.
Steven, if I could do anything after watching this video, it would be to encourage you to never give up on your dream. As a programmer, you already know the drill code, test, adjust, test, adjust, test, etc.
Keep your eyes and ears open and, yes, network!
All right smart guy and I am impressed. To see how it began and now look at it go.
Beyond incredible what you've achieved there. Mind-boggling in an environment like this!
Loved following along your maker journey for your racecar. Winning isn't everything. You did a great job!
Dude, that's an amazing work!!! Keep on going like this!!!! Im sure you'll be the winner next time!!!
Between the lack of traction, the tight track, the moving walls, and their beam-dump-like qualities, I'm surprised anyone did well, tbh.
The fact that you could make laps at all was really good.
Haha, great video!! I really enjoyed the robot race and your human vs robot race too!
While you did Max a bit dirty, that was funny.
Tbf though every F1 champ ever has had to drive a bit dirty at times, that’s just the ruthlessness you need to win
Most excellent performance! Great video and great programming! Well done!!
Been watching the build process and am excited you got to run! Good job on the car and the videos! Thanks for sharing your journey.
Great job, success! Enjoy the slight F1 references
That was cool, Steven. Keep good spirits, you're in University to learn. Keep innovating, keep failing, keep learning.
Super nice video, great to see your progress, well done !
This video was fantastic! You have a great future in front of you!
The black walls are a kill, why didn't you use as backup ultrasonic sensors ?
As well add a function which will run the track without tracking only avoid obstacles if detected like other cars or deforming walls.
I know what it feels putting in hours of work only to get held up... but,, you've learnt so much to quit,, keep on pushing... that's all you need to do.. keep on pushing. from Africa, with love and respect for your work. cheers, and all the best buddy.
Managing to qualify solo is a win by itsel for a such young person you are mate, gotta admit, as a 30 y.o. electronics engineer, i would have similar results for my first try. Keep at it, you are goot at what you are doing!
Holy shit! Really great work! Congrats, hats off!
Great video! I don't know anything about autonomous racing, but I do Formula SAE, and this was incredibly interesting. Also great editing, kept it entertaining.
Great channel!! I'm finishing my PhD in Autonomous Vehicle Perception and I'm loving your content. It's really hard to find that kind of content on RUclips, and you make it really good. Congratulations on your channel and the advances in your project. It's not easy to cover all the environments that the vehicle can be in, but its results are really impressive. Have you considered using a camera to help the "vision" of the RC car? Love your channel, hope you have greats achievements.
yea, i’m working on a few things for that :))
I would have thought that a body or wrap-around bumper should have been used to protect the exposed wheels to minimize suspension breakage. I used to roam those halls back in the late 80's. Congratulations on your achievements, simply amazing. Cheers.
Damn, I just wanted to check out the car but I stayed for the whole video. Great project and race, but also amazing directing and montage!
I feel like having a non static track should've been specified in the rules or something. I would be livid if this was me.
Also you freaking blue balled me. I was waiting for that in-depth code explanation! Not even kidding lmao! I don't code anymore at my current job, but I dabble here and there for some stuff I personally need lol.
But back to the track, like why not use wood or something since it seems this layout was already predetermined? Idk I'd be pissed. I'm also surprised only one team took the generative AI approach. It looks like it was better in the end since I'm guessing it was constantly learning every single run it did. Looking forward to seeing more from you! Keep it up!
Dude, you did great beginning to end. Keep your head up and keep going!
20:13
You said it yourself; it came down to the map while the rest of your system is good. You know what that means? It means you have a massive advantage for next year's competition since you can focus on fine-tuning other parts of the system and are getting closer to the win. Remember, failure is part of success as long as you leverage the learning productively. Keep tuning and pushing for those final percentage points of performance and consistency-- the wins (whether it's autonomous racing or not) will come with time.
Basically, you have to get your ass kicked a couple of times before you master learning how to kick other people's asses. You got this homie
This feels like I'm watching Re-Volt, but IRL.
The Initial D segments absolutely made this video for me. Amazing work.
Great combination of technical content and humor. Well done!
Hey, very cool video! Well edited. I wrote that particle filter, fun to see it's still getting some mileage years later :) Unfortunate to see the map changing on you, particle filters definitely don't like that. I hope range_libc didn't put up too much of a fight
wow insane!! good job making it GPU accelerated, just had to change a few flags to compile it on the newer jetson architectures :))
It was really fun to watch your journey