Anyone know where to post the votes?
Quote from: GoldenFox93 on August 09, 2011, 04:36:06 PMAnyone know where to post the votes?sheeppaper[nospam]@gmail.com Remove the [nospam]
No american bots Vert?
Voting is closed, the results will likely follow later today 6 hours. Mark commented that he was getting a lot more ballots from the UK than hte US. I don't know if the US ever caught up, but based on that information, here are my predictions:New inductees:Professor ChaosMaelstromBig NipperWarrior SKFHonourable Mention:ExplosionThor/MetanoriaRipperAnticideGyrobotUpheaval
Honorable Mention 2011:Anticide - The dominant UK antweight, Andrew Hibberd's tiny flipper claims to be the most successful ant of all time. The chassis was made on a 3-D 'printer'. Successes include three consecutive Antweight Fighting Robot World Series wins.Gyrobot - This odd antweight has no wheels, legs, or treads. It moves by inducing a gyroscopic reaction in its vertical spinning blade to tilt the robot from side to side and rotate by precession! Builders love strange designs.Kronic - A full-pressure heavyweight flipper from the UK with a long record of success: 2005 Roaming Robots champion, 2006 International Challenge winner, 2010 Team Bud Challenge champion, and Fighting Robots Annihilator champion for 2010 and 2011.Warrior SKF - Another oddball design beloved by builders. This Team Whyachi heavyweight flipper is powered by energy stored in a horizontal spinning ring. It's an intersting alternative to pneumatic flipper power, but hard on the flipper clutch!
The Master - Inducted 2011: The original 'thwackbot', The Master was a pioneer in interchangeable weaponry and the 'all in the wheels' drive train. Weapon modules included a grinding wheel, a lifter, and a long chain 'whip'. Mark Setrakian was co-winner of the 1995 Robot Wars heavyweight title with this creation, and it continued to compete for many years. Record: 8 wins, 4 losses.
Professor Chaos - Inducted 2011: The middleweight terror from WPI Combat Robotics has ruled the middleweight class in the U.S. since its first tournament in 2008 and has pummeled the top robots in the division. Record: 14 wins / 2 losses.