OmniTread: A serpentine robot 150
karvind writes "Physorg is running a story about OmniTread: a serpentine robot designed to traverse extremely difficult terrain, such as the rubble of a collapsed building. The 26-pound robot is developed at the University of Michigan U-M College of Engineering. It moves by rolling, log-style, or by lifting its head or tail, inchworm-like, and muscling itself forward. Link to videos. Check out there other robots as well."
Crikey! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Clarification of how this works (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Clarification of how this works (Score:1)
Re:Clarification of how this works (Score:2)
It's pretty simple actually (Score:3, Funny)
cool (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:cool (Score:4, Funny)
Great, just what I need... SUVs crawling over my house at night.
Re:cool (Score:1)
Re:cool (Score:1)
Re:cool (Score:1)
Great! So now we'll get SUV who'll gladly climb over any VW bugs unfortunate enough to be in its path. The SUV will handle the situation just fine, but the VW bug will be slightly flatter than before!
Re:cool (Score:2)
Re:cool (Score:1)
Serpentine Sheldon! (Score:2, Funny)
From "The In-Laws," possibly the best Peter Falk movie ever, right next to "The Great Race."
Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:1)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:2)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:1)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:1)
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:2)
George Lucas really embellished his balls in that one.
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:1)
Lea
Re:Spheres with tentacles are better (Score:2)
I know this is off-topic but... (Score:1)
Re:I know this is off-topic but... (Score:2)
Re:I know this is off-topic but... (Score:2)
At first I thought you were kidding. Something along the lines of...
Slashdot's Hardware Section [gizmodo.com]
I read both (and others) daily and seems like at least one thing from Gizmodo shows up on the front page here per day. Nothing wrong with that, but when I'm bored and trying to find new "news" and other interesting things, it's just a drag to see the same thing proliferated across sites.
Re:I know this is off-topic but... (Score:1)
So you're not the only one.
Re:I know this is off-topic but... (Score:1)
A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:1, Redundant)
Can I suggest to the editors that if you know you are linking to a video, you simply place a link to a mirror there as well.
Having said that, the site is holding up remarkably well - I've still got 14kb/s..... uh oh 13..... 12..... damn.
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:1)
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:1)
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:2)
that was eecs.umich.edu. eecs is probably some dual pII in a closet somewhere. It serves up static pages, mostly for internal usage.
engin.umich.edu is a bunch of heavy iron suns. Probably right now there are more than a few instances of matlab and some simv procs running
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:1)
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:1)
I've been going through the archives, and I found a dupe of the story, but not the actual one (unless comments got ripped
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:1)
By god, my school isin't the only one then, I could not for the life of me figure out why my school bought such shitty software from them. Apparently my school wasn't the only one scammed by their PR.
Peoplesoft = worse web apps I have ever had the displeasure to use.
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:1)
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:2)
Re:A 40MB file on slashdot. (Score:1)
I wonder (Score:2, Insightful)
It is obviously made of 5 (reasonably) identical parts, but I wonder if you can (in theory) make a robot of this type as longs as you want just by `tacking' on a new section (of course this ignores drive train problems).
Re:I wonder (Score:1)
Re:I wonder (Score:4, Insightful)
It actually wouldn't be too hard to give each section its own motor and power supply. The connection between each section would include an umbilical capable of transmitting data, and perhaps even extra voltage if one of the power units (batteries) was not providing sufficient power. At that point, operation of the robot becomes a software issue; how do you program each pod with identical software that can all work together as a cohesive whole, in real time? If all of the individual components are identical but work flawlessly together, at almost any length, then theoretically the robot could add more sections or shed damaged ones without compromising functionality. Specialized sections could also be attached to the front and/or rear, for digging, drilling, collecting, clearing, bomb dismantling, carrying, or anything else you can think of.
I noticed in the video that the crew was using a remote to control the robot. (I also noticed the distinct lack of any purposeful log-rolling, contrary to what the editor said--but I digress.) Ideally, of course, such remote operation would not be needed. Crews using the robots--rescue teams, bomb squads, recovery missions--should be able to just tell the robot, "hey, go explore over there. We'll be watching on the monitors, and you tell us if you find anything." The locomotion of the robot would then be completely automated, based on a set of instructions (one of a library of scripts, maybe; use the "find and bring out bomb" script, or the "search for human survivors" script), with the operator just gathering data, and perhaps taking manual control if needed.
Re:I wonder (Score:1)
theoretically the robot could add more sections or shed damaged ones without compromising functionality
This is how PARC's modular robots worked, which is the really cool part. The modules could be snapped apart and then reassembled into a different-shaped robot. Some models could even reconfigure the [parc.com]
Re:I wonder (Score:2)
On-board power is definitely not easy, both because it takes a lot of power to move that much robot around and because batteries make the robot heavier (and larger), which makes the problem even worse.
I'm assuming your housemate was working on the plastic polybot modules, which were run off of an offboard processing board, or one of the cubic or rhombic models. The G2 hardware had a CAN bus and onboard processin
Re:I wonder (Score:1)
They showed a prototype of this in that documentary "The Core." They were able to travel to the center of the Earth and restart the core's spin, thus saving Earth!
Eat your heart out, Jules Verne!
Re:I wonder (Score:2, Informative)
How modular the design is. It is obviously made of 5 (reasonably) identical parts, but I wonder if you can (in theory) make a robot of this type as longs as you want just by `tacking' on a new section
If you go into the slideshow on the site, there's an image [umich.edu] of the robot composed of 7 sections instead of 5.
Ooh, snake! A snake! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ooh, snake! A snake! (Score:2)
WolverwineWolverineWolverine....
It's so simple. (Score:3, Informative)
At least we haven't slashdotted the server yet... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:At least we haven't slashdotted the server yet. (Score:2, Funny)
No, you probably won't. COE at Michigan has what is technically termed "phat pipe", and the main web servers are more than capable of handling your piddly little Slashdot attack.
YOU ARE HITTING THE MAIN WEBSERVERS FOR A 40,000 STUDENT UNIVERSITY WITH 10,000 ENGINEERING STUDENTS. Slashdotting? Unlikely. It'd be like slashdotting Sun.
Re:At least we haven't slashdotted the server yet. (Score:1)
Memory Shape Alloys (Score:4, Interesting)
Really the only thing I have seen using this form of memory-shape alloys is just for hobbyist projects, nothing serious. Granted there are some problems to overcome, such as duty cycles and heat dissipation. But most of these could be solved, I have looked into them. On larger scale projects the cost could be prohibitive though.
The value as I see memory-shape alloys over motors, is that it is almost a solid-state actuator. There really is no moving parts that can wear, other than the alloy itself. And these memory-shape alloys have a very high force/weight ratio - thus making the bulk of most robotics not a function of locomotion.
Re:Memory Shape Alloys (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Memory Shape Alloys (Score:2)
People are still working on artificial muscles though, and hopefully
Re:Memory Shape Alloys (Score:1)
ed2k link of the movie (Score:2, Informative)
remember to remove the spaces
ed2k://|file|OmniTread.SwRI-7min.320x240 x30.wmv|39219440|00C932FF9AD4D798E92C05D9869EE323
serpentine movement suggestion (Score:3, Insightful)
Only the treads that are touching the ground should
move. The others moving in air are wasted motion. That does not seem efficient.
Re:serpentine movement suggestion (Score:4, Insightful)
- Eliminates complicated gearing
- Every part that can come in contact with a surface has full torque
And when you are tethered to a cable anyways, and not run on battery power, you probably don't have to worry as much about efficiency.
Re:serpentine movement suggestion (Score:1)
Re:serpentine movement suggestion (Score:2)
Perhaps you could do the same.
Mouse vs Snake? (Score:2)
I thought Remote control mice [nationalgeographic.com] were taking that job.
Re:Mouse vs Snake? (Score:1)
Obligatory bash.org quote (Score:5, Funny)
it collects data about the surrounding environment, then discards it and drives into walls
-Dracken
Hurray, I'm saved (Score:1)
Virtually unstoppable? (Score:1)
Slick. Wonder if.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Slick. Wonder if.. (Score:2)
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/news/releases/
Missing Part! (Score:1)
More like a caterpillar (Score:5, Informative)
I've sat through many talks about modular robots that are supposed to be able to do everything, yet rarely do anything well at all (I come from a lab doing what I guess you'd call "specialized monolithic" robots). I think this robot is just specialized enough to be useful (using its treads). The walking snake like robots are normally agonizingly slow, but this robot moves at a reasonable speed for the type of applications you'd need it for. Also, tracks should scale up in speed reasonably well if needed.
Re:More like a caterpillar (Score:1)
Re:More like a caterpillar (Score:2)
My first thought... (Score:2)
What about controls? (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, does it know which way is up and readjust or do you have to figure that out after it rolls?
Re:What about controls? (Score:2)
... read the article, started watching the video (Score:1, Troll)
Regards,
John
Syd Mead (Score:2)
I came across this a few days ago, seemed vaguely related conceptually.
Snakebots are very fragile! (Score:5, Interesting)
Snakebots are very fragile. Many times a section would break after a few hours demostration. Jer was working on making each section more modular and easier to build. Apparently the main goal of snakebots for many research labs are for providing demostrations (read: grantbots) and giving new grad students something to do. ;-)
Re:Snakebots are very fragile! (Score:2)
A short overview of polybot hardware:
http://www2.parc.com/spl/projects/modr o
Re:Snakebots are very fragile! (Score:1)
Read the fine-print: the videos are played at twice the speed...
This is reminiscent of... (Score:1)
Polybot (Score:1)
Re:Polybot (Score:1)
And from the looks of the CMU site [cmu.edu] linked to above, their project is heavily based on this PARC work.
"Rolling like a log" (Score:1)
Don't try this at home (Score:2)
Re:Don't try this at home (Score:2)
It is just urban legend, but I have heard that some schools make
Weight distribution among segments? (Score:2, Interesting)
Such position looks as if it would only be possible if "head" is substantially heavyer than "tail" (or else it would tip backwards). However, the doc states that the middle segment is the heavyest. Or does it also have the means of pumping liquid for one end segment to the other to achieve more optimal weight distribution? In any cas
Re:Weight distribution among segments? (Score:1)
Re:Weight distribution among segments? (Score:1)
But since the two 'head' segments are nearly horizontal, and the two 'tail' segments are diagonal, the 'head' segments extend their mass further away from the tilt point, and thus shift the center of gravity to the 'head' of the robot.
HTH
--Blerik
Re:Weight distribution among segments? (Score:1)
Oops, didn't think about this. Yes, obviously this explains it.
Cool, but... (Score:2, Informative)
Don't get me wrong. I realize this is a step forward, but the current state of robots seems so behind others.
Re:Cool, but... (Score:2)
Landed on the moon, 26 freaking years ago..
US can't even get a man into high orbit right now...
What's behind>?
News? (Score:1)
I mean: http://www.snakerobots.com/main.htm
or am missing out on something from TFA? =)
In a further development (Score:2)
Important question (Score:3, Funny)
wow! (Score:2)
Re:Purposes? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Purposes? (Score:1)
Re:What good is this "Robot"? (Score:3, Insightful)
The "bunch of wires" is probably because it's still a prototype. The finished product will be radiocontrolled, obviously (or at least I hope so).
Indeed, if you watch carefully, the "bunch of wires" would make the robot useless in real conditions: the wires would get tangled into the debris, and hold the contraption back, even though the robot by itself could cope. Many times in the video, you'll see the handlers rearranging that cable to make sure it do