Scoot: The Kitten Bot

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Why did we make Scoot?

Inspired by many mini bots that the team and it's mentors have interacted with over the years, Scoot was developed for team 6762 as a minimal entry point to explore the feasibility of a swerve drive for a robotics in-season bot.

What is Scoot?

Scoot is a robot with a 3d printed chassis that uses 2 of Rev's swerve modules and a full FRC control system. This way, the team can experiment with many season-legal swerve libraries, or roll their own (we are definitely not ready for this). This also allows a team to purchase only two modules versus the 4 a typical swerve bot has.

Why only 2?

Swerve is expensive. Four Rev Swerve modules costs ~2282.50. That is a large investment for a design that may not be a good fit for a team. This solution allows a team to dip their toes in the waters of swerve relatively inexpensively.

How much will this cost?

We do not have a full BOM yet, but the general estimate is below.

The price of each swerve module, motors and controllers...

Number Item Price Desciption
1 Rev Swerve Module 305.00 this comes with the Rev Through Bore Encoder We purchased the plastic ones for testing, and the aluminum for competition. There is a known issue with the v1 plastic wheels.
1 Neo (no pinion) 52.00
1 Neo 550 (no pinion) 29.50
2 Spark Max 92.00
Total 570.50

Total General Cost

Number Item approximate cost of the number listed
1 1Full FRC Control System: Radio, PDP/PDH, POE for Radio, Rio 1 or 2, RSL, ~950
1 Optional: We substituted the Rev POE cable for the Rev Power Module. This is not tournament legal, but is working for us. 11.99
1 Optional: Small PDP. We used this one from Amazon 19.99
1 Optional: 12Ohm terminating resistor. If you substitute the PDP, you need a terminating resistor for the Can Bus. .15 at Digikey, 5.00/3 at Amazon
18 Gauge cable for the RSL 11.99
12 Guage cable for all motor and power connections 12.98
22 Guage cable for the rio and CAN 10.48
cable connectors We used Anderson for the battery and Wago for all other power connectors molex/ dupont for CAN 35.00 for 50; more than you need for this project
2 swerve modules 1141
Ring or hook Connectors for our PDP 14.99
~801.81 g 3d Fillament 11.99
Fasteners for control system (we used velcro) 7-20 depending on the brand and length
4 #10 bolts for the swerve modules and securing the base 5.00
1 2 inch Swivel Caster; We used this one because we had it in our shop, but one without a brake would be even better 7.50
1 Limelight or other targeting camera, Optional 200 - 400
1 battery; We use one of the Studica batteries 44.99
Total ~2303.05

That sounds like a lot, however, other than the swerve drives themselves, we were able to source all of the materials from team stock. So, for us, it cost us clocer to $650.00. Many of the materials are also reuseable. Another aspect of the design is that you could use scoot as the control board for a full-size bot with four swerve modules.

CADD

ScootCaddImage (https://cad.onshape.com/documents/dc911cfa8b3dccdac654b76b/w/eddf5a90f3b74427297dde25/e/3c74e6053ab6216a8b7a64ff)

View our Cadd on onshape

Changes that have not made it into our CADD designs

  • We are using the Amazon PDP and terminating resistor because it is smaller
  • We put the PDP under the chassis to allow more flexibility on top

Some images of our current bot

PXL_20231006_200813674 PXL_20231006_200752239