I'm elated to say that my mbed-powered autonomous vehicle, Data Bus, won 3rd place in the 2012 Sparkfun Autonomous Vehicle Competition (AVC)! Thanks, mbed!!
Last Saturday (6/16) was the annual Sparkfun Autonomous Vehicle Competition where ground and air robots run a timed race around the Sparkfun Building in Boulder. It's an awesome event to watch (if you're not stuck in the pits fixing your robot...)
My mbed runs a sensor update, estimation, control routine at 100Hz and about 20,000 lines of code. It's barely taxed. Heading estimation is accomplished with a time-lag compensated Kalman Filter that fuses GPS heading and gyro heading rate data. Top speed was 20mph and 37.16 seconds around the building. Official results:
1st Place: Team 0x27, 2.08 seconds (hoop time deduction; raw 22.08 sec)
2nd Place: Team Minuteman, 9.46 seconds (hoop; raw 39.46 sec)
3rd Place: Team Databus, 37.16 seconds (no hoop)
Top speed of my robot was 20mph with an estimated cross-track error of about 1 meter after the 270m course.
If it wasn't hard enough to build a robot to drive itself 270 meters around the narrow parking lot of a large building, giant red barrels were added on the first leg. A hoop was situated in the center of the path; robots passing through it earn a 30 second time deduction.
But a misstep a few meters later could land a robot off the curb and down into the pond! If the robot makes it this far, on the next leg, curbs jut out waiting to grind unlucky bots to a halt and, surviving this obstacle a giant pothole awaits robots as they approach the last turn.
I counted 34 ground vehicles out of 50 entrants that actually made it to the event. Of those I think something like 7 or 8 made it around the building. As for the air vehicles (doing this in three dimensions isn't just 3 times harder) I have no clue how many made it or didn't...
Sparkfun Recap Teaser
{{http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-pjbPd2pjx-s/T99Uf2CjumI/AAAAAAAAFpM/qNdj3grdXWM/s400/2012_sf_avc_094.jpg}}
I'm elated to say that my mbed-powered autonomous vehicle, Data Bus, won 3rd place in the 2012 Sparkfun Autonomous Vehicle Competition (AVC)! Thanks, mbed!!
Last Saturday (6/16) was the annual Sparkfun Autonomous Vehicle Competition where ground and air robots run a timed race around the Sparkfun Building in Boulder. It's an awesome event to watch (if you're not stuck in the pits fixing your robot...)
My mbed runs a sensor update, estimation, control routine at 100Hz and about 20,000 lines of code. It's barely taxed. Heading estimation is accomplished with a time-lag compensated Kalman Filter that fuses GPS heading and gyro heading rate data. Top speed was 20mph and 37.16 seconds around the building. Official results:
1st Place: Team 0x27, 2.08 seconds (hoop time deduction; raw 22.08 sec)
2nd Place: Team Minuteman, 9.46 seconds (hoop; raw 39.46 sec)
3rd Place: Team Databus, 37.16 seconds (no hoop)
Top speed of my robot was 20mph with an estimated cross-track error of about 1 meter after the 270m course.
{{http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-2Ci6kaofQnA/T99UsLprrqI/AAAAAAAAFpk/5SN43jwkask/s400/2012_sf_avc_108.jpg}}
The ground winner, Team 0x27, 1/5 scale buggy
[[http://susanbrady.smugmug.com/Events/2012-SparkFunAVC/23626357_VmgGB5#!i=1911719671&k=dS2vs63|Pics my friend Susan took]]
[[http://www.bot-thoughts.com/2012/06/2012-autonomous-vehicle-competition-avc.html|Here's a write-up of my experiences Saturday]]
[[http://www.bot-thoughts.com/2011/05/data-bus-nickle-tour.html|More detail about my robot]]
[[http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL890A8244F3EE6DC5|I am collecting AVC videos on this playlist]]
If it wasn't hard enough to build a robot to drive itself 270 meters around the narrow parking lot of a large building, giant red barrels were added on the first leg. A hoop was situated in the center of the path; robots passing through it earn a 30 second time deduction.
{{http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-PQDZ1pGxBHo/T99UmkVWXAI/AAAAAAAAFpc/s1rpnvrEdHs/s400/2012_sf_avc_098.jpg}}
But a misstep a few meters later could land a robot off the curb and down into the pond! If the robot makes it this far, on the next leg, curbs jut out waiting to grind unlucky bots to a halt and, surviving this obstacle a giant pothole awaits robots as they approach the last turn.
{{http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Eb0SWe2BQcg/T99VUCHNlgI/AAAAAAAAFrc/Emc_XDxrRqg/s400/2012_sf_avc_081.jpg}}
{{http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-50ZMp-LB7Hc/T99U7Uc805I/AAAAAAAAFqc/YhHMhSSftoM/s400/2012_sf_avc_030.jpg}}
{{http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-SzmKiP19YLI/T99VBFGv1PI/AAAAAAAAFqs/qVnQjOGQYAc/s400/2012_sf_avc_041.jpg}}
I counted 34 ground vehicles out of 50 entrants that actually made it to the event. Of those I think something like 7 or 8 made it around the building. As for the air vehicles (doing this in three dimensions isn't just 3 times harder) I have no clue how many made it or didn't...
{{http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-1-dEsiW3Jhs/T99VQ-aob-I/AAAAAAAAFtI/K77sPpJrjOw/s400/2012_sf_avc_075.jpg}}
Sparkfun Recap Teaser
{{http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yEhUhVX8OqE}}
{{http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UL2_dbX97KE}}
{{http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SbsL4IThgnQ}}
Your Data Bus rover is just great. I have printed a copy of your Data Bus Nickel Tour post to help me with my own rover plans and ideas. Also, I keep reading your write-up article in Robot Magazine... very well written and informative. I have learned a lot lately from your experiences, and thanks for making the code and project details all available to others.
As you may know, I am trying to plan/design my own rover with (at present) a Wild Thumper platform. I will likely use a Propeller if I get a chassis kit from Parallax (it comes with it). But I also have an mbed and I can't believe what you have done with this on your Data Bus. Man, I have so many questions, but with time I hope to be able to wrap it all together.
Would the 8 cores of the Propeller offer anything of value over the mbed as a controller for a Wild Thumper rover? I want to use a Parallax GPS, PING sensor with rotating mount, an XBee, and some sort of stand-alone digital camera. Also, I need to incorporate some type of failsafe, like with your RoverMUX. I know you have commented on my post at the Parallax site, but if you have any additional ideas I am open to hear them! Thank you.
George Sutton
georover@outlook.com
Your Data Bus rover is just great. I have printed a copy of your Data Bus Nickel Tour post to help me with my own rover plans and ideas. Also, I keep reading your write-up article in Robot Magazine... very well written and informative. I have learned a lot lately from your experiences, and thanks for making the code and project details all available to others.
As you may know, I am trying to plan/design my own rover with (at present) a Wild Thumper platform. I will likely use a Propeller if I get a chassis kit from Parallax (it comes with it). But I also have an mbed and I can't believe what you have done with this on your Data Bus. Man, I have so many questions, but with time I hope to be able to wrap it all together.
Would the 8 cores of the Propeller offer anything of value over the mbed as a controller for a Wild Thumper rover? I want to use a Parallax GPS, PING sensor with rotating mount, an XBee, and some sort of stand-alone digital camera. Also, I need to incorporate some type of failsafe, like with your RoverMUX. I know you have commented on my post at the Parallax site, but if you have any additional ideas I am open to hear them! Thank you.
George Sutton
georover@outlook.com
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I'm elated to say that my mbed-powered autonomous vehicle, Data Bus, won 3rd place in the 2012 Sparkfun Autonomous Vehicle Competition (AVC)! Thanks, mbed!!
Last Saturday (6/16) was the annual Sparkfun Autonomous Vehicle Competition where ground and air robots run a timed race around the Sparkfun Building in Boulder. It's an awesome event to watch (if you're not stuck in the pits fixing your robot...)
My mbed runs a sensor update, estimation, control routine at 100Hz and about 20,000 lines of code. It's barely taxed. Heading estimation is accomplished with a time-lag compensated Kalman Filter that fuses GPS heading and gyro heading rate data. Top speed was 20mph and 37.16 seconds around the building. Official results:
1st Place: Team 0x27, 2.08 seconds (hoop time deduction; raw 22.08 sec) 2nd Place: Team Minuteman, 9.46 seconds (hoop; raw 39.46 sec) 3rd Place: Team Databus, 37.16 seconds (no hoop)
Top speed of my robot was 20mph with an estimated cross-track error of about 1 meter after the 270m course.
The ground winner, Team 0x27, 1/5 scale buggy
Pics my friend Susan took
Here's a write-up of my experiences Saturday
More detail about my robot
I am collecting AVC videos on this playlist
If it wasn't hard enough to build a robot to drive itself 270 meters around the narrow parking lot of a large building, giant red barrels were added on the first leg. A hoop was situated in the center of the path; robots passing through it earn a 30 second time deduction.
But a misstep a few meters later could land a robot off the curb and down into the pond! If the robot makes it this far, on the next leg, curbs jut out waiting to grind unlucky bots to a halt and, surviving this obstacle a giant pothole awaits robots as they approach the last turn.
I counted 34 ground vehicles out of 50 entrants that actually made it to the event. Of those I think something like 7 or 8 made it around the building. As for the air vehicles (doing this in three dimensions isn't just 3 times harder) I have no clue how many made it or didn't...
Sparkfun Recap Teaser