Half-Blood-Princess wrote:
We have a track/rail on our ramp, with a small guide wheel on the front and back of our vehicle that rides the it down. Works okay, a few days ago we noticed it lifting the front wheels off the ramp... which was very bad of course =/ But we got it mostly fixed
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That's a good way to get tracking with low friction. Lifting the front wheels sounds like the front guide wheel is/was mounted in front ot the front axle. If so, as you go into your transition curve, distance down to the ramp surface will reduce (from what you have in flat section), pushing the wheel up. If mounted directly under the axle, that distance won't change in a curve. You may have figured that out already......
We got the gravity supercharger working at full power over the weekend for the first time; some new dilithium crystals arrived by shuttlecraft; a little more speed now. 5 days to Regionals
sachleen wrote:
You could also use the release mechanism to hold the car straight and in the same position every time. Maybe have the flat rear of the car against the mechanism so you really just have to push it up against it and it'll get lined up. Has anyone tried anything like that?
Edit:
Also, don't you think there could be instances where a slight misalignment with the rail system cause the car to slow down a lot and miss the target distance? The whole point of the rail is to prevent this, but if it was slightly off the rail would try to correct it but we also use long cars that don't turn easily and that would just slow it down. In cases like that, you'd rather have the car be off the center a bit than not go very far.
Using the release mechanism as a consistent position holder is indeed a very good, and easy to implement way to get some alignment. On rail misalignment, as long as the rail is a) straight, b) aligned along the "fall line (the "straight way down - line a marble would take), and c) the guides that track the rail are aligned with the wheels (so the car's not "crabbing- the wheels not trying to run a different line than the rail runs), the interaction of rail and guides will be minimal.