Very nice, Carl! I need to neaten up WALTER’s cabling also, but that will require a complete disassembly (WALTER says NO DISASSEMBLE!) and rebuild, which I am not going to do until I have the new body decks.
Uh oh. Tell her to keep it nice now… One of the ladies here where I live named WALTER and I came up with the acronym.
When building my robots I use all kinds of pieces parts. We are fortunate to have in Orlando, SkyCraft Surplus. It is one of those places you can browse for hours and always find things you need or things you will need sometime in the future. Heck, even my wife likes going there now with me to shop.
Got a couple more things planned which I will be working on after Thanksgiving. One of the mods is pretty ‘kool’ so I will be taking a few pictures to show what I have done.
Carl
Jim, thanks much for a great product. In fact, all your kits are great and all your pieces work fantastic. Wish more businesses had your attitude about quality work.
I noticed some black rubber shock mounts in the kit that comes with the '475 servos I just bought, but it doesn’t look like they can be used with the current brackets.
I got them at SkyCraft Surplus but it is one of those items you just see in the aisles when you are browseing and shopping.
I am flying to Orlando tomorrow and plan on going to SkyCraft before we leave to go see my mom for Thanksgiving. I will try and pickup a hundred or so of the nylon inserts if they still have them.
A while back I saw a video of a hexapod that used its front legs for pincers to pick up something and carry it around. Well, I thought about that and decided I wanted to add that feature to my hexapod but how to do it was the big question. Finally, I was browsing the Lynx site and saw these pieces, lynxmotion.com/Product.aspx? … egoryID=87, Low Profile Axis kits, and new that was the ticket.
Since today is miserable outside, which means I can’t fly my helicopters, I decided it was time to add the pincers to my hexapod.
I have not finished all the code just yet but she is still walking and moving and that is a good thing.
Very creative! I guess those Low Profile Axis kits make the femur part a bit longer? But since you are working with the code (IK part…) you hopefully has it under control
Would be fun to see a video of these nice pincers in action!
Wow, Carl! That is an awesome use of the LPA. I have never used the LPA so far, but am going to have to investigate the possibilities. I have some new ideas…
Come join us at the HexaPodRobotIK group! We need you there. Be sure to edit your membership and select “Traditional” instead of “Full Featured” to cut out all the Yahoo stuff in messages.
WOW! That is really creative! This should be made into a totorial on LM so others can learn how to modify their hex’s like this. Its super cool and must be a real useful to have use of picking up objects with the front legs instead of adding an arm to the top (which can be way more expensive).
Hmmm, facinating… This might be workable with the CH3-R leg style, even to the extent of allowing for the 0.5" or so added length to the leg. If I understand how IK works, it should be possible to adjust for that in the software.
What I’d really like to know is if you can get that thing to walk on only four legs (while the two front legs are holding an object). Quads are harder to make walk because there is on weight on 2 legs at a time when walking - not to mention the weight of the object your carrying will make the robot quite front heavy and will be a challenge to distribute weight into the back more when walking.
Although, if it does work, again, it will be a neat way to be able to pick up objects with the bot without the need to add an arm or some kind of pinsers.
So when you get it to work I think we should make this a sticky or perhaps a neat totorial on the website. Its a low-cost idea that is more “life like” or animal/insect like (rather than having an arm strapped to its back)
This will be the interesting thing. Can it actually walk on four legs and balance while using the two front legs to hold something? I am positive this could be accomplished with an octapod, because then you would still have six legs for the robot to walk on while gripping with the front two.
This will be a bit if a challenge to do with four legs, but I believe it can be done.
I would love to see a tutorial such as this, and other things that would use the LPA. Now I wish I had a hexapod to tinker with.