Dwayne was designed and built for the 2025 FRC game entitled Reefscape. It has a three-stage telescopic arm that pivots off of a rather hefty shoulder joint, and has a pivoting head on the end that can accept and spit the game pieces in either direction. The entire bot rests on an aluminum frame and multidirectional drivetrain. It also features a state-of-the-art "Waggly RSL" (Robot Signaling Light), where the required orange blinking light is mounted on a spring, bringing joy to competitors, allies, and officials.
Hank-enstein was an offseason project during 2024. It got it's name from being a Frankenstein of a bot, made from parts of both Hank and Michael. It features dual air compressors and a dedicated battery to feed Hank's revolving cannon and the all-new recovered train horn, as as well a separate battery as the omnidirectional drivetrain and steel chassis from Michael.
Rodger was built for the 2024 FRC game entitled Crescendo, featuring a pivoting head to fire the notes (the orange foam ring game pieces) with hooks for climbing capabilities.
This bot unfortunately experienced a significant collision during the playoffs of our final event that year, bending the aluminum chassis more than 20° upwards into a banana shape.
With a welded steel base, a six-foot-long aluminum arm multidirectional drivetrain, and an AI vision system this is our most Advanced Robot yet. It was built for The FRC 2023 event Charged Up. This robot allowed us to beat some of the highest-ranked teams in the state and allowed us to achieve the highest place we have ever been in the finals.
This was an off-season project that the team put together in 2022 to educate our members and to help with outreach among the student body. This bot was used at our school events like the Halloween parade, basketball games, and football games.
This bot was our project for the FRC Rapid React competition. Adapted from our bot from a few years ago, Matthew was prepared for the challenges that awaited it at competitions, placing our team at 201st in the state, the highest spot we have ever reached so far.
This was our season robot for the FRC competition Infinite Recharge. This was the last robot built in our old shop room and was unfortunately only able to compete once out of it's three planned due to COVID-19 restrictions. Although not named in its competitive prime, it has been posthumously named Themis.
This was our season robot for the FRC competition Deep Space.