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by Max_aaa 2601 days ago
This is basically pavement wear-leveling. Wonder how much more life they can get from this.

I would also imagine the next generation could include using thinner pavement where they know that the robots would never go through, as this should drastically save on material.

2 comments

I'd say probably a lot depending on just how much they move the containers around. For an off the cuff calculation considering just the wear from containers we can take the support pads as being 6 inches (larger than real life) there's ~78 pad lengths between it and the far end pad that are untouched in an unmoving stack and if we move it sideways as well there's ~14 so that's just shy of 1100 spots each pad could rest that aren't used under a static container stack. This does ignore the wear from the tires of the movers but it's a quick illustration of all the space underneath the containers that can be wasted.
This planning has hidden costs for other operations though. At my university they where not allowed to move certain equipment whole or even at all through some corridors, as that sort of thinking on the new building had rendered it basically unsafe for usage.

If in doubt over engineer. When handling use cases be in doubt.