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Underactuated Adaptive Robot Gripper Finger, v1

Here’s what I’ve been working on today. R&D is a long, difficult process, but I like a challenge. Case in point, I’ve been stuck on trying to design a 6DOF robot arm for ages. It occurred to me that I’m starting at the shoulder and trying to work towards the hand. What if I start at the hand and work back toward the shoulder? So I’m making a robot gripper inspired by Robotiq’s 2 and 3 finger grippers. They’re underactuated because they have fewer motors than degrees of freedom and they’re adaptive because they can deal with gripping odd shapes.

printing underactuated adaptive gripper finger, v1

This was a failed print. I printed six tests before I got two that worked, and stopped in the middle to check a few potential problems. My 3D printer needs a lot of good lovin’ to work. Still worth it.

underactuated adaptive gripper finger, v1

Here’s a close up. The strings will probably be replaced with 50lb fishing line. There’s one on either side running down the groove in the middle of the finger.

underactuated adaptive gripper finger, v1, size comparison

Here it is again, to scale. I’ll probably reprint each “bone” as a single piece, rather than two separate halves. I still need a way to keep the strings in place and to add some touch-sensitive pads to detect contact. I also need to hook these to a servo and make at least one more. All in all I’ll be lucky if I get a beta working in less than 6 prototypes.

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Bert forks Makelangelo and builds a new pen holder

Bert Balcaen says,

“I was impatient and made my own parts suitable for laser cutting. See https://github.com/bertbalcaen/DrawBot/tree/master/printable-parts for spools, motor mounts and pen holder. Motor mounts are based on your design, spools were inspired by http://stuartchilds.com/2012/07/drbo-thread-spool-assembly/. I did a write up here: http://www.iaacblog.com/mai2012-2013-physicalcomputing/2012/12/drawing-machine-prototype/

Thanks for opensourcing this project – great work!”

Meanwhile I’m designing a robot gripper and waiting for china to deliver my bobbins.

Art

KUKA KR180 from Thingiverse, fixed

I’m slugging my way through the end of a project and I needed something to take my mind off it for a bit so I found my first vanity 3D print – a KUKA KR180 robot arm. This scale model is fully articulated. I used an M3 screw with the head cut off to hold the wrist onto the elbow without sacrificing movement. You can get all the files on thingiverse but I found I needed to fix a number of broken meshes. To save you time, here are all the files for KUKA KR180 including the fixes. A couple more M3s will hold the rest of the parts together and I used some hot glue to hold the two halves of the humerus together. I really find this model inspiring, I hope one day soon to build my own.

http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4575

http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4575

http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4575

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Gift Certificates Now Available

Want an awesome gift for that special tech-savvy person in your life? Tired of trying to get them the next “jump jump, shoot shoot” game? Not actually sure what to get? Now it’s easy, with our emailed gift certificates in $20, $50, and $100. Get a half dozen for yourself and don’t share them with anyone, like the one ring.

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Makelangelo software update

Late night coding – what could possibly go wrong? Based on some most awesome feedback from Mr. Steven, I’ve added a few issues to Github and then fixed & closed a few of them. Maybe tomorrow night I can tackle some of the rest.

Experimental branch only!

+ added a picture to configure limits that should make things clearer.
+ added a version number (github commit #) to about page.