Teams consisting of one or more competitors design and build their robots from scratch. The builders range from high-school students to retirees. Some competitors have engineering or machining experience, but many do not.
The robots themselves are not "real robots" because they are remote-controlled by the driver, instead of having an onboard computer brain. Self-controlled, or autonomous combat robots, are allowed under the rules, but are very difficult to make competitive in the complicated combat environment.
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2 Robot Design 3 External Links |
The small weight classes: Antweight (one pound), beetleweight (three pounds), hobbyweight (12 pounds), and featherweight (30 pounds). These weight classes have become popular in just the last few years, and they are cheaper and safer to build than the large weightclasses seen on TV.
The large weight classes: Lightweight (60 pounds), middleweight (120 pounds), heavyweight (220 pounds), and superheavyweight (340 pounds). The three television shows, Robotica, Robot Wars, and Battlebots, showed robots in this range.
A robot that moves by means of legs, rather than wheels, is allowed a weight advantage. Robots fight against others in the same weightclass.
Robots vary widely in shape, size, weaponry, and number of wheels. They can be made of mostly scrap metal and recycled or surplus parts, or they can have custom parts and machining and exotic materials, or anything in between. The cost of a competitive robot in the large weightclasses can be as low as $500, or it can be $50,000 or more. The average is $3000-$5000. An antweight can be made from a remote-controlled toy for twenty dollars or so.
Weight Classes
Robot Design
Some robots use combinations of weapons, such as both hammers and jaws, or a wedge with a spinning weapon on top, or a spinner at one end and a wedge at the other. There are also robots that fit no strict definition, such as snake robots.External Links