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Home » Drones » How Does That Grab Ya?

How Does That Grab Ya?

Ever tried one of those mechan­i­cal cranes where you try to pick up a teddy bear? They look easy but theyre next to impos­si­ble because mechan­i­cal manip­u­la­tors are so awk­ward at han­dling irreg­u­lar objects. But this week in New Scientist I report on a new DARPA devel­op­ment which will make robots a lot more dex­trous.
Oct3small.jpg
DARPAs OCTOR (sOft robotiC manip­u­la­TORs) pro­gram is build­ing a new type of robot limb pat­terned after an ele­phants trunk or octo­pus arm. Its flex­i­ble, fast, and can han­dle frag­ile objects and reach into nar­row spaces, as well as cop­ing with a range of dif­fer­ent sizes, as this 55 Mb video shows The cur­rent Octarms use an indus­trial Pentium proces­sor board and a 24-volt electro-pneumatic pres­sure sys­tem. They are mainly built with off-the-shelf com­po­nents, with much of the work going into mod­el­ling the behav­iour of the sys­tem and design­ing soft­ware for kine­mat­ics (move­ment con­trol), and the oper­a­tor inter­face.
The strength of the arm is gov­erned by actu­a­tor pres­sure and diam­e­ter. The cur­rent Octarm is pneu­matic and works at 60 psi, but in prin­ci­ple a 2000 psi hydraulic sys­tem would be pos­si­ble which would be far more pow­er­ful. The design is scaleable; small six-inch Octarms have been built, and a 20-foot ten­ta­cle is cer­tainly pos­si­ble — all it would take is fund­ing. A vehicle-mounted Octarm capa­ble of tear­ing down walls or shift­ing rub­ble would be worth see­ing
A team includ­ing Bill Kier from the University of North Carolina and Roger Hanlon from the Marine Biological Laboratory pro­vided the bio­log­i­cal research behind the Octarm. They found that octo­pus arms in nature have trans­verse and lon­gi­tu­di­nal mus­cles as well as two sets of helically-wound mus­cles which spi­ral around the arm, giv­ing the abil­ity to shorten, lengthen, rotate or bend at nearly any angle.
The taper also bor­rowed from the octo­pus — means it can reach into nar­row spaces, and helps with han­dling objects of many sizes. Small objects can be grasped with the thin end sec­tion of the Octarm, with larger and heav­ier objects the thicker and more pow­er­ful base sec­tions come into play. Existing manip­u­la­tors tend to me lim­ited in the range of sizes they can deal with because their grip­pers can only open to a cer­tain width.
Hanlon and col­leagues are work­ing on fur­ther improve­ments to the Octarm, using a range of bio­log­i­cal mod­els for inspi­ra­tion, so later ver­sions may take advan­tage of refine­ments observed in ani­mal sys­tems.
Octlogo.jpg
The lat­est demon­stra­tion fea­tured an Octarm mounted on a Talon robot car­ry­ing out a vari­ety of tasks, includ­ing retriev­ing a dummy and work­ing under­wa­ter. Military appli­ca­tions may include recon­nais­sance (theres a cam­era at the end of the Octarm) and IED dis­posal, but there are host of civil appli­ca­tions where Octarms should be able to out­per­form exist­ing designs.
The Octarm project is another one of DARPAs Biodynotics biologically-inspired robot­ics pro­grams, and its inter­est­ing to see how lever­ag­ing tech­niques per­fected in nature brings rapid improve­ments in robot­ics. Its also inter­est­ing to see how much of this is led by the mil­i­tary. This fol­lows the same path as early com­put­ing described in my book Weapons Grade, which shows how the mil­i­tary were respon­si­ble for intro­duc­ing major inno­va­tions in both hard­ware and soft­ware includ­ing dig­i­tal elec­tronic com­put­ing and the sil­i­con chip.
Octarm joins other well-publicized cre­ations like the BigDog pro­to­type for a robotic mule , Carnegie Mellons snake­bot and DARPAs robot fly­ing insects and RoboLobster — and I can guar­an­tee more some even more sur­pris­ing inno­va­tions where these came from. Stay tuned!
– David Hambling.

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May 14th, 2006 | Drones | 321928 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2006/05/14/how-does-that-grab-ya/How+Does+That+Grab+Ya%3F2006-05-14+19%3A43%3A07jason You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

« « Rapid Fire 05/12/06 (Updated) | NSA: Not So Tough? » »

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  1. Dr Octopus says:
    May 16, 2006 at 8:34 am

    Nice logo, but I’m still suing.

    Reply
  2. GuildWars Gold says:
    August 12, 2008 at 8:07 pm

    Initial con­tact this game, I did not very like. Since find good rea­son to release point, I also began to like it. Every day after work, I always go to play this game. Perhaps lit­tle girls will like me, in order to give went to all I like it. I dull play­ing a few weeks, very few speak to peo­ple and I have 26 lev­els and also I earn a lit­tle GuildWars Gold.

    Reply
  3. rappelz gold says:
    August 12, 2008 at 8:31 pm

    I rec­og­nized her is an occa­sional, When I was just upgrade and earn rap­pelz gold. She also just through, and she is a new player, she saw me my num­ber is high. So she asked me how to play. And I said I was a bad peo­ple, I asked if did you not heard in this game. She said she heard, but she did not believe. I smiled. So I took her to play, I told her how to play, how to upgrade.

    Reply
  4. ro zeny says:
    August 13, 2008 at 9:34 pm

    The friend took me to the game, but she own was leav­ing the game. A per­son to game is bor­ing, every day, I only know to upgrade and earn ro zeny. I can not sad dot this mess of feel­ings and mov­ing. Once, the two boys for me quar­reled utterly, until I leaved and tool sad. Later, I found a boy to mar­ried, I think per­haps all this to change, and I pray to become a real­ity, a few days after he dis­ap­peared. A per­son was play­ing a mar­riage num­ber, what would it have taken place.

    Reply
  5. rappelz rupees says:
    August 13, 2008 at 9:41 pm

    Three years ago, after friends intro­duced, I played the Rappelz game. At that time, I dazed and con­fused, I like to go my own way, I have a lot of rap­pelz rupees, but I became the most evil vil­lains in the game. Until I encoun­tered her, I found the mean­ing of survival.

    Reply

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