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Drive Team·Lesson 3 of 34

What Makes a Great Drive Team

Meet the five people behind the controls and learn the habits that turn a capable robot into a winning one.

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The robot is only half of it

A well-built robot still loses if the people running it panic, miscommunicate, or freeze. The drive team is the small group physically operating the robot during a match, and a sharp drive team can out-compete a better robot driven poorly. The skills that make them good, communication, composure, and preparation, are all learnable.

Who's on a drive team

A drive team is up to 5 people from the same team, and no more than one may be a non-student, so a mentor can fill at most one role. The roles:

  • Driver. Controls the robot's movement around the field. Needs smooth, deliberate control and strong field awareness.
  • Operator. Controls the mechanisms, intakes, arms, shooters, elevators. Works in tight sync with the driver, often acting before being asked.
  • Human Player. Stationed at a field element, handling game pieces by hand (feeding pieces or scoring at a station). Exact duties change with the game.
  • Drive Coach. The strategist. Watches the whole field, calls the plan, talks to alliance partners between matches, and keeps the team calm. This is usually the role a mentor fills.
  • Technician. Handles pre-match setup, robot connection, and Driver Station troubleshooting before and after the match, but does not operate the robot during play.

What separates great from good

  1. Communication. Constant, short callouts: "intake jammed," "go for the climb," "defender on your left." Quiet drive teams lose track of the field.
  2. Composure. Staying level when a mechanism breaks or the match goes sideways. Panicked inputs cause more failures than hardware does.
  3. Field awareness. Tracking the whole field, partners, opponents, and the clock, not just your own robot.
  4. Reps. Great drivers have run hundreds of practice cycles. Muscle memory is built before the event, not during it.
  5. Gracious Professionalism. FIRST's core value: compete hard, treat partners and opponents with respect. Alliances form fast and your reputation travels.

Preparation beats talent

  • Read the game manual and know that match's bonus objectives before you step to the field.
  • Run a pre-match checklist: battery charged and secured, robot connected to the Driver Station, controls verified. This is mostly the technician's job, but everyone should know it.
  • Scout partners and opponents so the coach can build a realistic plan.
  • Debrief after every match in one quick conversation: what worked, what to fix.

Know your battery

Commands flow from your controllers through the Driver Station laptop to the robot's roboRIO over the field network. If the battery sags too far under heavy load, the roboRIO browns out (below roughly 6.3–6.8V) and cuts motor outputs to protect itself, the robot goes sluggish, then resets. A fully charged, well-secured battery is the cheapest match you'll ever win. A driver who recognizes a brownout can report it instead of blaming their own driving.

Bottom line

Drive teams are made, not born. Communicate constantly, stay calm, prepare relentlessly, and respect everyone on the field.

Key takeaways

  • A drive team is up to 5 people, with at most one non-student, filling driver, operator, human player, coach, and technician roles.
  • The driver controls movement, the operator controls mechanisms, and they must work in tight sync.
  • Communication, composure, and field awareness separate great drive teams from merely capable ones.
  • Preparation (manual knowledge, pre-match checklist, scouting, debriefs) reliably beats raw talent.
  • Understanding basics like battery brownouts and the Driver Station connection helps drivers diagnose problems instead of misreading them.

Lesson quiz

Required

Answer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.

1.What is the main difference between the driver and the operator?

2.What is a battery 'brownout' and why should a driver care?

3.Under current rules, how many non-students may serve on a drive team?

Answer every question to submit.