Homebrewed Robot Exoskeleton In Alaska 202
museumpeace writes "CNET has an article about a robotic exoskeleton ginned up by tinkerer from Alaska There are a few cool pictures. The audacity of Mr. Owens project, if you believe the article, compares to the efforts of the old
Home Brew Computer Club when compared to the work of GE or
Toyota. Inspiration here comes more from sci-fi and video games than from industrial competition. The article is a good roundup of MECHA related developments, some of which sprang from DARPA money, so I am glad at least a few of my tax dollars are having some real geek fun."
Dammit (Score:5, Funny)
This guy is certifiable. (Score:4, Funny)
To build it outside in the friggin Alaskan winter... well, there's only one word for that:
OTAKU!!!
(which, by the way, is what is on my housemate's vanity plate, so I speak with first-hand knowlege)
Re:This guy is certifiable. (Score:1)
Upright? (Score:2, Insightful)
A crane could easily stand it up later, but if it is going to work at all, it would need to be able to stand after a stumble anyway.
Sure, it looks cooler standing, and probably annoys his neighbours more, but it seems like a very poor design decision.
Re:Upright? (Score:2)
Build it lying down and you have to build it from the back up. It's a lot more difficult that way.
Re:Upright? (Score:3, Funny)
EUREKA!
THAT is what Voltron was trying to teach us! "Form feet and legs! Form arms and body! And then form the head!" Given Earth's current level of technology, this is the only sequence that will permit us to construct giant space combat robots!
The dilemma, now, is to determine the motives of the mysterious entities that sent us message. Are we to build giant space robots to protect o
Re:Upright? (Score:2)
Even if it doesn't affect karma (like funny mods).
Re:Upright? (Score:2)
his neighbors the polar bears? He's in freakin alaska, unless the polar bears have freakin lasers on their foreheads I don't think he has anything to worry about, besides a 35 foot mech is the perfect weapon against his neighbors the polar bears with freakin laser on their foreheads.
FM! - (First Meme) (Score:5, Funny)
Robot Jox (Score:1)
Giant Robot Website Crushed By /. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Giant Robot Website Crushed By /. (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdot Crushed by Giant Robot (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Giant Robot Website Crushed By /. (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, you get the TSA to hire Gundam, then we'll have security.
Sorry... (Score:4, Interesting)
But, I have a feeling the first step is going to put this flat on it's face.
Anime-ish designs for Mecha (mobile suits) don't translate well into the real world.
If it were me, I would be looking to emulate some of the designs from the original MechWarrior series. They seem a bit more realistic.
Still, love to see this walk/work!
Re:Sorry... (Score:2)
Re:Sorry... (Score:1)
Those of us that aren't going for the Prick Award would assume that I (just like the builder) would scale the design back within a reasonable realm.
Do you watch Anime, because the Mobile Suits are larger that the 18ft proto he is building.
I wish I could patent and sell common sense.
Re:Sorry... (Score:1)
Re:Sorry... (Score:3, Informative)
Mr. Owens say he has addressed this by making sure the lower half weighs far more than the upper half, and some other design modifications. The whole thing (pic [com.com]) weighs a ton and a half, though.
I'd love to see a project like this tackled on "Junkyard Mega-Wars" [discovery.com]. Dueling Exoskeletons!
Re:Sorry... (Score:2, Insightful)
Back in the day a friend and I were working on designs for a workable mech. About 10ft tall. Chicken-Leg design.
For balance we used a custom designed counter-weight system that was tied into the drivetrain. From the models we built, it worked great - but only for flat surfaces.
Mechs and bumps/hills/ditches are a realy tough design problem. But just balanced walking is a huge problem to tackle first. Honda poured billions in
Combine that with the Bear Proof Suit (Score:5, Funny)
Now THAT would be cool.
I guess... (Score:4, Funny)
MechWars! (Score:5, Funny)
Obvious Anime Influence. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Obvious Anime Influence. (Score:1)
</i>
HOW LONG? (Score:2, Funny)
Fishing.. (Score:1)
obscure movie reference...
Re:Fishing.. (Score:2)
You mean this Kevin Kline [imdb.com] movie?
Re:Fishing.. (Score:1)
Re:Fishing.. (Score:1)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106673/
Techical knowledge is there, but not with this guy (Score:5, Interesting)
The Large Arm is especially impressive, holding a freakin anvil like it was a stein of beer!
If you could build the whole body of the Sensuit to a large enough scale that the whole pilot can be encased in a haptic feedback harness, you'd have a viable mecha.
Re:Techical knowledge is there, but not with this (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Techical knowledge is there, but not with this (Score:2)
Re:Techical knowledge is there, but not with this (Score:3, Insightful)
Real science is better than demolition derby science any day. Instead of a couple of humanoid megasaurs lumbering around, imagine two giant robots nimble enough to do Kung-Fu! (Duking it out with giant clubs!)
Re:Techical knowledge is there, but not with this (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Worked so hard and long (due to fiancial pressures) that their joins develop slop
2) The hydraulic valves only have a limited amount of proportional control
With a well maintained machine and good proportinal control valves, hydraulic force can be applied very smoothly and controllably. The power/size radio is incredible and is really required for something like this.
Re:He's on a budget so... (Score:2)
I doubt he's going to get that far!
Limited Usefulness (Score:5, Insightful)
A mecha would be standing 20 feet in the battlefied, an open and tempting target to everything from bombers to tanks to helicopters and to RPGs. It would have limited mobility, be extremely difficult to keep in working condition, and will have less load capacity than its tracked or wheeled counterparts. In short, it would look cool, but would be a useless coffin.
In BattleTech, they make up for the obvious disadvantages of a mecha by giving them advantages over vehicles. Mecha are more reliable, more maneuvarable, able to take more damage and continue to function, and can carry more weapons. Even then, if you pit a balanced vehicle force against a balanced mecha force, ton for ton, credit for credit, the vehicles can easily overpower the mecha in most circumstances.
I don't want to discourage this backyard project. After all, how many inventions were made when there was no necessity, but a necessity was found at a later time? But I do want folks to exercise a bit of common sense. If mecha were such a great idea, we'd have used them in WWII. We certainly had the technology to build them back then.
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:1)
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:3, Insightful)
That'd be cool anyhow. Even if it wouldn't be as fun as picking up your neighbor's house and hiding it while he is gone to the store. Too bad the huge footprints leading to the new location of the home would probably give you away.
Aliens got mechas right (Score:2, Insightful)
They'd make excellent car crushers, too
Re:Aliens got mechas right (Score:2)
As for working in the soft soil or mud with them, forget it! The PSI/Square inch of pressure
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Russian Tanks in Hungarian Revolution (Score:2)
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:1)
That environment would cause less equipment stress (no terrain, no weather, no small/large arm fire) and would allow for smaller, lighter (no armor) and more simply constructed mecha.
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think there is any inherent reason why powered exo-skeletons would need to be anything like that big and provided they are reliable and able to cope with much the same terrain as general infantry I think they'd be quite effective in any battle situation.
I would guess the benefits an effective exo-skeleton could bring are in increased carrying capacity for the solider allowing them to carry more food, ammunition etc which would allow them to operate longer in the field with less reliance on supply lines.
Another aim would be to design a skeleton which enabled the solider to move more quickly and over longer distances than would normally be possible and maybe provide some increased protection from unfriendly weaponary.
I don't think anyone is suggesting building giant robots because as you say they would just be too easy to target and destroy.
I am guessing again that the key components in such a suit would be a lightweight, reliable powersource which preferably doesn't need a massive amount of fuel and strong lightweight materials for the skeleton it's self - this is in addition to all the wizzery needed to actually get the skeleton to function in the first place.
Any army which does develop an effective exo skeleton would be able to field a very dangerous weapon indeed, something capable of deploying powerful firepower, fielded in dispersed units of hard to hit small units, capable of sustained attacks into your territory, able to be inserted quickly and secretly in helicopters, parachutes etc.
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
It may be hairsplitting on my part, but if we're going to talk about actually building devices that have their roots in SF, we should use the appropriate terms.
Aside from that, though, you're right. Powered armor is far more likely to be practically useful than a honest-to-$deity 'mech.
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
I guess if you could develop better localised defences, e.g. intercepting cannon shells, rockets etc before they hit you - leaping quickly out of the way of incoming materiel etc then mechs might have a place on the battlefueld.
However I don't think they would ever be versatile enough on different terrain since all the weight is going to be concetrated into their feet which would limit their area of operations to hard rocky areas which can b
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:3, Interesting)
But if you dispense with dynamic balance, then you can build mecha on
Re:Why are haptics needed? (Score:2)
Haptics aren't needed, but the technology is there, and can be used to leverage a human beings finely developed sense of kinematics and balance. Otherwise, you're rolling your ow
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:3, Interesting)
Same here. My first thought of a battlefield mech is the Robotech [google.com] Cyclone [robotech.com]. That seems versatile to me - but hard to build without Protoculture for a fuel source.
The whole transformer idea is what makes mecha seem useful to me. Maybe I'm just a little old school.
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Mmm, Mospeada...
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Think this through... How much fuel would such a system need? How often do you think it would need to be repaired?
I highly doubt such a system would reduce a soldiers reliance on supply lines.
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Some possible configurations for the suit on a 'real' battle field include a 'practical' flame thrower. you co
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
I think you are mistaken that we've had the technology for automated bipedal motion / balance since world war 2. I think it is a very challenging robotics problem. I know for a fact that active research is being done in this area. Projects like Honda Asimo and Sony QRIO and there are several other lower profile projects.
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
A lot like the fictional cybernetic tank, the Ogre (from Steve Jackson games [sjgames.com]). While not Mecha styled, it too could be easily overwhelmed by the opposition. But often used as intimidation and sometimes as a lure to draw opposition to it and away from the rest of the attacking force.
True, most likely a useless coffin...if the operator is truly inside. What the
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Maybe a mecha wouldn't be efficient for war-fare, but it could for civil tasks like carrying heavy objects on a construction site, rescue missions where ALOT of strenght is needed but accessibility is limited. There are alot of situations where such machinery would be very usefull.
Why always with the killing? ^_^General rule; first invent/creat/build, then get someone else to think up evil applications with said innoncent invention :P
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
On one side were those who felt that artificial muscles could make mecha more viable than tanks, on the other side were those who pointed out that if the muscles were so great, you could just use them to power a tank instead of a walking coffin (to use your terminology.)
Eventually I came up with a compromise position: Put the mechs on bicycles. [google.com]
Re:Limited Usefulness (Score:2)
Which is why you won't build a 20-meter tall mecha. Instead, you build about human-sized one, pack it with all the top-secret ultra-advanced mi
This is pretty cool. (Score:1)
this is the beginning... (Score:1, Funny)
Three words - Alaska Needs Women (Score:5, Funny)
The things men do when there are not enough women around. I guess it keeps his hands from going crazy on those long alaskan nights.
In Alaska, you don't lose your woman... (Score:3, Funny)
By the pictures (Score:1, Funny)
Other *Real* Mecha/Teleop links (Score:5, Interesting)
Forget this guy in the post. He clearly doesn't have a clue. But the problems have been largely solved in the past several decades with DARPA money.
If you put a full body haptic interface around someone strapped into a huge robotic body, you'd have it. (See the Immersion Corp link.) But the thing would have to be freaking huge. A full-body haptic cockpit would be something like a sphere 8' in diameter, implying a mecha 30 foot tall!
Perhaps have the cockpit controlling separate and much smaller mecha body remotely, and just have the haptic controls on one of those motion simulation platforms.
Re:Other *Real* Mecha/Teleop links (Score:1)
Re:Other *Real* Mecha/Teleop links (Score:2)
Re:Other *Real* Mecha/Teleop links (Score:2)
And as for the stuff being in the research phase, Sarcos Corp, which is linked to
Re:Other *Real* Mecha/Teleop links (Score:3, Informative)
You're putting words into my mouth. No one's damning him. But his project is not going to produce anything that looks like *combat* unless there's some pretty sophisticated dynamic balancing capability.
Imagine that mecha A and mecha B are fighting. A is not dynamically balanced and h
How about some prize money... (Score:5, Interesting)
I have no doubt that someone as creative as Rutan is out there, and with a little incentive and the promise of some real financial gain could use modern actuators and pressure pads and gyro sensors and so forth to finally create a useful mecha.
I also have no doubt that (unlike Spaceship One) a mecha that could complete the above test would immediately be of great value in quite a few industrial and/or emergency applications.
Re:How about some prize money... (Score:3, Insightful)
Interesting idea, but how would you differentiate a "mecha" from a forklift in this contest?
It seems to me that a "mecha", like its human inspiration, is most useful as a creature for general purposes, unlike a spaceship which is meant to carry a specific load to a specific location. Thus, the contest should be designed to prove fl
Re:How about some prize money... (Score:2)
Suit (Score:2, Funny)
Hmmm... (Score:2)
hope he didn't forget.... (Score:1, Insightful)
i hope he's got intentions to incorporate some sorta personal heating system....-40 and metal is not a good combination
Honey... (Score:3, Funny)
Dr. Stephen Hawking's is better (Score:2)
The link posted with "URL:" (Score:2)
Actual, operational link:
http://www.paralinks.net/paralinksarchives/hawking exo.html [paralinks.net]
Please use the URL feature that will auto-link a URL, as shown under the Submit button on the Post Comment page. Those of us who perfer to click rather than copy-paste and then fix the link.
In your post it has a space that's not in the actual link, dunno why
Other leg-enhancing system? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Other leg-enhancing system? (Score:2, Interesting)
Motion Control (Score:4, Interesting)
This is way cool and it'd be awesome to see it work, but I'm officially a doubter.
Other amateur Mecha (Score:3, Interesting)
Mechanicus [machinegod.com] is another home-made exoskeleton from Austin, TX.
ANOTHER Exosuit (Score:2)
for which he won an Ignoble Prize. http://www.improb.com/ig/ig-pastwinners.html#ig199 8 [improb.com]
Re:ANOTHER Exosuit (Score:2)
*grin* The article mentioned Ripley's loader... (Score:2)
Re:Good God Tell Me I'm not First? (Score:1)
Re:Good God Tell Me I'm not First? (Score:1, Funny)
It's not slashdot (Score:2)
Re:Good God Tell Me I'm not First? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I disagree (Score:2)
Re:I disagree (Score:1)
Re:I disagree (Score:3, Informative)
From the article:
Re:I disagree (Score:2)
See I told you, pr0n drives all technological advances! "Exoskeletons for Human Performance Augmentation" is just a fancy name for a strap-on.
Japan (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Waste of good resources... (Score:2)
Well you can't justify a few millions on research for a "GIRL ROBOT" which if fully integrated with all sorts of pleasuring features.
You can however, justify it when you go for "humanoïde robots" and add funky features later.
You don't think those guys inventing the internet were actually building a "network to withstand a nuclear attack"? : P
Just be patient my friend. ^_^