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We'll I finally made it to the halfway mark on the construction of my robot. These are just the legs and already it's over a foot tall. It may look a bit crude and unstable but actually it's quite sturdy (my cat already tried to play with it). It's made out of HS-311 servos, .030 aluminum and a lot of screws. I started making it with my MAX NC 3 axis cnc mill but I ended up just using a pair of tin snips and some elbow grease.
26-07-2005 22:11
Arefin Bari
I must say that this is one of the coolest project I have seen around in this forum. But I do have questions for you...
In the picture you are using 11 servos... if you are adding a body with arm and a head, you would add atleast another 5 servos. How are you planning on powering 16 servos to work the same. What kind of controllers would you use and why? Do you think you will need more than one controller? what kind of battery are you going to use? Don't you think it will weigh a lot which may cause it to tip over?
The legs look cool. Great job man.
26-07-2005 22:57
spears312
Cool. I tried something like that once (but w/ Lego's, needless to say, it never really "worked", per say). Have you given it a test yet and will it have a gyro sensor to detect and compensate for balance? It really want to see this thing walk! 
26-07-2005 23:04
mechanicalbrain
http://www.etek.chalmers.se/~almir/ this is also pretty cool and very similiar. i highly recomend the movie.
26-07-2005 23:26
Arefin Bari
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Originally Posted by mechanicalbrain
http://www.etek.chalmers.se/~almir/ this is also pretty cool and very similiar. i highly recomend the movie.
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27-07-2005 09:33
[527]philWe'll I've already tested it and it walks fine. I'm using a lynxmotion BASIC atom pro 24 pin module and their mini Atom bot board. I'm going to have to purchase their servo controller though because I need to control (ready for this) 19 servos. I didn't really design it to walk up stairs but it can. And I'm not using any gyros (yet), it just takes about 400,000,000,000,000,000 tries before I get the servo placements and timings right so it doesn't fall over. I plan on putting up a video of it walking, but first I have to program it. If you plan on building something like this DON"T but the BASIC atom pro + bot board, it can control 20 servos, but only 1 at a time. So lets say i want the legs to crouch and both motors need to move an equivalent of lets say 800, I have to divide it by a big number and then move each one back and forth.
IE.
SERVO 1, 5
SERVO 2, 5
SERVO 1, 5
SERVO 2, 5
etc.
O, and for the batteries, I'm just using a 9 volt battery because the BASIC atom board can take up to 9 volts and convert it to 5 volts for the micro controller and the servos.
27-07-2005 18:29
Andrew Rudolph
Ive seen videos of these kinda robots they are really impressive to watch move.
27-07-2005 18:34
mechanicalbrain
yeah i was specifically impressed with the logic programming on that robot.
27-07-2005 18:42
[527]philI'm having trouble with the programming though, if anyone knows how to put voltage through a pin in order to keep a servo from moving, or if you know how to make more than one servo move at a tine, OR if you know how to sue the pulsout command, please help!!
27-07-2005 18:56
mechanicalbrain
you tell the servo the angle you want it the potentiometer inside it will keep it at that angle and as long as power runs to the servo it will "lock" it at that angle. i recomend Robot DNA building Robot Drive Trains. its a must.
27-07-2005 19:07
mechanicalbrain
i did a sumo bot that ran on servos. keep in mind if the servos aren't quite up to the job you can get more power from the motors by giving them more juice than their rated for. note that this is actually safe as long as your careful. you can run a servo on up to 12 volts but the motor will get warm pretty fast and i would not recommend running them more than 4-6 min on a high voltage (and yes this will lower the milege of your motors but the speed and power increase is worth it).
27-07-2005 19:47
tiffany34990wow!! that's really nice!! great job... what exactly do you want this bot to do???
27-07-2005 19:54
sanddragI think that's a lot of load for those servos to handle at the top, but it does look like it will be cool once it gets moving. It will never outrun anything with wheels, but it definitely scores in the articulation category.
27-07-2005 20:02
[527]philyeah I'd like to see a wheeled robot do a back flip, lol. But if you could provide any code examples it would be nice. I'm not much of a programmer.
27-07-2005 20:35
mechanicalbrain
sanddrag makes a valid point but i think you are going to see more motor problems at the bottom. if you can run different amounts of current to different motors run about 8 volts to the bottom motors.
27-07-2005 20:36
[527]philI figured out one major problem with the legs, i need to take out one servo from each leg, not only will this make it more stable, it'll make it easier to program.
27-07-2005 20:40
sanddrag|
Originally Posted by mechanicalbrain
run about 8 volts to the bottom motors.
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27-07-2005 20:54
Mike AA|
Originally Posted by [527]phil
I figured out one major problem with the legs, i need to take out one servo from each leg, not only will this make it more stable, it'll make it easier to program.
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27-07-2005 21:02
mechanicalbrain
i like the idea too often i see robots bound by the constraints of biology. make biology the base and then improve!
27-07-2005 21:58
GdeaverIf I remember your past post about the atom, there was a problem with your use of the servo command. Look at the docs on the servo command.
Servo 1,5 will repeat this command 30 times by default which takes about 1 second to execute. Try servo 1,5,1 This will take about 30 ms to execute.
To control that many servos you going to need a servo board. Most servo boards are serial or I2C controlled. Serial is probable easier, I2c is most likely faster.
27-07-2005 22:17
mechanicalbrain
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Originally Posted by sanddrag
I think 8v is far too high for most hobby servos. I think about 6v is the max.
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28-07-2005 15:47
[527]phil
this is robo-one legs 2.0. I took off the knee servos and not only is it shorter, it's much more stable. 
29-07-2005 22:58
John Gutmann
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Originally Posted by Mike AA
I was beginning to wonder why you had some many servos. You should only need 3 per leg (just like human legs) including ankles. It would definatly make things easier.
-Mike |
29-07-2005 23:54
mechanicalbrain
ive been compiling info to write a whitepaper on bipedal walking so tell me how this turns out. one of the things i want to see and i think would be extremely usefull to a better system would be the addition of bending toes and able to lean side to side. both of these are extremely important to human balance. if you don't believe me try walking without bending your toes or shifting weight from side to side.
31-07-2005 17:02
[527]philIt's having a weee bit of trouble walking, but it's not because of my designs it's because of my programming, I still haven't mastered the HSERVO command, + I've been searching for a Pentium 3 laptop, kinda like an IBM think pad or a dell latitude, but alas i keep getting overbid
.
what happened to the pic of legs 2.0?
01-08-2005 14:14
[527]philYes he can move. all servos work perfectly and I calibrated the servo horns so they are at the 0 position (or almost). I can move single servos or multiple ones. It's just in order for it to walk on it's own i have to find the exact placement of each servo so it won't fall over. But it's alive!!!, lol 