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Industrial Robot Arm Becomes Giant Catapult
Posted by
Soulskill
on Thu Jan 17, 2008 10:28 PM
from the excellent-gift-ideas dept.
from the excellent-gift-ideas dept.
wintersynth brings us a story about a group of enthusiasts who made a catapult out of a 2,800lb industrial robot arm. They used it to launch bowling balls, fireballs, and cans of beer toward a stationary target, and they controlled the catapult's aim with a graphical UI on a laptop.
"I wanted to be able to control the rotation of the robot so we could aim the robot from the laptop, but I quickly realized that since the desert is so flat, we could do some basic ranging on the target too. I also wanted the targeting to be overlaid in 3d over a photograph of the target area. The software needed to control the robot like an MMO or RTS game. I suspect that video games, in general, have some of the most optimal control interfaces. I wanted to try a control scheme similar to the area effect spell targeting in World of Warcraft."
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Games: Using a Treadmill and Wiimotes To Run and Fly in <em>Aion</em> 86 comments
MMO fans may recall news from last year when a treadmill was hooked into World of Warcraft so players could run in real life to make their characters run, getting exercise while playing. Now, with the release of Aion, which features characters with wings, the makers of the Robopult decided to take it a step further. Reader wintersynth writes
"We hooked a treadmill and Wiimotes through BlueTooth and GlovePIE to Aion so we could take advantage of the run/fly sequences and get fit while we play the game. It's kind of like interval training, which is supposed to burn more fat and be better for cardio. It's too tough to play this way all the time, but for a quest a day, it might be perfect."
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double entendre (Score:5, Funny)
And it's all thanks to the second amendment.
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And it's all thanks to the second amendment.
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Re:double entendre (Score:5, Insightful)
[1] [wikipedia.org] [2] [wikipedia.org] [3] [wikipedia.org] [4] [wikipedia.org]
Parent
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"The right of the people to keep and bear arms." implies personal firearms.... not the sort that would be solely used in large-scale warfare.
Landmines, on the other hand, would seem to fall into the same category as handguns, as the victim more often than not has no idea that his opponent is armed, or that he's even in danger. I fail to see a reason for those to exist.
Although I do respect the fo
Re:double entendre (Score:4, Insightful)
Does "the president" need to DROP NUKES on The Continental US of A before people WAKE UP and DO SOMETHING?
Or do you all think that "having a vietnam war" in the middle of the desert is in the interests of the general populace?
Parent
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Landmines by themselves will usually kill only wandering civilians and stray dogs. The enemy is clever enough to figure out that landmines exist and might be planted somewhere, and as soon as they discover a minefield they'll find a way to avoid being killed by it.
Landmines, in conjunction with other defenses, are extremely effective. For example, if the North Korean army were to swarm south across the DMZ, they would come under heavy machinegun fire, and would lack the time and ability to safely go throug
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As long as kids and farmers will keep loosing limbs or worse in past conflict zones, no I won't understand. It's not because in one case they are used in a well defined DMZ that their existence is justified.
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http://www.armedforces.co.uk/army/listings/l0066.html#MINE%20CLEARANCE [armedforces.co.uk]
" The Python has the ability to clear a much longer safe' lane than its predecessor. It is also faster to bring into action and far more accurate. It can clear a path up to 230m long and 7m wide through which vehicles can then safely pass.
The system works by firing a single rocket from a newly designed launcher mounted on a trailer which has been towed to the edge of the mined
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Try living right next to Stalinist/Soviet/Putinist Russia for a while and the idea of putting booby traps between them and you starts getting a certain appeal.
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I suggest you read "Common Sense" [gutenberg.org] by Thomas Paine.
"If premiums were to be given to merchants, to build and employ in their service ships mounted with twenty, thirty, forty or fifty guns, (the premiums to be in proportion to the loss of bulk to the merchants) fifty or sixty of those ships, with a few guardships on constant duty, would keep up a sufficient navy, and that without burdening
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Re:double entendre (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
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Uhm, in the US, neither the Constitution nor government "grant" rights; they eixst and are the people's independent of either. The people give the government certain powers; and we can argue what those are and how broad they are, but that's different than teh people's rights.
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Rights are not granted by the constitution or any government, they are supposedly protected by the government.
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It's not a catapult. (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:It's not a catapult. (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:It's not a catapult. (Score:5, Interesting)
There were non-counterweight trebuchets as well, called "traction" trebuchets. Instead of a counterweight you had a number of people tugging on ropes. I had one based on this model built for me for SCA combat as the result of a siege engine competition (Stormhold) some years ago. 60-90 metre throws with a cargo of softballs was customary with a 6 metre composite rattan arm. One advantage of a traction trebuchet is it's more mobile as you don't need to score or drag a tonne or so of counterweight along to the launch site.
So to stay on topic, I think you could call the robot arm a form of trebuchet. I've not seen onagers with slings in my researches though, will look for that. Onagers btw were so named because of the bucking motion they make, mitigated by curved ends of their foundation rails. Onager = Donkey in Latin. They were also called "rocking donkeys".
And another name for Ballista could be "ZOMG Look at the size of that effing crossbow!". They didn't always use rocks, some of them used mucking great iron bolts.
Parent
Re:It's not a catapult OR a trebuchet (Score:2, Informative)
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Those are AC servo motors. From the colour of the robot and be blurry photos I think it's a KUKA KR 150-2 K [kuka.com] or something similar.
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Let me be the first (Score:4, Funny)
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I can see the future now, and you DON'T want to be (Score:5, Funny)
Graphical UI (Score:5, Funny)
HD Camera (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure some people will defend this tactic, but its stuff like this that causes awesome return policies at stores to be restricted, and prices to go up. (as recently happened at CostCo)
I can't believe they posted that tidbit on the site...
Re:HD Camera (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, I was pissed at them when I read this too. I hope that when Fry institutes a 20% open-box charge on returns, that everybody look this guy up and send him a thank you note. Wrapped around a bowling ball.
Parent
Re:HD Camera (Score:5, Interesting)
I felt absolutely no remorse returning that thing. I know, that still doesn't make it right, because we didn't know that going into it. But I hope it is at least a mitigating factor. Plus, I give Fry's tons of (non-"rented") business, and their awesome return policy is a big part of the reason.
Parent
Re:HD Camera (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
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You don't exactly see them sitting out on the street every day....
Calculon proves even robot arms can move up (Score:4, Funny)
Omg (Score:2)
Oh I can see it coming... "OMG fsking WALL HAX N00BZ!" ...shouted right before you get shelled by 16 pound bowling balls. :(
yes but can it fling.... (Score:2)
Catapult? (Score:5, Funny)
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correct timing of motors (Score:2)
Ah, memories... (Score:4, Interesting)
But that incident, among others, spurred work to develop collision detection. They finally got some software running on the DSPs that'd estimate what the current to the motors should be, and measure what it actually was; too big a difference and the robot would halt. And then comes the fun part...
I got to test it.
For six months, my paid job was to take huge industrial robots and bang them into things.
I'm pure software now, and it's fun and pays better... but I still think about those days with fondness.
Not the first robot to fling something. (Score:5, Interesting)
The way you protect workers from getting killed by a robot (and these things are way stronger than you think, even after seeing it fling rocks) is to put up light curtains around the robot.
The OSHA safe stopping distance calculation is used to prove that the hazardous motion will stop in the time it takes the person to traverse the light curtain and come into contact with the equipment.
So, the safety folks find the robot with the biggest, fastest moving load on the line--the floorpan skin transfer robot. A floorpan skin is basically a sixty-pound razor blade.
The end effector held onto the floorpan skin with suction cups, which are a cost-effective and reliable method for the process.
The robot guys set up a test, where they got all 6 axes of the robot moving in such a manner that the end effector achieved its maximum possible speed.
Not something you'd normally do, but a worst-case scenario for use as safety systems challenge.
We all wanted to see this robot haul ass, so the safety folks had us all standing back...
Robot dude picked up the TP and initiated the path at 100% speed...
Somebody waited for the arm to get to full extension and speed...and stuck their hand into the light curtain.
The robot stopped almost instantly--well within the expected stopping distance.
No way that person would have been injured by the robot.
The skin (remember the sixty-pound razor blade) stopped a couple bays over.
Hard clamps were added to the end effector and the test was repeated with improved results.
Re:I for one... (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
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