View allAll Photos Tagged industrialrobots

Photo showing Philipp Hornung of PRINT A DRINK. Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl

© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_022

 

Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)

 

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Photo showing two industrial robots erforming a choreography during the voestalpine Klangwolke.

  

credit: Reinhard Winkler

Photo taken at the Ars Electronica Center’s Deep Space 8K.

 

Read more about the Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Christopher Sonnleitner

Preparation works of the Creative Robotics exhibition at the Ars Electronica Center Linz.

 

Credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

The Robotic Woodcraft interdisciplinary research team consists of architects, mathematicians, designers and master cabinetmakers. The University of Applied Arts Vienna, the Association for Robots in Architecture and Lucy.D, a Vienna-based design studio, are jointly exploring ways to customize production processes.

 

Recently, the team developed several pieces of furniture, the production of which builds upon the flexibility of today’s robots. Working together with master cabinetmakers, the research crew identified particular fabrication processes that are highly challenging to do by hand but benefit from a robot’s high precision and strength.

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Magdalena Sick-Leitner

Find out more at: peopleplusrobots.github.io/robo-op/

© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_014

 

Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)

 

You can follow me also on Getty Images

PRINT A DRINK combines methods from robotics, life sciences, and design to explore a completely new field of 3D-printing. Rather than building up objects layer by layer, the process uses a high-end KUKA Robots to accurately “inject” microliter-drops of edible liquid into a cocktail. Within a minute, PRINT A DRINK can build up complex 3D structures in a wide range of drinks – creating fascinating augmented cocktails using only high quality ingredients.

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

Find out more at: peopleplusrobots.github.io/robo-op/

IRB 1410 is a well-proven and cost-efficient robot with a stroke and reach sufficient for most arc welding applications. It is based on IRB 1400, delivered in over 14,000 units world-wide.

 

For more details, visit

www.abb.com/product/seitp327/aebd514c0e25af94c125714c0044...

Inspired by production technologies in the fashion industry, Tailored Structures experiments with the development of a new fabrication method for wood constructions. The structures consist of several 3-millimeter-thick beech wood plates that are sewn together. This is done by an industrial sewing machine mounted on a 6-axis industrial robot.

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_012

 

Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)

 

You can follow me also on Getty Images

The excellent car-welding robot exhibit at Think Tank, the science museum in Birmingham, England.

 

This is from our article about robots.

 

Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.

© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_010

 

Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)

 

You can follow me also on Getty Images

ABB's new IRBP B positioner features a twin station solution where the robot works on one side and the operator can load and unload on the other side. A screen is fitted between the two stations to protect the operator from arc-eyes.

 

For more details and datasheets - www.abb.com/product/seitp327/caf1ab771605724fc125771c0042...

ABB's new IRBP A positioner is for workpieces that have to be rotated around two axes to reach best process position. It is suitable for applications requiring one or two stations .

 

For more details and datasheets - www.abb.com/product/seitp327/f1aea40a044ee283c125771c0041...

© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_011

 

Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)

 

You can follow me also on Getty Images

Photo showing projections on houses along the banks of the river Danube.

 

credit: Reinhard Winkler

PRINT A DRINK combines methods from robotics, life sciences, and design to explore a completely new field of 3D-printing. Rather than building up objects layer by layer, the process uses a high-end KUKA Robots to accurately “inject” microliter-drops of edible liquid into a cocktail. Within a minute, PRINT A DRINK can build up complex 3D structures in a wide range of drinks – creating fascinating augmented cocktails using only high quality ingredients.

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

The project Cyber Physical Macro Material demonstrates a tangible vision of a new dynamic (and intelligent) architecture for public spaces. The agile and reconfigurable canopy is enabled by a combination of distributed robotic construction and a programmable digital building material. A project by Miguel Aflalo, Behrooz Tahanzadeh, Jingcheng Chen, Denitsa Koleva, Sanoop Siby / University of Stuttgart: Institute for Computational Design and Construction, ICD (Prof. Menges), Institute of Building Structures & Structural Design, ITKE (Prof. Knippers)

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl

Inspired by production technologies in the fashion industry, Tailored Structures experiments with the development of a new fabrication method for wood constructions. The structures consist of several 3-millimeter-thick beech wood plates that are sewn together. This is done by an industrial sewing machine mounted on a 6-axis industrial robot.

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_017

 

Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)

 

You can follow me also on Getty Images

Johannes Braumann (Kunstuniversität Linz, Association for Robots in Architecture) and Klaus Luger (Mayor of the City of Linz) who has a picture taken by a robot that will also paint a portrait of him.

 

credit: Ars Electronica Center / Robert Bauernhansl

The excellent car-welding robot exhibit at Think Tank, the science museum in Birmingham, England.

 

This is from our article about robots.

 

Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.

Find out more at: peopleplusrobots.github.io/robo-op/

Using Robo.Op, android, and to do some light drawing / tracing with an industrial robot.

  

See more here: Robo-Op SITREP!

© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_016

 

Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)

 

You can follow me also on Getty Images

Flexible adaptive welding demo with Servo-Robot's laser vision seam tracking

ABB's smallest ever multipurpose industrial robot weighs just 25kg and can handle a payload of 3kg (4kg for vertical wrist) with a reach of 580mm. It is a cost-effective and reliable choice for generating high production outputs in return for low investment.

 

For more details, visit

www.abb.com/product/seitp327/be2eef38406eaca4c12576200031...

Photo taken at the Ars Electronica Center’s Deep Space 8K.

 

Read more about the Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Christopher Sonnleitner

Find out more at: peopleplusrobots.github.io/robo-op/

Find out more at: peopleplusrobots.github.io/robo-op/

Photo showing Gerfried Stocker, Artistic Director of Ars Electronica, during a press tour through the new exhibtion "Creative Robotics".

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl

This cube balancing independently on one corner is hard to destabilize due to its built-in gyroscope. The robotic cube offsets external disturbances and changes in its immediate environment on its own. The physics behind this is the principle of the conservation of angular momentum, according to which the angular momentum of an isolated physical system remains constant regardless of the forces and interactions at work among the system’s individual components.

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Christopher Sonnleitner

PRINT A DRINK combines methods from robotics, life sciences, and design to explore a completely new field of 3D-printing. Rather than building up objects layer by layer, the process uses a high-end KUKA Robots to accurately “inject” microliter-drops of edible liquid into a cocktail. Within a minute, PRINT A DRINK can build up complex 3D structures in a wide range of drinks – creating fascinating augmented cocktails using only high quality ingredients.

 

PRINT A DRINK is part of the Ars Electronica Center’s Exhibition Creative Robotics.”

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl

 

Get an Industrial Back Rub with your very own robotic masseuse!

 

Download to see animated GIF ... flickr, for some reason, doesn't support the file type!

 

This project adapts an ABB IRB140 into a back massager. We created a smart end-effector –– embedded with pressure sensors –– that lets a person direct lean into the robot to control its massage routine.

 

Project by Madeline Gannon (www.madlab.cc) & Zack Jacobson-Weaver (enartdezark.blogspot.com)

Photo showing Reinhard Nagler (Sales Manager Kuka) during a press tour through the exhibition "Creative Robotics".

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl

 

Commands from Processing (left) are separated from the code running on the robot (right).

Keeping these two parts separate lets us share Processing sketches across different Industrial Robot platforms (we only need to adapt the generic server code on the right to the different robot's language.)

IRB 1600 is a very versatile robot by ABB Robotics. It can be used in various industrial robotic applications such as Arc welding, Assembly, Die casting, Injection moulding, Machine tending, Material handling and Packing

 

For more details, visit www.abb.com/product/seitp327/45d78d423f3fa9c4c1256fda005b...

© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_015

 

Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)

 

You can follow me also on Getty Images

The excellent car-welding robot exhibit at Think Tank, the science museum in Birmingham, England.

 

This is from our article about robots.

 

Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.

Ever since Spellbound I have a hard time seeing or hearing the R world without hearing young, awesome, hyper, goofy, supernerdy and oooh-i-just-want-to-hug-him Harry singing, "Do. I. sound. like. a. mu.sic.al ro.bot?"

 

I need a MP3 of that.

Find out more at: peopleplusrobots.github.io/robo-op/

PRINT A DRINK combines methods from robotics, life sciences, and design to explore a completely new field of 3D-printing. Rather than building up objects layer by layer, the process uses a high-end KUKA Robots to accurately “inject” microliter-drops of edible liquid into a cocktail. Within a minute, PRINT A DRINK can build up complex 3D structures in a wide range of drinks – creating fascinating augmented cocktails using only high quality ingredients.

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

The IRB 5400 is a family of paint robots offering accurate painting, high uptime, low paint consumption, short cycle times and effective integration of paint application equipment. Additional benefits include an expansive working envelope, high load capacity and reliable operation.

 

For more details, visithttp://www.abb.com/product/seitp327/dee0afb7a4cfabe3c1256f2c00327e38.aspx

Photo showing Maria Smigielska ([proteus] and Johannes Braumann (Kunstuniversität Linz, Creative Robotics Lab) during a press tour through the Ars Electronica Center's new exhibition "Creative Robotics".

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl

Fluxuri consists of a new surface material that’s thin and flexible and can be painted by merely touching it. Extraordinary visual and haptic experiences emerge on this innovative canvas upon which aesthetic “moment art” can be created and then easily erased.

 

Fluxuri is part of the Ars Electronica Center’s Exhibition Creative Robotics.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl

Viktoria Falk and Lukas Mahlendorf’s luggage includes their own Traveling Pavilion, which was executed as their final assignment at the RWTH Aachen’s Faculty of Architecture. Based on their work, RWTH Aachen has developed an intelligent robotic aide in cooperation with KUKA, a manufacturer specializing in industrial robots. This assistant supports the fabrication of foldable construction elements that are created from a variety of materials.

 

Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.

 

Ars Electronica Center Linz

Ars-Electronica-Straße 1

4040 Linz

Austria

www.aec.at

 

credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

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