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Designed to impress: the three most unusual robots
A giant manned robot for schoolchildren.
This manned robot can remotely resemble the robot loader from the movie Aliens. The main difference is that it is designed for children. He is unlikely to help defeat the uterus of aliens, but even a little girl can cope with his control. Control is carried out by pedals and two levers. Although the robot moves on two legs, the wheels are hidden inside them.
Windy multi-legged beach dwellers
Inventor Theo Jansen has been working on amazing mechanisms he called Strandbeests for more than twenty years. These are walking machines that operate from the wind and move along the beach. Jansen proposes to consider their creations alive, and the process of their development – “evolution”. The most amazing thing is that there are no electronics, only intricate mechanical joints. Some “beasts” can even be configured with the help of levers or, if you like, “programmed”, because they have logical elements, albeit not very complex.
http://player.vimeo.com/video/53963103
A Spider Robot That You Can Drive In
This design was created by the British engineer Matt Denton, who is literally obsessed with spider robots. In his workshop you can find a whole bunch of prototypes of modest size, and manned iron hexopod Mantis became the pinnacle of his creation. Each leg of Mantis is equipped with many sensors that allow the robot to feel the soil under its feet, and creating software that can balance the body while moving, according to Denton, was almost more difficult than the body of the robot.
Source: /users/413
This manned robot can remotely resemble the robot loader from the movie Aliens. The main difference is that it is designed for children. He is unlikely to help defeat the uterus of aliens, but even a little girl can cope with his control. Control is carried out by pedals and two levers. Although the robot moves on two legs, the wheels are hidden inside them.
Windy multi-legged beach dwellers
Inventor Theo Jansen has been working on amazing mechanisms he called Strandbeests for more than twenty years. These are walking machines that operate from the wind and move along the beach. Jansen proposes to consider their creations alive, and the process of their development – “evolution”. The most amazing thing is that there are no electronics, only intricate mechanical joints. Some “beasts” can even be configured with the help of levers or, if you like, “programmed”, because they have logical elements, albeit not very complex.
http://player.vimeo.com/video/53963103
A Spider Robot That You Can Drive In
This design was created by the British engineer Matt Denton, who is literally obsessed with spider robots. In his workshop you can find a whole bunch of prototypes of modest size, and manned iron hexopod Mantis became the pinnacle of his creation. Each leg of Mantis is equipped with many sensors that allow the robot to feel the soil under its feet, and creating software that can balance the body while moving, according to Denton, was almost more difficult than the body of the robot.
Source: /users/413