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The 27400 SumoBot Robot by Parallax is a competition-ready robot designed within the Northwest Robot Mini-Sumo Tournament rules. If you think one robot is interesting, wait until you see two of them battling for control Sumo-style. This little pusher will locate and knock its opponent right out of the ring while detecting the outside circle should an escape move be necessary.
The electronics consists of a surface-mounted BASIC Stamp 2 module and infrared sensors to detect your opponent and the edge of the Sumo Ring. The hardware package includes the black anodized aluminum chassis and scoop, servo motors, wheels, 4AA power pack (batteries not included) mounting standoffs and screws. The documentation takes you from basic moves to one-on-one combat. The general topics introduced in the SumoBot Manual are as follows:
- Basic SumoBot locomotion under program control
- Edge avoidance and opponent detection based on a variety of sensor inputs
- Navigation opponent seeking using programmed artificial intelligence
Each topic is addressed in an introductory format designed to impart a conceptual understanding along with some hands-on experience.
Quantity and Description of Parallax SumoBot contents:
- (1) SumoBot Board with surface-mounted BS2
- (2) QTI Sensor
- (1) Parallax Screwdriver
- (1) Chassis, SumoBot
- (1) Front Scoop, SumoBot"
- (2) Wheel, Plastic, 2.58 Dia, .3 W
- (4) Rubber Band Tire
- (1) Battery holder, 4cell, AA, leads
- (1) SumoBot Manual
- (2) Res, CF, 5%, 1/4W, 470 Ohm
- (1) CD ROM, Parallax software and documentation
- (1) LED-GREEN-T 3/4
- (2) LED-Infrared - T1 3/4
- (1) LED-Red - T1 3/4
- (2) IR Receiver
- (2) LED Standoff
- (2) LED Light Shield
- (1) Serial Cable
- (1) 3 inch Jumper Wires (1 Bag of 10)
- (2) Servo Extension Cable (10 inches)
- (1) Piezo Sound Generators
- (2) Continuous Rotation Servo (Futaba)
- Assortment of screws, washers, and standoffs
Find more SumoBot activities in the Stamps in Class text
Apllied Robotics with the SumoBot (see related products section below)
, including friction analysis, self-calibrating sensors, memory optimization with multipurpose variables and a sensor flags register, and state-machine diagrams for sensor-based navigation. EEPROM data logging lets you record your robot's sensor and program states during a match, then display them afterward in the BASIC Stamp Editor's Debug Terminal - an excellent way to troubleshoot and analyze the performance of your program strategies.
Hold your wrestling matches on the durable 36 x 36 in the
Sumo Bot Ring Competition Poster (see below), designed to use with the instructions and programs included in Applied Robotics with the SumoBot.
An assembled SumoBot with 4 AA alkaline batteries weighs 0.8 lbs (0.36 kg), has a 10 cm square footprint, and is less than 10cm tall. The PCB is 76 mm square, and the Serial connector projects 5mm beyond the rear edge of the board.
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