A personal account from Mik Reed
We came out of filming in 1999 licking our wounds and knowing we
needed to make changes.
We had more body damage than we'd initially thought, but had also
answered some of our worries. We knew we couldn't do anything without
better radio control of SMIDSY and that we needed a crash course on
that part of the hobby.
We also knew that we wanted to be back in the thick of it in 2000!
The easy bit... Andy had spotted some titanium covered in dust at a
neighbouring university. Ignoring our (naturally jovial) suggestions
to 'just borrow it' he got in touch with them and once he'd convinced
them that they did actually have some laying around got given a
sheet! This was enough to replace the aluminium backing plates for
the side and rear armour and to build boxes to contain all of our
electronics (see "The hard bit" below). Only problem was we needed more gas
main...
A build weekend was arranged and after much to-ing and fro-ing the
correct size of pipe (or something resembling it) was sorted out,
only downside was that it was in Slough. Still, that's almost
en-route from Crawley to Huddersfield, hardly a detour at all. Late
Friday night, or possibly early Saturday morning Robin and I arrived
in Slurrit with all the bits and pieces, including a bit of gas main
Andy could crawl through!
We were met by Steve Bennett on the Saturday and between us we built
new side armour (the pipe we ended up with was a bit big so the
panels got thinner and more solid.) New leatherette was stuck on
the plastic and it was bashed into solid titanium backing panels. We
suffered from the old aluminium panels peeling off of the mounting
points, so Andy came up with a new stronger fixing method. We had
also come across problems with the old captive nuts meant to hold on
the side panels so these were replaced with a different type, fitted
by some devious test-your-grip rivetter-style tool. Unsuprisingly
Andy won that one!
Steve did some cable making and note taking and the jaw wiring was
rethought. We didn't bother replacing the rear tyre as SMIDSY still
ran happily. The top armour was up for replacement and Andy had an
idea to thwart the Stihl saw on Dead Metal which he wanted to
incorporate into it, along with better wheel protection. We decided
to replace top and bottom even though the bottom armour was barely
touched and the dents caused by the arena spike (which had gone
straight through Rattus Rattus' 1/2" ply base) were easily banged
out.
The hard bit. We knew our control was a problem, we didn't know why.
It could have been interference from the motors, obviously something
was picking up outside interference, we just didn't have the
knowledge, so we started amassing some.
Andy started building helicoil antennae matched to 50 ohms and 40Mhz.
We started to talk to people who pointed out some basic errors in
SMIDSY's set-up. To make wiring easier we had used the chassis as the
ground, standard automotive practise. Oddly we'd neglected to spot
that cars and bikes were rarely remotely controlled. If they were,
it'd be done differently! The theory is simple, an interference field
is set up between the positive and negative cables. A good set-up has
them the same length and twisted together; a bad set-up, well, looks
like SMIDSY did basically!
Our antenna had been chopped about like crazy, this was a problem as
while we couldn't get anyone to confirm what length they should be,
or what problems cutting them creates we could get loads of people to
tell us 'ooh no you don't want to cut/squeeze/tamper with that at
all...' Also we were taking our antenna out to the side panel through
a small hole in the chassis, which acted as a perfect choke to the
signal being carried down the wire and then into the side pod where
we sandwiched it between the gas main and a sheet of aluminium. Not
good.
Back inside SMIDSY, we had supressed the Bosch motors a bit but had
guessed at the values, this could have been a problem. All of our
electronics sat unshielded within the metal box that was the 'bot,
sharing space with big DC motors, all the power wiring and whirring
chains, which could apparently cause problems of their own. To finish
off the catalogue of horrors the cable we used to run the 4QD boards
from the Team Delta interfaces was unshielded and ran straight across
one of the Bosch motor bodies.
We actually tried to get scientific at this point and Kevin Cordina
came down and ran across the 'bot with an oscilliscope. He proved our
good points, but also showed up that the cable linking the Team Delta
boards to the 4QD boards, which carried a plain analogue signal, was
picking up interference like it was going out of style!
We went through these problems one by one, the wiring loom was
completely redone with the leads as perfectly matched as we could
manage lengthwise and twisted together throughout. The cable
connecting the speed controllers to the interfaces was replaced with
a fully shielded version professionally made. A new antenna was
bought and various alternate antennae were tried. Until a new
location could be decided we went to a small 40Mhz whip antenna on
the top of the 'bot.
Some of the titanium went into building a box for the speed
controllers and a box for the radio gear. This was also part of
another branch of learning. Initially we had shied away from lots of
connectors, attempting to have as much as possible soldered and
permanent. Watching Series Two had brought home the number of people
who could be knocked out by a rogue connection coming loose. The
downside of this was a strip and rebuild time for the 'bot of around
a day and any job being a strip and rebuild job. By the end of Series
Three filming we had realised that this was just not the way to go. So
SMIDSY was rebuilt compartmentalised. We can now remove bits
separately and a full strip and rebuild is probably down to around 4
hours, the main problems occuring when stuff like motors need
unbolting and refitting. Starts to make you appreciate the work
that's gone into motorbikes so that they can be stripped and rebuilt
with relative ease!
This all came together to give us a better reception, but not an
excellent one. Andy was slowly coming to the opinion that the jaws
needed altering radically and this was part of the final solution.
The Jaws. We had problems with the jaw drives in Series Three. They
were driven using the standard jag motors, which were a bit small and
hard to mount. They were driven through flexible speedo style drives
which were hard to mount, especially with the limited space we had,
and prone to snapping. The night before Series Three filming we were
welding new mounts to the chassis to try and help this, yes a full
strip down job.
Post filming we were still not happy. Andy's first change was to junk
the jag motors and use the spare windscreen wiper motors & gearboxes
we had in stock. These were repositioned along the front bulkhead and
UV joints and connecting fireglass rods were put in place to connect
to the actuators. This made the whole process easier, with the side
effects of more strength and more space within the 'bot.
The Team Delta relay boards were used to run automotive 24V relays to
operate the jaws as we were blowing the relays on the TD boards. This
still wasn't sufficient and Andy created a damper circuit using
diodes to solve it once and for all.
To house the antenna, and save some of the weight we'd spent
elsewhere the metal jaws were junked in favour of a spaceframe with
the sides in steel and the faces in polycarbonate. The leading edges
were made of tool steel.
With range still a worry Andy made the single biggest change. We'd
been talking about replacing the analogue FM transmitter and receiver
for ages but hadn't been sure what to get. We'd fixated on Multiplex
as being the best make available but faced with a large bill just
hadn't been willing to commit. Andy went out and bought a Multiplex
Cockpit Tx and a 7 channel IPD Rx. Using a hybrid of analogue and
digital this set-up is designed to give good interference-free signal
without the lag from which full digital systems can suffer. Our range went up
and our worries were finally solved.
It had taken many months but we were finally ready for the Live
Event, the qualifying event for the TV show.
Last modified: 2003-08-04 19:45:55 127